
A jury has found Sam Bankman-Fried guilty of all seven criminal counts against him.

A jury has found Sam Bankman-Fried guilty of all seven criminal counts against him.
Content pruning for SEO threatens web history, and experts say it is ill-advised.
1 million Pi models a month are being made until supplies return to normal.
I've been shocked by how expensive (though also powerful) these pis have gotten.
They're easier to recycle, and chips come right off. Will they take off?
Cool stuff!
For Zuck, it's just another marketing phrase. For developers, it's the rules of the road
Arc is the biggest new thing in browsers in a long time — and the waitlist is finally gone.
Interesting new browser that's become pretty popular lately
Sam Altman’s Worldcoin token to launch Monday
The coin has the ambitious goal of solving online identity authentication and income inequality.
The token has been controversial in Silicon Valley for its ambitious and unorthodox approach to trying to solve two vexing problems: Online identity authentication and income inequality.
Link to: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-66256081
Behavior of OpenAI models about as consistent as Office 365's uptime
I'm inclined to agree in general. GPT has actually gotten worse over time.
For one it's just way too locked down now. But I also have noticed a decline in overall quality of responses, especially for technical stuff. It used to translate between programming languages quite well, and that's been more broken lately.
I'm wondering if they purged a bunch of copyrighted material from it and that's why it got dumber.
Meta promised to make Threads compatible with W3C open standard for social media.
While Zuckerberg's Threads reels in users at record rates
Departure follows layoffs, project cancellations, and other chaos.
In other words, he doesn't trust Google not to randomly kill projects.
'We already have various legal options in the drawer,' says Max Schrems, lawyer who killed the first two deals
The EU-US Data Privacy Framework (DPF) is the third attempt between the trading bloc and the US to iron out privacy kinks in the flow of data about their citizens. This latest agreement marks the EU's determination that "the United States ensures an adequate level of protection – comparable to that of the European Union – for personal data transferred from the EU to US companies under the new framework," the Commission said in a statement.
Key to today's decision [PDF] was an October executive order signed by US President Joe Biden that the Commission said adds new safeguards that address the problems raised with the second attempt at a transatlantic data agreement, Privacy Shield.
The Google Pixel Fold cut corners to compete with Samsung's foldable phones, and it shows in its teardown.
TL/DR: Google used flimsier parts that are more likely to break over time (aluminum over stainless steel, etc).
Comedian Sarah Silverman, novelists sue OpenAI for scraping books
Plus: Adobe is limiting how staff can use external generative AI tools, and the Pentagon is testing different large language models
US Spies Are Buying Americans' Private Data. Congress Has a Chance to Stop It
The National Defense Authorization Act now includes draft language forbidding government entities from buying Americans' search histories, location data, and more.
Want to try out Meta’s new social media app? Here’s more context on what personal data is collected by Threads and similar social media apps.
The Nubia RedMagic 8S Pro+ gaming phone sports a huge spec sheet.
Meanwhile my iPhone 12 Mini is doing great with 4 gigs.