/r/technology
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Palantir CEO says AI 'will destroy' humanities jobs
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Hacker Uses Claude and ChatGPT to Breach Multiple Government Agencies
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Politico survey finds 84% of EU people distrust US tech companies to handle their personal data responsibly, rising to 93% distrust for Chinese tech firms
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Microsoft confirms Windows 11 KB5077212, KB5079420 break PC reset on 25H2 and 24H2 systems
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Rockstar Games confirms it was hacked by malicious group — 'ShinyHunters' takes credit, gives until April 14 to pay ransom or it will release confidential data
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Experimental Drug Can Reverse Osteoarthritis in Weeks, Animal Research Shows
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‘I feel helpless’: college graduates can’t find entry-level roles in shrinking market amid rise of AI
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Veteran Microsoft engineer says original Task Manager was only 80KB so it could run smoothly on 90s computers — original utility used a smart technique to determine whether it was the only running instance
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The shuffle is not random. Spotify's patents show how the recommendation engine works.
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Oxygen made from Moon dust for first time | Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin says it has developed reactor that can release breathable air from lunar soil
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Microsoft starts removing unnecessary Copilot buttons in Windows 11
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OpenAI is backing an Illinois state bill to shield AI companies from lawsuits for catastrophic harm
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CIA reportedly used Pegasus software for deception op during rescue of airman in Iran
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Linux lays down the law on AI-generated code, says yes to Copilot, no to AI slop, and humans take the fall for mistakes — after months of fierce debate, Torvalds and maintainers come to an agreement
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Mozilla says Microsoft is using Copilot and Edge to tighten its grip on Windows
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Rockstar Games has confirmed it was hit by third-party data breach
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Federal judge extends restraining order on $6.2B merger of local TV giants Nexstar and Tegna
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"AI polls" are fake polls
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User anger as Amazon ends support for some older Kindles
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Streamers, mergers driving up price of watching sports, lawmakers say
Techmeme
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A deep dive into the debate about Claude Mythos Preview, the model's capabilities, attempts to refute Anthropic's claims, and what it means for the future of AI (Zvi Mowshowitz/Don't Worry About the Vase)
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As weather betting grows on prediction markets, climate experts are debating whether it improves forecasts by aggregating knowledge or is simply a zero-sum game (Bloomberg)
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Sources: UK regulators plan to warn banks, insurers, and exchanges about security risks exposed by Claude Mythos Preview at a meeting within the next two weeks (Martin Arnold/Financial Times)
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Sources: Apple is testing four AI glasses designs with rectangular and oval frames, multiple colors, and a camera system with vertically oriented oval lenses (Mark Gurman/Bloomberg)
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Flipkart and Amazon's quick commerce push in India is intensifying competition in an already crowded space where profitability remains under pressure (Jagmeet Singh/TechCrunch)
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A journalist recounts how he used ChatGPT to develop a fitness plan to prepare for the Paris Marathon, resulting in a 20-pound weight loss and faster race times (Derek Wallbank/Bloomberg)
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The Linux Kernel Organization now lets developers submit AI-generated code, as long as it complies with the guidelines, licensing, and attribution requirements (Simon Batt/XDA Developers)
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Analysts and researchers say Google's TurboQuant compression algorithm to make LLMs more efficient is more likely to expand memory chip demand than reduce it (Daniel Tudor/Financial Times)
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Takeaways from HumanX, one of the AI industry's main events: Claude Code dominated the conversation, while some execs noted China's lead in open-weight models (Ashley Capoot/CNBC)
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Q&A with NYT reporter Tiffany Hsu about AI-generated online influencers, how the volume of synthetic content produces exhaustion for users, and more (Charlie Warzel/The Atlantic)
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Survey of 6,698 people across six EU countries: around 84% said they don't trust US tech companies with their personal data; 93% don't trust Chinese companies (Ellen O'Regan/Politico)
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Sources: Anthropic met with Christian leaders in March to seek input on Claude's moral and spiritual development and if it could be considered a "child of God" (Washington Post)
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A wave of top AI researchers returned from the US to China in the past year, driven by better pay, quality of life, and a more restrictive US immigration system (Zijing Wu/Financial Times)
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Google says Polymarket bets "briefly appeared in Google News in error", after the bets appeared alongside news articles in the "For You" section (Terrence O'Brien/The Verge)
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Japan approves an additional $4B in subsidies to Rapidus to bankroll the chipmaker's work for Fujitsu, taking the total state investment and fees to $16.3B (Mari Kiyohara/Bloomberg)