Front-page articles summarized hourly.
German researchers led by Christoph Heine found that the ability to accurately judge someone else’s intelligence depends largely on the judge’s own intelligence. Involving 198 participants who watched 50 one-minute clips of people with verified intelligence levels, the study identified three good-judges: more intelligent individuals, better readers of emotion, and those with higher life satisfaction. The cues they used were clarity of articulation and vocabulary, not appearance or posture. Gender, empathy, openness did not predict accuracy. Limitations: mostly students; short clips may not reflect real-life judgments.
An IIT Delhi student launches iitsocial.com, scraping student data to create anonymous profiles where users post comments and tags; notifications go to official IITD emails. The site goes viral within hours on a campus of about 5k undergrads. A student with campus influence demands its takedown; IIT security and the cyber police intervene. The Dean and security pressure him; his phone is confiscated and privacy violated; he cries. After a tense meeting, the Dean is supportive; the site is taken down, relaunched, then sunk again. Final stats: ~7k visitors, 16k posts; he aims to be a future entrepreneur.
18-year retrospective by Peter N. M. Hansteen on greytrapping. On Aug 7, 2025 spamtraps exceeded Norway’s population (about 5.60M). Begun in 2007 with OpenBSD spamd, it traces the shift from self-hosted mail to cloud services, IPv4 limits, and growing centralization. The piece catalogs monthly/hourly trap data (2017–2025) and notes a late-2024 move to creating synthetic traps. End-2025 total: ~17.0M; Jan 2026 adds ~5.7M, crossing 22.5M. The method remains useful but has constraints, especially around IPv6.
The Cult Of Vibe Coding Is Insane argues that extreme dogfooding—vibe coding, where developers avoid looking under the hood and rely on AI-generated output—is misguided. While AI helps, there is still human input and infrastructure; pure vibe coding is a myth. The Claude leak is used as an example of neglecting audits, duplications, and messy design. With proper guidance and an audit process (Ask mode), AI can clean up code and improve quality. Bad software is a choice you make—own it and do better.
An essay contrasting a Casio F-91W with an Apple Watch to show how modern devices demand ongoing maintenance: updates, accounts, passwords, subscriptions, and constant interruptions. It argues that products no longer finish at purchase; they form an ecosystem that exhausts users, turning upkeep into a daily job and blaming the user for overuse. The piece reframes resistance as structural, not personal failure. The Casio, in contrast, remains silent and unchanging—a rare, last quiet thing.
GovAuctions aggregates government surplus listings from GSA Auctions, GovDeals, HUD and other official platforms into one free, searchable feed. Users can search, filter by keyword, category, state or distance, and click through to bid on the original platform—no middleman, no credits. It covers vehicles, equipment, electronics, real estate, seized assets, and more across all states. The site explains government surplus auctions, the fragmentation of official platforms, and provides guides on buying, flipping, and platform comparisons, plus email alerts for new listings.
OSnews reports that Adobe Creative Cloud on Windows/macOS secretly writes entries to the system hosts file to detect if Creative Cloud is installed when visiting adobe.com. It loads detect-ccd.creativecloud.adobe.com/cc.png; if a hosts DNS entry exists, the browser connects to Adobe’s server to signal installation. They switched from localhost-based checks after Chrome blocked Local Network Access. Critics compare it to the Sony BMG rootkit and warn that such system-level modification is dangerous and should be QC’d, noting widespread hosts-file blocks (hundreds of entries) in tools designed to block Adobe.
Open-source, fantasy-themed, turn-based strategy game with single-player and online/hotseat multiplayer. Wesnoth offers a rich world of quests and battles across 17 single-player campaigns and 55 multiplayer maps, featuring 200+ unit types across seven factions. It is highly moddable via WML/Lua and supports cross-platform play on Windows, macOS, and Linux, with translations in 30+ languages and a large add-on community. Downloads are available as stable releases (Steam, itch.io, Mac App Store) and a development version for veterans. Donations fund servers, artwork, and music.
Sky is an Elm-inspired language that compiles to Go, with Hindley–Milner types and a server-driven UI (Sky.Live) that runs a full-stack app as a single portable binary. The compiler is self-hosted (written in Sky, compiled to Go, producing ~4MB binary) and auto-generates Go bindings for Go packages and Sky packages. It uses the Elm Architecture for UI, SSE-based server-side updates, and a Go-based runtime with no Node.js dependencies. Includes a built-in package manager, LSP, CLI, and examples; MIT licensed.
Reducto announces Deep Extract, an autonomous, agent-in-the-loop extraction method that verifies and corrects itself until results meet a defined quality threshold. Designed for long documents and multi-line items (invoices, statements, manifests), it breaks tasks into sub-agents and iterates to 99–100% field accuracy, often outperforming human labelers. It provides granular citations bounding boxes for auditability. In beta, it handled complex documents (county payments, agricultural invoices, cattle sales) improving accuracy from 10–20% to near perfection. Available now via the Extract endpoint with deep_extract: true; docs at docs.reducto.ai.
Macs prompt you to press keys near the left and right Shift when you connect a new keyboard to identify its physical layout (ANSI/US, ISO/European, or JIS/Japanese). Since keyboards don’t report their layout, macOS uses the nearby key as a signal to map keys correctly, even for non-standard or split keyboards. A wrong layout is mostly cosmetic, but correct physical layout matters for certain keys, especially on Japanese keyboards. Apple keyboards skip the dialog because they self-identify; third‑party devices often appear as unknown, triggering the prompt. The method is primitive but clever.
Two recent papers imply cryptographically relevant quantum computers could break 256-bit ECC far sooner than hoped, threatening WebPKI and other systems. Google’s results lower the required resources; Oratomic shows 10k qubits with non-local connectivity could suffice. Experts warn 2029 as a hard deadline. The risk is immediate and unacceptable; we must ship post-quantum crypto now. Use ML-KEM for key exchange and ML-DSA-44 for signatures; drop hybrids. Symmetric crypto needs no change beyond avoiding oversized keys. TEEs aren’t PQ-ready. Start migrating cryptographic identities now to avoid store‑now‑decrypt‑later attacks.
Freestyle provides scalable, persistent Linux VM sandboxes for AI agents, with real root access and nested virtualization. You can create repos and VMs via API, fork VMs, run dev servers, lint/test, and have AI review diffs. Features include live forking, pause/resume with idle-cost savings, persistent state, VM-host networking, and run-VMs-inside-VMs; GitHub bidirectional sync and webhooks; telemetry, policy rules, and mission control tooling. The docs show code examples for creating repos, setting up dev servers, delegating tasks to AI assistants, and automating reviews, with claims of instant VM startup and thousands of agents.
WSJ 404 page: The requested page can’t be found. It directs users to verify the URL and to email [email protected] if the issue occurred via the site. The page also features popular articles (A Downed Airman… Iran; Trump Warns Iran He Could Strike ‘Every Power Plant’…; More Americans Are Breaking Into the Upper Middle Class) and latest podcasts (Stocks Open Higher on Cease-Fire Efforts; TNB Tech Minute: OpenAI Publishes New AI Policy Proposals; Trump Threatens Iran’s Power Plants).
Showbiz411 reports that Dallas Little's AI creation Eddie Dalton has surged onto iTunes, occupying eleven spots in the top 100 singles and number three on the albums chart. The AI singer, who has no real recording process or existence, was released via prompts and AI-generated videos. Despite 1.2 million YouTube views for one video, Luminate shows only about 6,900 tracks sold, and there is no radio airplay or streaming. The piece questions whether iTunes is gaming charts and whether listeners understand the situation.
An issue documents a major regression in Claude Code's ability to handle complex engineering tasks after the February updates. Analysis of 6,852 session files and 234,760 tool calls shows a sharp drop in thinking depth following the redaction rollout (redact-thinking-2026-02-12), with the model shifting from research-first to edit-first behavior. Consequences include more edits without reading, more reasoning loops, missed conventions, and increased stop-hook violations and user interruptions. Quality declines drive thrashing in large fleet workflows and higher compute per useful output. Proposals: expose thinking tokens, offer a guaranteed deep-thinking tier, and monitor canary metrics.
sc-im (Spreadsheet Calculator Improvised) is an ncurses, Vim‑like terminal spreadsheet program based on sc. It supports undo/redo, 65,536 rows by 702 columns (expandable to 1,048,576), plus CSV/TAB, XLSX, and ODS imports/exports and Markdown export. Features include direct color and wide-char support, multilingual alphabets, sorting, filtering, subtotals, cell shifting, clipboard, GNUPlot, and Lua scripting with external C modules. It can run as a non-interactive calculator and includes tutorials and installation notes. The project is solo-led and seeking donations.
Generative AI makes propaganda cheap and fast, packaging war in toy- or game-like visuals that go viral. State and nonstate actors from Iran, China, Russia, ISIS, and the U.S. produce AI-driven memes and videos (LEGO, Inside Out, Wii Sports) to shape perception. The key is engagement: content travels because it's familiar and novel, not because it is true. Platforms struggle to attribute and moderate; users disseminate content with or without endorsement. The result is an environment where virality, not accuracy, dominates, shaping public perception of conflicts even when actual events are underreported.
The New Yorker profiles Explosive News, a young, independent Iranian media project that shifted last year to AI-generated Lego-style propaganda criticizing the U.S. and its allies. The viral clips caricature world leaders as yellow Lego figures, celebrate or mock war, and weave conspiracy theories, satire, and trauma into visuals. The videos have circulated widely, being reposted by Iranian state outlets, promoted by Russian media, and co-opted by No Kings protesters, even as the team claims no government backing. Critics label the style 'slopaganda'—highly produced AI propaganda for mass engagement. YouTube/Instagram removed them; Telegram/X remain; they pursue bigger formats.
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