General
Princeton's CITP blog argues that internet voting is fundamentally insecure, outlining three core weaknesses: voter device malware, server-side tampering, and insider risks. It also critiques End-to-End Verifiable models and the VoteSecure project, emphasizing reliance on peer-reviewed science over press releases for election security.
Black Forest Labs releases FLUX.2 [klein], a family of fast image models delivering sub-second generation/editing and real-time inference on consumer hardware. The 4B variants are …
This Reddit post highlights the demand for AI-powered call answering that sounds natural enough to avoid turning customers away. The author seeks tools that handle basic inquiries …
Archaeologists uncovered the wreck of an enormous medieval cargo ship off Denmark, a cog named Svaelget 2, built around 1410 CE. The ship measured about 28 meters long and 9 meters…
A federal judge issued a default judgment against Anna’s Archive, ordering the shadow library to delete WorldCat data and stop scraping, storing, or distributing it. The ruling cit…