OpenAI's Reasoning Models: Chains That Sometimes Snap
OpenAI's latest reasoning models like o3 and o4 aren't just chatty parrots anymore. They think step-by-step, or so the pitch goes—but who's really cashing in on this 'emergence'?
OpenAI's latest reasoning models like o3 and o4 aren't just chatty parrots anymore. They think step-by-step, or so the pitch goes—but who's really cashing in on this 'emergence'?
Intel's nerdy packaging bet could net billions from AI hyperscalers. But fabs don't win races alone.
Your Cybersecurity morning briefing for April 09, 2026 — top stories you need to know.
In a world of tidy bit.ly links, one dev flips the script with a URL Lengthener. It's enterprise satire at its finest — and open source to boot.
Why's a Japanese banking titan dropping 2,000 jobs in North Carolina's upstart finance hub? Charlotte's cheap talent and tax breaks might just flip the script on Wall Street dominance.
Proprietary thermal printer apps are a privacy disaster. Here's how open source pulls you out of the data-mining pit.
Platform engineers dreamed of code gen miracles from Claude. Reality? Agents turning tickets into reviewable PRs, guardrails mandatory—or bust.
Ever wonder why stablecoins — crypto's boring backbone — suddenly have the Treasury's full attention? New rules aim to plug laundering holes, but at what cost to innovation?
Imagine AI agents zipping through vim or npm wizards without stalling. tui-use makes it real, turning human-built terminals into agent playgrounds.
Ever wonder why your security cam feeds end up on shady websites? Tools like Cameradar made it easy to find them. Now its creator wants out.
One dev's plea on Reddit cuts through the noise—open source isn't just free software anymore; it's a frontline tool against ICE and state surveillance. Time to pick up the keyboard.
Threat actors aren't just using AI; they're stealing it. Google's GTIG details a wave of distillation attacks and new AI-malware hybrids that could reshape cyber ops.
Picture this: a innocent-looking PR promising CI magic slips into your repo, only to phone home with your deepest GitHub secrets. That's the nightmare hitting MCP projects right now.
Picture this: your site's in 'coming soon' mode, looking all sleek and professional, while hackers siphon your database dry. That's CVE-2022-46849 in action, folks—a classic SQL injection slip-up in a WordPress plugin nobody thinks twice about.
Imagine waking up to a website that's redesigned itself overnight — complete with AI arguments over pointless features. Command Garden isn't just a joke; it's the spark of self-evolving code.
A single malicious input into an accessibility widget — and poof, your site's database spills open. CVE-2022-47420 strikes at the heart of Online ADA's plugin, a tool millions use for compliance.
Your API pings back 200 OK. Feels good, right? Wrong—it's probably failing spectacularly underneath.
Everyone thought AI agents would just work, humming along on autopilot. Then one got stuck retrying a rate limit forever, torching $400 in an afternoon.
Ever wonder if AI could out-hack humans in real-time cyber battles? Mythos just did, crushing Anthropic's Opus in a CTF showdown that screams platform shift.
What if your company's 'trusted' edge devices are the hackers' favorite backdoor? Google's latest zero-day tally shows 90 exploits in 2025, and enterprises are paying the price.