T/technology

  1. So Long Jeeves and Ask.com, Relics of Yesterday’s Internet Business, Today

    The pioneering search engine shut down on May 1, after nearly 30 years in operation.

  2. Why the A.I. Job Apocalypse (Probably) Won’t Happen Opinion, Today

    The feeling of efficiency should be mistrusted.

  3. Cómo controlar la adicción al teléfono En español, Today

    Contar los minutos es una mala forma de frenar los hábitos telefónicos. He aquí los verdaderos antídotos, según los expertos.

  4. How Do So Many People Already Own Elon Musk’s SpaceX? Technology, May 1

    Even before the rocket company holds a major initial public offering, many people own stock in it through so-called special purpose vehicles.

  5. Probablemente tus contraseñas estén en peligro En español, May 1

    La fantasía de los hackers se hizo realidad cuando el nuevo modelo de IA de Anthropic demostró que podía detectar vulnerabilidades de software.

  6. Musk vs. Altman: What Is This Really About? Video, May 1

    In a landmark trial between Elon Musk and OpenAI’s Sam Altman, the origins of OpenAI are being examined. The Times’s technology reporter Cade Metz explains what’s behind it all.

  7. Still Powered by iPhones, Apple Reports 17% Sales Jump Technology, April 30

    The Silicon Valley company, which is undergoing a chief executive transition, also reported a 19 percent increase in profit.

  8. Is A.I. a Threat to Humanity? Not in This Trial. Technology, April 30

    One of Elon Musk’s abiding fears is that A.I. could one day threaten humans. But the jurors deciding his suit against OpenAI probably won’t hear about it.

  9. The April 30 Openai Trial Sam Altman Elon Musk live blog included three standalone posts:
  10. Palantir Is Making a French Chore Coat. Yes, That Palantir. Style, April 30

    The data analysis company is selling a version of the jacket that it says will show its commitment to “re-industrializing America.”

  11. Why Are We Still Driving? Opinion, April 30

    Confronting the weirdness of a Waymo future.

  12. The A.I. Fear Keeping Silicon Valley Up at Night Opinion, April 30

    The people building A.I. fear that we have only a short time before advanced A.I. disrupts the labor force.

  13. Struggling With Phone Addiction? Try These Remedies. Technology, April 30

    Counting minutes is a poor way to curb phone habits. Real antidotes, experts say, include mindful parenting, curated content and human connection.

  14. A Tech Writer Puts Google’s A.I. to the Test as a Trip Planner Travel, April 30

    Gemini is a digital Swiss Army knife for planning flights, activities and routes, but it isn’t perfect. Why did it forget to put underwear on the packing list?

  15. Musk Says He ‘Was a Fool’ to Provide OpenAI’s Early Funding Technology, April 29

    In the second day of a trial pitting Mr. Musk against OpenAI, he said he was misled by the company’s chief executive, Sam Altman. But OpenAI’s lawyer said evidence showed the opposite.

  16. A.I. Spending Sets a Record, With No End in Sight Technology, April 29

    Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta reported more than $130 billion in quarterly capital expenditures on Wednesday as they build A.I. data centers. There’s more to come.

  17. The April 29 Openai Trial Sam Altman Elon Musk live blog included three standalone posts:
  18. Uber Can Already Bring You Dinner. Now, It Wants to Book Your Hotel Room. Travel, April 29

    In partnership with Expedia, the ride-booking, food-delivering, package-transporting service takes another step toward becoming a super app.

  19. Behind the A.I. Boom, a Boring Business Is Soaring With Better Ads Technology, April 29

    Google and Meta are enjoying a digital ad boom, as artificial intelligence automates marketing and drives record sales.

  20. In Backlash Against Tech in Schools, Parents Are Winning Rollbacks Technology, April 29

    From Salt Lake City to New York City, parents are demanding more sway over the digital tools that schools give children.

  21. Meta Accused of Failing to Keep Children Off Instagram and Facebook in Europe Business, April 29

    European Union regulators said the company did not have effective controls to check a user’s self-declared date of birth, in violation of an online safety law.

  22. OpenAI Trial Starts With Two Very Different Tales of a Company’s Early Years Technology, April 28

    In the trial’s first day of testimony, Elon Musk said greed led co-founder Sam Altman to pull the A.I. lab away from its nonprofit roots. OpenAI says that’s nonsense.

  23. The April 28 Openai Sam Altman Elon Musk Trial live blog included 8 standalone posts:
  24. ‘¿También tú, Bruto?’ Entendiendo el conflicto entre Elon Musk y Sam Altman En español, April 28

    La demanda de Musk contra Altman y OpenAI demuestra que la codicia total es el rasgo definitorio de Silicon Valley.

  25. Offbeat Obituaries Honor Loss With Levity (and Brutal Honesty) U.S., April 28

    Irreverent tributes filled with unvarnished truths and funny anecdotes, which run counter to more somber traditional obituaries, have gained attention for “how alive they feel,” a researcher said.

  26. Google Signs A.I. Deal With the Pentagon Technology, April 28

    The Pentagon has also signed deals for using A.I. on classified networks with OpenAI and Elon Musk’s xAI, amid a dispute with Anthropic.

  27. Here Are the Key Players in the OpenAI Trial Technology, April 28

    Elon Musk, Sam Altman and several other key artificial intelligence industry figures are slated to testify in the trial, which is expected to last several weeks.

  28. Elon Musk Assails Sam Altman on Social Media Before OpenAI Trial Technology, April 28

    Mr. Musk’s posts on X have pushed his narrative that OpenAI has lost its way.

  29. Political Campaigns Have No Idea What’s About to Hit Them Opinion, April 28

    Social media helped put Trump over the top. What’s A.I. going to do to us?

  30. Anger About Internet Restrictions Breathes Some Life Into Russian Politics World, April 28

    From beauty influencers to the token political opposition, Russians are openly questioning President Vladimir V. Putin’s moves to hamstring access.

  31. Your Passwords Are Probably Screwed Opinion, April 28

    Nobody can afford to be relaxed about their digital security anymore.

  32. Et Tu, Brute? What Elon Musk’s Clash With Sam Altman Is Really About. Technology, April 28

    Mr. Musk’s lawsuit against Mr. Altman and OpenAI makes the case that all-encompassing greed is Silicon Valley’s defining feature.

  33. Facebook Has a Health Scam Problem Well, April 27

    A new report found hundreds of thousands of scam ads for medical products, some of which were illegal or had been deemed dangerous.

  34. From Indiana to Idaho, a Backlash Against A.I. Gathers Momentum Technology, April 27

    The widening movement is pulling in people from all walks of life, united by a worry that Big Tech will cash in while average Americans bear the costs.

  35. War and Nachos on My Social Media Feed Opinion, April 27

    The feed makes everything, bombs and nachos and the dead, weigh the same. Which is to say: nothing.

  36. Altman, Musk and the A.I. Spectacle Come to ‘The Town’ Technology, April 27

    Oakland, Calif., where Elon Musk’s trial against OpenAI and its chief executive, Sam Altman, starts on Monday, is not exactly known as a hub of the tech industry.

  37. Microsoft and OpenAI Loosen Their Partnership Technology, April 27

    Microsoft, OpenAI’s biggest financial partner, will continue to license the start-up’s technology but will no longer be its exclusive licensee.

  38. Oprah Winfrey Moves Her Podcast (and Books and Products) to Amazon Business, April 27

    The multiyear deal with Ms. Winfrey signifies the tech giant’s growing ambitions in video podcasts.

  39. Supreme Court Reviews Police Use of Cell Location Data to Find Criminals U.S., April 27

    Geofence searches allow law enforcement to find suspects and witnesses by sweeping up location data from cellphone users near crime scenes.

  40. Rumors and Speculation Swirl Online After Shooting at Washington Dinner Technology, April 26

    Influencers jumped to fill the information void with conspiracy theories about the attack at the White House Correspondents’ dinner on Saturday.

  41. Can an A.I. Company Ever Be Good? Opinion, April 26

    The short answer: not really. The long answer: maybe with a little help.

  42. A Year Later, Trump’s ‘Most Exclusive’ Memecoin Event Is a Lot Less Exclusive Technology, April 25

    Even a Times reporter qualified for the event, which caused outrage last year for providing access to President Trump in exchange for investment in one of his family’s crypto ventures.

  43. In Wine Country, Sales Are Down and Fraud is Rampant Business, April 25

    The industry’s murky supply chain has long attracted scammers and con artists. In the words of one expert, “Wine and fraud go hand in hand.”

  44. Iran’s Meme War Against Trump Ushers In a Future of ‘Slopaganda’ Interactive, April 25

    The country’s propaganda apparatus has harnessed artificial intelligence tools to reach a global online audience primed for irony, irreverence and trolling.

  45. Qué es la ‘inteligencia irregular’ y cómo puede redefinir el debate sobre la IA En español, April 25

    La IA siempre ha sido comparada con la inteligencia humana, pero quizá esa no sea la forma más adecuada de entenderla. Sus fortalezas permiten anticipar qué empleos podría sustituir.

  46. Tim Cook hizo maravillas por Apple. También por China En español, April 25

    El exdirector ejecutivo convirtió a Apple en un gigante, pero lo hizo arriesgando la seguridad económica y política de Estados Unidos.

  47. Un perrito robot para cuidar a tus padres en su vejez En español, April 25

    Nuevas tecnologías de monitoreo ayudan a los adultos mayores a recordar que tomen sus pastillas o a entablar conversaciones con un robot mientras aligeran la carga para los cuidadores que no pueden estar siempre con ellos.

  48. Google Commits to Invest Up to $40 Billion in Anthropic Technology, April 24

    The investment comes as the A.I. start-up looks to keep up with accelerating demand for its business and coding products.

  49. 5 Tall Tasks for Apple’s New C.E.O. Technology, April 24

    John Ternus will face many of the same issues that Tim Cook has grappled with for years.

  50. Sam Altman’s Next High-Wire Act: Getting OpenAI to Make More Money Technology, April 24

    Mr. Altman, who has faced criticism over OpenAI’s direction, has culled company projects and is trying to be more disciplined with strategy.

  51. How Elon Musk Used SpaceX to Benefit Himself and His Businesses Technology, April 24

    The rocket maker has been a useful financial tool for Mr. Musk, providing the billionaire with loans and aiding his struggling companies, a Times examination found.

  52. DeepSeek’s Sequel Set to Extend China’s Reach in Open-Source A.I. Business, April 24

    Chinese companies have embraced making their most advanced artificial intelligence models available to all.

  53. Intel’s Revenues Soar, Aided by A.I. Boom Technology, April 23

    The chip maker reported a 7 percent rise to $13.6 billion in its latest quarter, more than $1 billion more than Wall Street expected.

  54. Microsoft Targets About 7% of Its U.S. Workers With Buyout Offer Business, April 23

    The tech giant is offering long-serving employees early retirements as it continues to invest aggressively in artificial intelligence.

  55. Meta to Cut 10% of Work Force in A.I. Push Technology, April 23

    The layoffs affect about 8,000 employees, with Meta also planning to close 6,000 open roles, as the company focuses on artificial intelligence.

  56. OpenAI Unveils Its New, More Powerful Model Technology, April 23

    The maker of ChatGPT is taking a more open approach to cybersecurity than its chief rival, Anthropic.

  57. Elon Musk and Sam Altman’s Epic Fight Heads to Court Technology, April 23

    A jury trial that is set to start on Monday could shift the course of the A.I. race, with Mr. Musk seeking billions of dollars in damages from Mr. Altman’s OpenAI.

  58. Tim Cook: Great for Apple Investors. Not as Great for America. Opinion, April 23

    Tim Cook made Apple a juggernaut, but he did so by risking America’s economic and political security.

  59. Mythos, el nuevo modelo de IA de Anthropic, activa las alarmas globales En español, April 23

    La conmoción por Mythos se produce en un momento en el que existe una mínima cooperación internacional en materia de IA. No existe un equivalente del Tratado sobre la No Proliferación de las Armas Nucleares, ni inspecciones compartidas, ni normas acordadas.

  60. Crypto Entrepreneur Files Fraud Suit Against Trump Family Firm Technology, April 22

    Justin Sun, one of the largest backers of World Liberty Financial, sued the Trump family’s crypto start-up, accusing it of a fraudulent scheme to pressure him into buying digital coins.

  61. Anthropic’s New A.I. Model Sets Off Global Alarms Technology, April 22

    Mythos has triggered emergency responses from central banks and intelligence agencies globally, as Anthropic decides who has access to the powerful model.

  62. Anthropic’s Leaked Code Tests Copyright Challenges in A.I. Era Technology, April 22

    Artificial intelligence tools are making it faster than ever to reproduce creative work. Does copyright even matter anymore?

  63. Mars or the Moon or A.I.? Elon Musk’s Changing Goals for SpaceX. Technology, April 22

    As SpaceX prepares to go public, Mr. Musk has proposed moonshots that differ from the company’s original aim of reaching Mars.

  64. Advirtió sobre los peligros de la IA. Ojalá su padre hubiera hecho caso En español, April 22

    Ben Riley, quien escribe un boletín sobre los riesgos de los chatbots, no supo qué hacer cuando su padre empezó a confiar en la inteligencia artificial para manejar su diagnóstico de cáncer.

  65. Was Tim Cook Stylish? Style, April 21

    The unassuming look of the outgoing Apple chief executive was an asset, as he navigated pop culture, the president and following Steve Jobs.

  66. An Attack on Sam Altman Sends a Terrifying Message Opinion, April 21

    The attack against Sam Altman reflects how badly Silicon Valley needs to address the societal consequences of its products.

  67. How Apple Became a $4 Trillion Company Under Tim Cook Business, April 21

    If the Steve Jobs era was defined by technological innovation, the Tim Cook period was one of exceptional financial growth.

  68. A Wish List for the Man Replacing Tim Cook as Apple’s C.E.O. Technology, April 21

    John Ternus, an Apple veteran who runs hardware engineering, will take over an extraordinarily profitable company in need of new ideas.

  69. Even Without Internet Access, Prisoners Are Trying to Benefit From A.I. Business, April 21

    Most prisons forbid online access. But inmates are finding ways to ask chatbots questions anyway.

  70. Tim Cook to Step Down as Apple C.E.O. Video, April 21

    Tim Cook said on Monday that he would step down as the chief executive of Apple after nearly 15 years. John Ternus, the head of Apple’s hardware engineering, will take over in September.

  71. Tim Cook dejará de ser director ejecutivo de Apple En español, April 21

    El líder del fabricante de los iPhone será sustituido por John Ternus, jefe de ingeniería de hardware de la empresa.

  72. Amazon Plans to Invest Up to $25 Billion in Anthropic Technology, April 20

    Anthropic also committed to spending $100 billion on Amazon technologies that can help build and deploy A.I. systems.

  73. Apple C.E.O.s Through the Years: From Michael Scott (Not That One) to John Ternus Technology, April 20

    Apple’s corner office has been a seat from which executives like Steve Jobs changed how we interact with technology.

  74. Tim Cook Will Step Down as Apple C.E.O. Technology, April 20

    The longtime leader of the iPhone maker will be replaced by John Ternus, the company’s head of hardware engineering.

  75. California Accuses Amazon of Price Fixing in Legal Filing Technology, April 20

    The state claimed the e-commerce giant pressured brands like Levi’s and Hanes to ask competing retailers to raise prices on certain products.

  76. Iran Eases Some Internet Restrictions, as Wider Blackout Passes 50th Day World, April 19

    Critics say Iran may be creating a “tiered internet” model, where access is limited to the politically and economically privileged.

  77. You Can’t Game Your Way to a Real Education Opinion, April 19

    Technology must return to its proper place in the classroom — as a supplemental tool rather than the source and summit of education.

  78. White House and Anthropic Hold ‘Productive’ Meeting, Aiming for a Compromise Technology, April 17

    Friday’s meeting at the White House followed the introduction of Anthropic’s powerful new artificial intelligence model, Mythos, which U.S. officials believe could be critical for security.

  79. Cerebras, an A.I. Chip Maker, Files to Go Public as Tech Offerings Ramp Up Technology, April 17

    The Silicon Valley chip maker filed a prospectus just as SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI prepared for their own listings, in what is shaping up to be a wave of enormous initial public offerings.

  80. How Do You Measure an A.I. Boom? Technology, April 17

    A chart created by METR, a nonprofit A.I. organization, has become an industrywide obsession as it measures the rapid development of big A.I. systems.

  81. The Long-Term Plan to Scrub Carbon From the Sky Climate, April 16

    Microsoft is pulling back from efforts to remove carbon from the atmosphere. But the nascent industry’s proponents say they are thinking in decades, not years.

  82. Este es el fin de internet tal y como lo conocemos En español, April 16

    En la carrera por poner parches en los agujeros de ciberseguridad encontrados por los modelos de IA más recientes, corremos el riesgo de dejar a demasiadas personas a su suerte.

  83. What We Lose When Everything Is ‘-Coded’ Magazine, April 16

    On the social internet, our fascination with analyzing the hidden messages in our culture has been flattened into one word.

  84. The Rise of the Sugar Mommy Economy Opinion, April 16

    What a shift in the dating preferences of younger men reveals about our changing norms.

  85. Carbon Removal Industry Reels as Microsoft Retreats Climate, April 16

    Once held up as a key solution to climate change, a field that aims to remove carbon from the atmosphere is struggling to catch on.

  86. Starmer Summons U.S. Social Media Companies Over Child Safety Online World, April 15

    The British prime minister will meet with executives from Meta, Google and other companies on Thursday as his government explores how to protect children from online harms.

  87. It’s the End of the Internet as We Know It Opinion, April 15

    In the race to patch up cybersecurity holes found by the newest A.I. models, we risk leaving too many people to fend for themselves.

  88. Executive Who Led Ford’s Electric Car Push Is Leaving Business, April 15

    Doug Field, a former Tesla and Apple executive, had returned to Ford Motor in 2021 to help develop new electric models and software.

  89. Ad Companies Settle With F.T.C. Over Claims of Harm to Conservative Sites Technology, April 15

    WPP, Dentsu and Publicis settled claims they colluded on policies to combat misinformation, denying ad revenue to publishers on the right.

  90. Snap Is Laying Off 16% of Full-Time Staff as It Embraces A.I. Business, April 15

    The company, which owns the social media app Snapchat, said it was laying off about 1,000 employees as it increased its reliance on artificial intelligence.

  91. In the Tech Heart of Texas, an Art Show Built on Data, Code and A.I. Arts, April 15

    The showcase features works that change from hour to hour, invite interaction and interrogate the idea of creativity itself.

  92. How ‘Jagged Intelligence’ Can Reframe the A.I. Debate Technology, April 15

    A.I. has always been compared to human intelligence, but that may not be the right way to think about it. What it does well can help predict what jobs it may replace.

  93. Spice Up Your Cooking Skills With Help From Your Phone Technology, April 15

    Recipe apps and artificial intelligence can give you a boost, but free tools already on your device can also assist with meal planning and preparation.

  94. Why It’s Crucial We Understand How A.I. ‘Thinks’ Magazine, April 15

    For us to trust it on certain subjects, researchers in the growing field of interpretability might need to learn how to open the black box of its brain.

  95. How Older Adults Are Using V.R. to Counter Social Isolation Technology, April 15

    New tools tailored for use in senior living communities allow for shared experiences and social bonding.

  96. Like Anthropic, OpenAI Will Share Latest Technology Only With Trusted Companies Technology, April 14

    The maker of ChatGPT announced the limited release of GPT-5.4-Cyber, a technology designed to find security holes in software.

  97. Amazon Buys Globalstar for $10.8 Billion to Build Its Efforts in Space Technology, April 14

    The e-commerce giant is buying Globalstar, a satellite communications company, as it aims to expand its own satellite internet service to compete with Elon Musk’s Starlink.

  98. The Workers Letting A.I. Do Their Jobs The Daily, April 14

    In an era of agents powered by artificial intelligence, many programmers are barely programming.

  99. She Has an A.I. Lover. Her Son Has Questions. Opinion, April 14

    What happens when your parent falls in love with an A.I. chatbot?

  100. Man Held in Attack on OpenAI Chief’s Home Had List of A.I. Leaders, Officials Say Technology, April 14

    The authorities said a 20-year-old Texas man charged with throwing a homemade bomb at the gate of Sam Altman’s home had written at length about the threat of A.I.

  101. We Can’t Stop China From Building Powerful A.I. Here’s What We Can Do. Opinion, April 13

    American leaders should be trying to cooperate with China on A.I.

  102. The Economist Is Putting Names (and Faces) to Its Magazine Business, April 13

    Nameless no more, writers for The Economist are mixing it up on video from its studio in London.

  103. He Warned About the Dangers of A.I. If Only His Father Had Listened. Well, April 13

    Ben Riley was already writing about the risks of chatbots when his dad started trusting A.I. over his doctor.

  104. Elon Musk, Who Owns X, Appears to Post on TikTok Technology, April 12

    A verified account with the @elonmusk handle also recently showed up on Instagram, as the billionaire prepares to take his rocket company SpaceX public.

  105. Mutually Automated Destruction: The Escalating Global A.I. Arms Race Technology, April 12

    China, the U.S., Russia and others have ramped up their contest over artificial-intelligence-backed weapons and military systems. The buildup has been compared to the dawn of the nuclear weapons age.

  106. Iran Is Losing the Cyberwar, Not the Real War Opinion, April 11

    Tehran’s efforts have been underwhelming, but its conventional military successes have been significant enough that it may not matter.

  107. La IA está a punto de revolucionar la ciberseguridad En español, April 11

    Con los nuevos sistemas de empresas como Anthropic y OpenAI, los hackers pueden lanzar ataques con mayor rapidez. La defensa se basa cada vez más en la inteligencia artificial.

  108. Ahora cualquiera puede ser ‘biohacker’ En español, April 10

    Con semillas, suplementos y dispositivos electrónicos (pero con poca guía de expertos), estadounidenses de todos los perfiles buscan mejorar su bienestar con lo que comen.

  109. Ditching Digital Junk Food for a Healthier Mind Opinion, April 9

    Readers respond to an Opinion guest essay about digital consumption. Also: A failure of leadership; deconstructing Trump-speak; “moon joy.”

  110. Adam Back niega que él sea Satoshi Nakamoto, en respuesta a la investigación del Times En español, April 9

    “Adam Back ha declarado sistemáticamente que él no es Satoshi Nakamoto”, dijo su empresa en un comunicado. “Lo que no es especulativo es la contribución fundacional de Adam al bitcóin”.

  111. How Did ‘Gatekeeping’ Become a Cardinal Sin? Magazine, April 9

    We decided that filtering information was malicious. That didn’t mean we stopped doing it.

  112. The Click That Cost $11,000 and Other Travel Pitfalls Travel, April 9

    Shady hotel booking sites, misleading customer service numbers and hacked airline loyalty accounts have snared travelers. Here’s how to avoid getting scammed.

  113. ¿Quién es Satoshi Nakamoto? El gran misterio del bitcóin, revelado En español, April 9

    El creador de Bitcoin se ha ocultado tras un seudónimo durante 17 años. Pero un rastro de pistas enterradas en la historia del cripto conduce a un científico informático de 55 años llamado Adam Back.

  114. Federal Court Denies Anthropic’s Motion to Lift ‘Supply Chain Risk’ Label Technology, April 9

    The ruling was a setback for the artificial intelligence start-up in its battle with the Defense Department over the use of A.I. in warfare.

  115. Amazon and U.S. Postal Service Reach New Deal on Deliveries After Year of Talks Business, April 8

    Amazon will cut the volume of packages it ships through the Postal Service by 20 percent under a tentative new deal that will preserve a crucial source of income for the agency.

  116. Meta Unveils New A.I. Model, Its First From the Superintelligence Lab Technology, April 8

    The model, Muse Spark, performed better than Meta’s previous A.I. models but lags rivals on coding ability.

  117. We Are Witnessing the Rise of a New Aristocracy Opinion, April 8

    A.I. will further enrich the winners and impoverish the losers, with inevitable societal impacts.

  118. Unraveling the Mystery Behind Bitcoin’s Creator Video, April 8

    Our investigative reporter John Carreyrou spent 18 months digging through the archives of online cryptography communities in search of the identity of Satoshi Nakamoto, the anonymous inventor of bitcoin.

  119. My Quest to Solve Bitcoin’s Great Mystery Business, April 8

    Bitcoin’s creator has hidden behind the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto for 17 years. But a trail of clues buried deep in crypto lore led to a 55-year-old computer scientist named Adam Back.

  120. 4 Takeaways From Our Search for Bitcoin’s Creator Business, April 8

    Here’s what we found suggesting that Adam Back invented Bitcoin.

  121. Anthropic’s Restraint Is a Terrifying Warning Sign Opinion, April 8

    The rapid advance of artificial intelligence is happening now.

  122. Anthropic Claims Its New A.I. Model, Mythos, Is a Cybersecurity ‘Reckoning’ Technology, April 7

    The company said on Tuesday that it was holding back on releasing the new technology but was working with 40 companies to explore how it could prevent cyberattacks.

  123. Why Am I Watching People Get Their Medical Results? Magazine, April 7

    What was once discussed with a doctor is now frequently encountered first as decontextualized data on a screen.

  124. How Accurate Are Google’s A.I. Overviews? Technology, April 7

    The company’s A.I.-generated answers look authoritative, but they draw on an array of sources, from trustworthy sites to Facebook posts.

  125. Cómo la IA ayudó a un hombre (y a su hermano) a crear una empresa de 1800 millones de dólares En español, April 7

    ¿Quién necesita más de dos empleados cuando la inteligencia artificial puede hacer tantas tareas empresariales? Es súper eficaz… y un poco solitario.

  126. A.I. Is on Its Way to Upending Cybersecurity Technology, April 6

    With new systems from companies like Anthropic and OpenAI, hackers can attack with greater speed. The defense is more A.I.

  127. The Big Bang: A.I. Has Created a Code Overload Technology, April 6

    Companies are scrambling to deal with the glut.

  128. Forget the A.I. Apocalypse. Memes Have Already Nuked Our Culture. Magazine, April 6

    From our jokes and slang to the White House’s policy messaging, internet “brain rot” has escaped our phones to take over … well, everything.

  129. What Teens Are Doing With Those Role-Playing Chatbots Technology, April 4

    Harassing bots with “funny violence.” Confiding about a broken heart. Chatting with a block of cheese. Filling a void of loneliness.

  130. Uber and Lyft Offer Gas Price Relief, but Drivers Say It’s Not Enough Technology, April 4

    As fuel costs go up, making a living as a gig driver is harder than ever.

  131. How iPhones Found Their Way Into Space Technology, April 3

    The astronauts traveling in the Artemis II spacecraft were allowed to take smartphones with them. Sadly, they can’t connect to the internet.

  132. Leon Radvinsky, arquitecto del éxito de OnlyFans, muere a los 43 años En español, March 26

    Radvinsky convirtió un diminuto sitio web llamado OnlyFans en una potencia del entretenimiento para adultos, redefiniendo el sector para la era de las redes sociales.

  133. Leon Radvinsky, 43, Dies; Built the Adult-Entertainment Giant OnlyFans Business, March 25

    By leveraging social media and the influencer economy, he turned his website into a byword for online pornography in the 21st century.

  134. The Social-Media Platform That Makes You Tell the Truth Magazine, November 25

    Strava logs all your fitness achievements — and then some.

  135. The Laptop That Ate Your Child’s Classroom Opinion, November 16

    Asking students to drill down on their schoolwork amid an array of digital distractions is inimical to learning.

  136. YouTube to Reinstate Accounts Banned Over Content Related to the Pandemic and 2020 Election Technology, September 23

    The streaming platform unveiled its plan in a letter to the House Judiciary Committee.

  137. Why This Used Car Company Thinks Tariffs Could Be Good for Business Business, May 13

    The chief executive of Carvana, which sells used cars online, said President Trump’s tariffs could help his company by increasing demand for its vehicles.

  138. Amazon Tells Corporate Workers to Be Back in the Office 5 Days a Week Business, September 16

    The internet giant told employees on Monday that it expected them to return to the office full-time in January.

  139. Health Officials Tried to Evade Public Records Laws, Lawmakers Say Science, May 28

    N.I.H. officials suggested federal record keepers helped them hide emails. If so, “that’s really damaging to trust in all of government,” one expert said.