luizasnewsletter.com
ticle 7 prohibits anthropomorphic AI services from: (i) Generating or disseminating content that endangers national security, damages national honor and interests, undermines national unity, engages in illegal religious activities, or spreads rumors to disrupt economic and social order; (ii) Generating, disseminating, or promoting content that is obscene, gambling-related, violent, or incites crime; (iii) Generating or disseminating content that insults or defames others, infringing upon their legitimate rights and interests; (iv) Providing false promises that seriously affect user behavior and services that damage social relationships; (v) Damaging users’ physical health by encouraging, glorifying, or implying suicide or self-harm, or damaging users’ personal dignity and mental health through verbal violence or emotional manipulation; (vi) Using methods such as algorithmic manipulation, information misleading, and setting emotional traps to induce users to make unreasonable decisions; (vii) Inducing or obtaining classified or sensitive information; (viii) Other circumstances that violate laws, administrative regulations and relevant national provisions.
nikecraft.com
arstechnica.com
If DDoSing a blog wasn’t bad enough, archive site also tampered with web snapshots.
worldwideweb.cern.ch
In December 1990, an application called WorldWideWeb was developed on a NeXT machine at The European Organization for Nuclear Research (known as CERN) just outside of Geneva. This program – WorldWideWeb — is the antecedent of most of what we consider or know of as "the web" today.
answer.ai
So you can imagine my surprise when, during a conversation in solveit, Claude 4.5 hallucinated access to a tool I hadn’t given it yet, made up the parameters, tried to run it, and the tool actually worked - the API didn’t block it. The tool name was a valid function from the dialoghelper module, add_msg, so instead of “I’m sorry I was confused…”, I read, “Message added as requested” and a new note popped into existence! (And before you think this is Claude-specific - I’ve reproduced similar behavior with Gemini and Grok.)
thelocalstack.eu
The whole thing took three minutes. Scan, selfie, done. Understanding what I actually agreed to took me an entire weekend reading 34 pages of legal documents. I handed a US company my passport, my face, and the mathematical geometry of my skull. They cross-referenced me against credit agencies and government databases. They’ll use my documents to train their AI. And if the US government comes knocking, they’ll hand it all over — even if it’s stored in Europe, even if I’m European, and possibly without ever telling me. All for a small blue checkmark on a professional networking site. I’m not telling you to skip verification. But I am telling you to know what you’re trading. Because Persona does. LinkedIn does. The only person in the dark is the one holding their passport up to the camera.
anthropic.com
Rather than scanning for known patterns, Claude Code Security reads and reasons about your code the way a human security researcher would: understanding how components interact, tracing how data moves through your application, and catching complex vulnerabilities that rule-based tools miss. Every finding goes through a multi-stage verification process before it reaches an analyst. Claude re-examines each result, attempting to prove or disprove its own findings and filter out false positives. Findings are also assigned severity ratings so teams can focus on the most important fixes first.
therealdeal.com
The other owners who have been reported to have sold buildings to ICE through subsidiaries or affiliates are: Crestlight Capital, Oakmont Industrial Group, Rockefeller Group, PCCP, Fundrise, Flint Development, and retailer Big Lots. Those companies did not respond to requests for comment.
greg.org
Is this where the mattress ended up? The bedroom is not in Horst, and this Mulas is not in Homes & Studios. Green carpet, green velvet, green sheets, Twombly’s love affair with green didn’t start in Bassano. The Kiss (Bela Lugosi) is one of Warhol’s earliest screenprints, which he made himself, on paper. On November 22, 1963.
arstechnica.com
Over the past 15 years, password managers have grown from a niche security tool used by the technology savvy into an indispensable security tool for the masses, with an estimated 94 million US adults—or roughly 36 percent of them—having adopted them. They store not only passwords for pension, financial, and email accounts, but also cryptocurrency credentials, payment card numbers, and other sensitive data. All eight of the top password managers have adopted the term “zero knowledge” to describe the complex encryption system they use to protect the data vaults that users store on their servers. The definitions vary slightly from vendor to vendor, but they generally boil down to one bold assurance: that there is no way for malicious insiders or hackers who manage to compromise the cloud infrastructure to steal vaults or data stored in them. These promises make sense, given previous breaches of LastPass and the reasonable expectation that state-level hackers have both the motive and capability to obtain password vaults belonging to high-value targets.
youtube.com
Yuval Noah Harari, Historian, Philosopher & Bestselling Author and Max Tegmark, Co-Founder, Future of Life Institute; Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) discuss human agency, governing AI and the future of humanity with Bloomberg's Francine Lacqua at Bloomberg House in Davos on the sidelines of the 2026 World Economic Forum. --------
x.com
I'm definitely a bit sus'd to run OpenClaw specifically - giving my private data/keys to 400K lines of vibe coded monster that is being actively attacked at scale is not very appealing at all. Already seeing reports of exposed instances, RCE vulnerabilities, supply chain poisoning, malicious or compromised skills in the registry, it feels like a complete wild west and a security nightmare. But I do love the concept and I think that just like LLM agents were a new layer on top of LLMs, Claws are now a new layer on top of LLM agents, taking the orchestration, scheduling, context, tool calls and a kind of persistence to a next level. Looking around, and given that the high level idea is clear, there are a lot of smaller Claws starting to pop out. For example, on a quick skim NanoClaw looks really interesting in that the core engine is ~4000 lines of code (fits into both my head and that of AI agents, so it feels manageable, auditable, flexible, etc.) and runs everything in containers by default. I also love their approach to configurability - it's not done via config files it's done via skills! For example, /add-telegram instructs your AI agent how to modify the actual code to integrate Telegram. I haven't come across this yet and it slightly blew my mind earlier today as a new, AI-enabled approach to preventing config mess and if-then-else monsters. Basically - the implied new meta is to write the most maximally forkable repo and then have skills that fork it into any desired more exotic configuration. Very cool.
gemini.google
Lyria 3 Create custom tracks for any moment The new way to hit play. Lyria 3 is Gemini’s high-fidelity AI music generator that transforms your text or image prompts into 30-second tracks, complete with instrumentals, vocals and lyrics. Turn a funny moment, a specific feeling, or even a photo into a custom soundtrack.
bookstore.karmakarma.org
Dike Blair Untitled 2026 Archival pigment print 11 × 8 3⁄4 inches Signed edition of 100