Everyone's a coder now, thanks to AI. But more code means more bugs, more vulnerabilities, and not enough engineers to catch them.
Phishing surge, LinkedIn tracking claims, spyware use, and rising stealers expose growing abuse of trusted systems.
I spent the last week of March 2026 in San Francisco talking to CTOs, CPOs, and engineering leaders from companies of every ...
Abstract: In the radiation work environment of nuclear power plants and similar facilities, radiation can induce Single Event Upsets (SEUs) and even Multiple Bit Upsets (MBUs) in Field-Programmable ...
The litigation follows the company's bombshell disclosure that its financial statements for the past two fiscal years can no longer be relied upon due to material accounting errors. The lawsuit, ...
What happens if you stay AFK with the LEGO Ninjago characters? #videogames #legoninjago #legomarvel ...
Amazon has been aggressively pushing its engineers to adopt AI tools. At least 80% of its developers are expected to use AI for coding tasks at least once a week. However, recent events suggest that ...
Monday, a representative for a company that provides election tabulation machines for dozens of counties says something went wrong with the tabulations for several Democratic races in one county on ...
On January 5, employees at Cursor returned from the holiday weekend to an all-hands meeting with a slide deck titled “War Time.” During the break, employees playing with Anthropic’s latest model, Opus ...
🛍️ Amazon Big Spring Sale: 100+ editor-approved deals worth buying right now 🛍️ By Mack DeGeurin Published Feb 21, 2026 9:00 AM EST Add Popular Science (opens in a new tab) Adding us as a Preferred ...