The Brutalist Report - register
- TSMC, Samsung want slice of America's $52b chip subsidies [1387d]
- Wozniak startup to share orbital space junk data [1387d]
- GNOME 42's inconsistent themes are causing drama [1387d]
- Axed data scientist sues IBM claiming he was discriminated against as a man [1387d]
- Intel counters AMD’s mega-cache PC chip with 5.5GHz 16-core rival [1387d]
- Sophos fixes critical hijack flaw in firewall offering [1387d]
- Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge patched in race against exploitation [1387d]
- AI-generated fake LinkedIn faces probed by Stanford pair [1387d]
- 1,000-plus AI-generated LinkedIn faces uncovered [1387d]
- China APT group using Russia invasion, COVID-19 in phishing attacks [1387d]
- HP bets big on future of hybrid work with $3.3bn Poly buy [1387d]
- US to rev fastest supercomputer with powerful test system [1388d]
- HashiCorp's Armon Dadgar on dodging cloud chaos and supporting open source [1388d]
- Huawei reports first-ever yearly revenue drop, but profits up [1388d]
- Telehouse adds fifth datacenter to Docklands campus in London, UK [1388d]
- Triton malware still a threat to energy sector, FBI warns [1388d]
- Ukraine using Clearview AI to identify slain Russian soldiers [1388d]
- Dems propose privacy-respecting digital dollar [1388d]
- The first step to data privacy is admitting you have a problem, Google [1388d]
- Capgemini wins contract to look after legacy HMRC Aspire tech [1388d]
- Debugging source is even harder when you can't stop laughing at it [1388d]
- Alibaba opens DingTalk collaboration tool to enterprises and developers [1388d]
- Will Chinese giants defy US sanctions on Russia? We asked a ZTE whistleblower [1388d]
- Blockchain powered stock market rebuild started in 2017 delayed again [1388d]
- Okta acknowledges 'mistake' in handling of Lapsus$ attack [1388d]
- Kaspersky, China Telecom, China Mobile named 'threats to US national security' [1388d]
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