General
The Verge reports on Grammarly’s Expert Review feature, which uses AI to surface writing suggestions inspired by real experts, including some deceased or widely cited figures. The article documents misattributions, questionable source links, and scenarios where AI-generated feedback impersonates editors without explicit permission, raising concerns about consent and transparency. This piece highlights the potential risks to trust and brand integrity for AI-assisted writing tools and for users who rely on AI in professional contexts.
Researchers reveal a novel phishing method that uses the .arpa TLD in combination with IPv6 reverse DNS to hide malicious links. The attack exploits DNS providers that permit creat…
The article explains building a large procedurally generated hex map using Wave Function Collapse (WFC) with a modular multi-grid approach, backtracking, and recovery strategies. I…
Meta renews its commitment to jemalloc, emphasizing reduced maintenance and modernization to adapt to current hardware and workloads. The post unarchives the jemalloc repository an…
Nicholas Carlini offers an actionable, opinionated framework for doing important research and writing papers that matter. He covers idea generation, collaboration, literature readi…