Hackernews posts about Sway
- Silicon Valley is pouring millions into pro-AI PACs to sway midterms (techcrunch.com)
- Guile bindings for Sway window manager (github.com)
- With just a few messages, biased AI chatbots swayed people's political views (www.washington.edu)
- Silicon Valley is pouring millions into pro-AI PACs to sway midterms (techcrunch.com)
- With just a few messages, biased AI chatbots swayed people's political views (www.washington.edu)
- China tops US in climate change research, boosting sway on global policy (asia.nikkei.com)
- AWS CEO says using AI to replace junior staff is 'Dumbest thing I've ever heard' (www.theregister.com)
- Meta accessed women's health data from Flo app without consent, says court (www.malwarebytes.com)
- Neuralink 'Participant 1' says his life has changed (fortune.com)
- Kodak says it might have to cease operations [updated] (www.cnn.com)
- Y Combinator files brief supporting Epic Games, says store fees stifle startups (www.macrumors.com)
- IRS head says free Direct File tax service is 'gone' (www.theverge.com)
- The dead need right to delete their data so they can't be AI-ified, lawyer says (www.theregister.com)
- DOGE Put Critical Social Security Data at Risk, Whistle-Blower Says (www.nytimes.com)
- Say farewell to the AI bubble, and get ready for the crash (www.latimes.com)
- Stop talking to technology executives like they have anything to say (www.stilldrinking.org)
- Meta violated privacy law, jury says in menstrual data fight (www.courthousenews.com)
- Ex-Google Exec Says "The Idea That AI Will Create New Jobs Is 100% Crap" (www.windowscentral.com)
- Microsoft can't guarantee data sovereignty – OVHcloud says 'We told you so' (www.theregister.com)
- Tariff's found illegal, but will stay for now (www.bloomberg.com)
- Microsoft says U.S. law takes precedence over Canadian data sovereignty (www.digitaljournal.com)
- Anthropic's CEO says in 3-6 months, AI will write 90% of the code (March 2025) (www.businessinsider.com)
- Sloppy AI defenses take cybersecurity back to the 1990s, researchers say (www.scworld.com)