Front-page articles summarized hourly.
SignalTrace, a surveillance product, would add sensors to automatic license plate readers to collect Bluetooth device identifiers (phones, wearables, other Bluetooth) in cars. By linking these device IDs to the license plates, ALPR cameras could identify specific drivers or passengers, turning generic car tracking into person-tracking. ALPRs are already widely deployed in the U.S., and SignalTrace would significantly expand the amount of data gathered by such cameras.
Resonate is a real-time, low-latency spectral analysis method using a bank of independent resonators. Each resonator tracks energy near its natural frequency with per-sample EWMA updates (R_k, P_k) and, optionally, instantaneous frequency via phase differences. The processor requires few operations per sample; updates are parallelizable; memory and complexity scale linearly with the number of resonators. Output includes per-resonator magnitude/phase and can synthesize audio via inverse phasors. Implementations: Oscillators Swift/C++ and noFFT (Python/C++).
Scott Chacon's Grit reimplements Git from scratch in Rust as a memory-safe, library-first system. Using a swarm of agents, it builds a pure Rust core plus a CLI to exercise it, aiming to pass the Git test suite; it currently clears about 99.3% (with some tests skipped) but is not production-ready and has no Windows build. Potential uses include WASM deployments, embeddable Git in Rust apps, and tools like GitButler. Licensing is MIT. The project has ~360k LOC (100k grit-lib, 260k grit-cli), thousands of PRs/commits, and lessons on agent coordination and cost.
Exif Smuggling is a Proof-of-Concept showing how a JPEG's Exif data can conceal an executable payload, enabling a browser cache to passively download a second-stage payload. The repo demonstrates a loader (chrome_poc.ps1) that extracts the payload from Chrome's cache, and provides example workflows such as embedding a DLL inside a JPG and converting a PowerShell loader to a ClickFix command.
Anthropic’s Fable 5 model card describes safeguards that quietly limit Claude’s effectiveness for frontier AI development—via prompt modification, steering vectors, or PEFT—without visible indicators to users. Claude will not switch to another model, and Anthropic won’t notify users when nerfs occur. The piece argues that the boundary between frontier AI research and ordinary product development is blurring as startups train embeddings, rerankers, and fine-tune small LLMs, creating supply‑chain risks and eroding trust when bad guidance might be due to a hidden policy nerf.
Upcoming npm v12 introduces security-centric defaults for npm install. By default, allowScripts is off, so preinstall, install, and postinstall scripts from dependencies won't run unless explicitly allowed via npm approve-scripts; the allowlist is written to package.json and should be committed. Prepare by upgrading to npm 11.16.0+ and reviewing warnings; use npm approve-scripts --allow-scripts-pending to see script-bearing packages, then approve trusted ones (npm deny-scripts to block the rest). Also, --allow-git and --allow-remote default to none, blocking Git dependencies and remote URLs unless explicitly allowed.
Alpine Linux 3.24.0 is released as the first stable in v3.24. Highlights: GRUB 2.14, LLVM 22, Rust 1.96, GNOME 50, Go 1.26, KDE Plasma 6.6, Qt 6.11, Sway 1.12, nginx 1.30. Notable changes: py3-setuptools updated to 82.0.0 removing pkg_resources; qemu-binfmt deprecated in favor of binfmt.d. Installer now supports Limine and IPv6; serial-console headless config added. COSMIC 1 desktop joins community repo; GTK+ 3.0 moved to community; GTK2 and Qt5 removed; libsoup 2 removed. Upgrade with apk upgrade --available; grub-install may be required for GRUB; wiki has details.
Blaise v0.10.0 alpha: native x86-64 backend, thread support (threadvar, atomic ARC), per-thread allocator, and incremental per-unit compilation with .bif interfaces (--incremental). Enforces parentheses on zero-argument calls. New language features: diamond operator for type inference, Exit(Value) shorthand, set literals, and preserved calling conventions; improved string handling and WriteLn booleans. Compiler diagnostics improved with --dump-ast; per-unit symbol cache and layered lookup; Kanban board enhancements. 2627 tests, 130+ commits since v0.9.0.
Masnick argues that CEOs overhype AI and threaten layoffs, but true value comes from careful use that augments, not replaces, human labor. They often see only the “happy path” and miss extensive follow-on work (security, legal, accessibility, integration) needed to scale. Aaron Levie notes CEOs are detached from the actual work, risking misjudging production-ready prototypes. The piece warns against cargo-cult AI and urges leaders to understand limits, test deployments, and avoid large-scale layoffs.
Discusses Resilient Network Graphs (RNG) approach to flat data center networks at AWS. Traces from expander graphs and random wiring to overcome limitations of fat-tree networks (routing, cabling, operations). Introduces Spraypoint routing, ShuffleBox cabling, RNG tooling; shared a real-world deployment in Dublin 2024 and two more in 2025; results show 69% fewer routers, 33% higher throughput, 40% power reduction, 27% lower OPEX versus fat-trees. By early 2026 RNG is AWS default for new data centers. Highlights resilience, fungible capacity, continuous scalability, while noting operational complexity and stochastic guarantees.
Test-case reducers automatically shrink inputs that trigger bugs, often achieving 95–99% reduction and easing debugging. Laurence Tratt explains how reducers work: an input and an 'interestingness' test guide the tool to a minimal failing input. They’re surprisingly effective beyond compilers; Shrink Ray is a preferred parallel reducer with strategies and heuristics. Key takeaways: robust interestingness tests, watch for over-reduction, speed matters, and you can steer reductions toward factors beyond input length (e.g., shorter traces).
Apple’s Passwords app in iOS/iPadOS/macOS 27 may automatically change weak or compromised passwords using Apple Intelligence, showing a Live Activity. It could boost security by quickly replacing credentials, but hands control over sensitive actions to an automated agent, raising risks from prompt injection, misfires, lockouts, and device compromise. Key questions include how success is verified, privacy of passwords, and failure handling. The author urges strict safeguards: isolate secrets from the model, limit actions to password changes, require fresh user approval, strict origin checks, clear audit trails, robust failure handling, and independent beta testing before rollout.
GitHub Pages 404: the requested file isn't found. Check filename case and permissions; root URLs require index.html. See GitHub Pages docs and status.
GPT-2 is a scale-up of GPT-1, with up to 1.5B parameters and training on ~40GB of web text. OpenAI initially deemed the trained model too dangerous to release, issuing a smaller model and a paper instead. The architecture is still a transformer decoder; the main change is size and data. Nine months later they released the full 1.5B model with code, noting that outputs are convincing, can be misused via fine-tuning, and detection is challenging. The experience informed responsible publication norms and bias study; by ChatGPT, these lessons addressed misuse like impersonation, though cheating and detection remain hard.
Ethan Mollick tests Mythos-class AI Claude 5 Fable, noting it outperforms public models across tasks and can execute long, multi-step projects with minimal human input. In experiments, it produced sophisticated outputs—from a 19-page design and a complex Concord software to interactive isochrone maps created via multi-agent research and code, including remote data gathering and verification. While astonishing and enabling, Fable remains a 'black box' with high token costs and strict guardrails; the user shifts from doing to commissioning—being a patron who signs off on outcomes rather than steering every step.
Brexit was an economic trade-off: more domestic control over migration, regulation and trade in return for less EU integration. Ten years on, Brexit left the UK economy smaller than it would have been, via a drag on trade, investment and productivity. The UK left the single market and customs union; tariffs were avoided, but costs rose from customs checks, rules of origin and paperwork; services access shrank; free movement ended. GDP is below baseline, with productivity losses about 4%. Trade and investment weakened; migration shifted. The 2025 Common Understanding offers relief but cannot replicate single-market benefits.
Rayforce is a pure C17, zero-dependency embeddable engine for SIMD-accelerated analytics on columnar data. It fuses columnar analytics and graph traversal into a single operation DAG executed by a multi-pass optimizer and fused morsel-driven bytecode, with no malloc. It ships with Rayfall, a Lisp-like query language and REPL, and provides a C API (include/rayforce.h). Key features include lazy DAG execution, a memory-efficient allocator, a graph engine with algorithms (Dijkstra, DFS, PageRank), columnar storage (CSR, splayed tables), and an HNSW-based ANN index. MIT licensed; Python bindings available.
LD_DEBUG is a Linux environment variable that makes the dynamic linker print debug info about loading shared libraries, helping diagnose version conflicts. Flags include libs, reloc, files, symbols, bindings, versions, all, statistics, unused, and help. Output can be written to a file with LD_DEBUG_OUTPUT. Other helpful tools for linker issues: strace, ldd, objdump, patchelf, LD_PRELOAD. On Windows, ShowLoaderSnaps with gflags and WinDbg provides similar insight. The post includes an example and offers the author’s expert assistance.
Torsten Slok argues there is no AI jobs crisis. Job openings per unemployed worker have risen above 1.0, so more jobs exist than workers. The May 2026 report showed nonfarm payrolls up 172,000, with no evidence that AI like ChatGPT is replacing workers. Sources: BLS, Macrobond, Apollo Chief Economist.
Agora Cosmica is a nonprofit, open-source “Living Library” with 30 historical figures across philosophy, science, art, mysticism, and activism. It pairs hundreds of pre-recorded stories and four-figure councils with live AI conversations and voice, guided by a four-chapter learning arc. The project emphasizes privacy: no tracking cookies, BYOK encryption, self-hostable, AGPL-3.0 code, CC-BY 4.0 content, EU-first hosting, and local data processing. Free tier offers 30 messages/day without signup; roadmap is community-driven via in-app voting.
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