Attackers impersonate Interpol to trick small businesses into downloading ransomware hidden in password-protected archives.
NPR's Steve Inskeep asks Princeton computer scientist Sayash Kapoor about his assertions that AI won't lead to mass layoffs.
A campaign active since last November has been targeting Python developers building Telegram bots with trojanized Pyrogram ...
Researchers have developed a way to program human cells to perform calculations and make autonomous decisions, similar to how ...
The research project promises more efficient long-term recall by organizing knowledge around abstractions and cue-based ...
Leaked internal documents have revealed that for nearly a year Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) used counterfeit USB ...
Claude AI robotics benchmark shows Opus 4.7 finishing physical robot programming in 9 minutes, against 181 minutes for ...
Spread the love“`html Understanding your vehicle’s inner workings can feel like deciphering an ancient language. However, with the right knowledge, anyone can learn how to read OBD2 codes, unlocking ...
Shoppers can turn holiday, wedding and family photographs into a glossy hardback keepsake, although delivery is charged ...
Fault-tolerant quantum computer by 2028: the DOE’s Quantum Genesis initiative sets a hard deadline for the world’s first ...
Millions of people across the Arab world use a strange mix of numbers and letters to communicate online — and most outsiders have no idea what they’re reading. Known as “Arabizi,” this system was born ...