Top Hackernews posts from www.wired.com
- OpenAI staff threaten to quit unless board resigns (www.wired.com)
- Apple kills plans to scan for CSAM in iCloud (www.wired.com)
- Trapped in Silicon Valley’s hidden caste system (www.wired.com)
- The FTC Votes Unanimously to Enforce Right to Repair (www.wired.com)
- Companies are paying huge sums to show their ads to bots (www.wired.com)
- Locked out of 'God Mode', runners are hacking their treadmills (www.wired.com)
- Wired has removed "How Google alters search queries" story (www.wired.com)
- 22-year-old builds chips in his parents’ garage (www.wired.com)
- North Korea hacked him, so he took down its internet (www.wired.com)
- The US government is buying troves of data about Americans (www.wired.com)
- A YouTube chat about chess got flagged for hate speech (www.wired.com)
- We Still Don’t Get Things Done (www.wired.com)
- The Google employees who created transformers (www.wired.com)
- OpenAI’s CEO says the age of giant AI models is already over (www.wired.com)
- The hacking of Starlink terminals has begun (www.wired.com)
- Turn your backyard into a biodiversity hotspot (www.wired.com)
- A 25-Year-Old Bet Comes Due: Has Tech Destroyed Society? (www.wired.com)
- The whole of the Whole Earth Catalog is now online (www.wired.com)
- MDMA and psilocybin are approved as medicines in Australia (www.wired.com)
- Tech layoffs are feeding a new startup surge (www.wired.com)
- North Koreans are jailbreaking phones to access forbidden media (www.wired.com)
- The Capitol Attack Doesn’t Justify Expanding Surveillance (www.wired.com)
- Tor is fighting and beating Russian censorship (www.wired.com)
- Drones have transformed blood delivery in Rwanda (www.wired.com)
- Hackers found a way to open any of 3M hotel keycard locks (www.wired.com)
- A revelation about trees is messing with climate calculations (www.wired.com)
- Dashcam footage shows driverless cars clogging San Francisco (www.wired.com)
- The FBI Just Admitted It Bought US Location Data (www.wired.com)
- I Found David Lynch's Lost 'Dune II' Script (www.wired.com)
- Some Americans are breaking out of political echo chambers (www.wired.com)
- Apple wants rights to the image of apples in Switzerland (www.wired.com)
- Ice cream machine hackers sue McDonald's (www.wired.com)
- 22-year-old builds chips in his parents' garage (2022) (www.wired.com)
- The unsettling truth about the ‘Mostly Harmless’ hiker (www.wired.com)
- Apple iMessage Zero-Click Hacks (www.wired.com)
- How The Pentagon learned to use targeted ads to find its targets (www.wired.com)
- New emails released in the McDonald’s ice cream machine lawsuit (www.wired.com)
- Air Canada Has to Honor a Refund Policy Its Chatbot Made Up (www.wired.com)
- Email doesn't suck – it's email clients that need improving (www.wired.com)
- Why WhatsApp Only Needs 50 Engineers for Its 900M Users (2015) (www.wired.com)
- Generative AI could make search harder to trust (www.wired.com)
- The auction that set off the race for AI supremacy (www.wired.com)
- DuckDuckGo’s quest to prove online privacy is possible (www.wired.com)
- I Spent Hundreds of Hours Working in VR (www.wired.com)
- Signal walks the line between anarchism and pragmatism (www.wired.com)
- It's time for an RSS revival (2018) (www.wired.com)
- A Bitcoin bust that took down the web’s biggest child abuse site (www.wired.com)
- Cicadas are so loud, fiber optic cables can ‘hear’ them (www.wired.com)
- India’s government wants total control of the internet (www.wired.com)
- Face recognition is being banned, but it’s still everywhere (www.wired.com)
- They didn’t ask to go viral (www.wired.com)
- Luiz André Barroso has died (www.wired.com)
- Underground fiber optics spy on humans moving above (www.wired.com)
- Everyone Was Wrong About Reverse Osmosis–Until Now (www.wired.com)
- How Google alters search queries to get at your wallet (www.wired.com)
- Proton is trying to become Google without your data (www.wired.com)
- Many popular websites see what you type before you hit submit (www.wired.com)
- Wikipedia Is Finally Asking Big Tech to Pay Up (www.wired.com)
- The UK’s Secretive Web Surveillance Program Is Ramping Up (www.wired.com)
- Bookshop.org survives and thrives in Amazon’s world (www.wired.com)
- The full story of the RSA hack can finally be told (www.wired.com)
- Germany raises red flags about Palantir’s big data dragnet (www.wired.com)
- Twitter’s $42k-per-month API prices out nearly everyone (www.wired.com)
- People hate the idea of car-free cities until they live in one (www.wired.com)
- Big data may not know your name, but it knows everything else (www.wired.com)
- Telegram Became the Anti-Facebook (www.wired.com)
- A $3B Silk Road seizure will erase Ross Ulbricht’s debt (www.wired.com)
- It's time to bring back the AIM away message (www.wired.com)
- One man’s quest to revive the great American vacuum tube (www.wired.com)
- TikTok’s greatest asset isn’t its algorithm, it’s your phone (www.wired.com)
- Interview with Yanis Varoufakis on Technofeudalism (www.wired.com)
- System76's Lemur Pro Laptop Is Just a Nice Linux Laptop (www.wired.com)
- An Ominous Heating Event Is Unfolding in the Oceans (www.wired.com)
- Chinese hacking spree hit an ‘astronomical’ number of victims (www.wired.com)
- A history of Hup, the jump sound of shooting games (www.wired.com)