The recent online leak of Pentagon information is providing some deja vu to gamers, who've seen the release of military secrets in video game forums turn into a trend in recent years.
Why it matters: Past incidents show how hard it is to stop such leaks. It's easy to post documents online, and the urge to win an argument or otherwise impress online peers is strong.
Twitter on Friday removed the “government-funded media" label from the main Twitter accounts for several public media companies, including some that had publicly denounced it.
Why it matters: The labels drove several outlets to suspend their use of Twitter. NPR, PBS and CBC stopped tweeting after Musk placed the labels on their main accounts earlier this month.
A recent North Korea-linked supply chain attack targeting video conferencing tool 3CX was actually two supply chain attacks in one, researchers at Mandiant have found.
Driving the news: Researchers laid out their findings in a blog post published Thursday, saying the discovery marks the "first time Mandiant has seen a software supply chain attack lead to another software supply chain attack."
Elon Musk on Thursday said that he is personally paying for select users to remain verified on Twitter, even when those users had indicated they didn't want that status under his new system of blue check marks as a subscription perk.
State of play: Earlier Thursday, Twitter finally began removing most of the blue check marks from the hundreds of thousands of accounts belonging to celebrities, journalists, and other public figures who had been verified by Twitter before Musk changed the rules.
While many fret that AI threatens to take opportunities away from human artists, several practitioners took to the TED stage on Thursday to show the power that can emerge when they collaborate with technology.
Why it matters: Questions around AI are often framed as a battle between man and machine, ignoring what's possible when they team up instead.
Ex-Apple employee Imran Chaudhri gave TED attendees on Thursday an early glimpse of the AI-powered wearable that his startup, Humane, has been developing.
Why it matters: The screenless device, which does not require a nearby cell phone to work, uses a combination of voice and gestures for input and can display information by projecting it onto nearby objects.