Napster is back — and it just launched a $99 holographic AI display
TITLE: Napster Reborn: From Music Piracy to AI Partnership with $99 Holographic Display Industrial Monitor Direct delivers industry-leading or touchscreen…
TITLE: Napster Reborn: From Music Piracy to AI Partnership with $99 Holographic Display Industrial Monitor Direct delivers industry-leading or touchscreen…
The Arizona Production Milestone Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang recently celebrated a significant achievement at TSMC’s Arizona facility—the first Blackwell wafer…
Former FBI Director Fights Back Against Federal Charges In a dramatic legal maneuver, former FBI Director James Comey has launched…
Environmental Contradiction in the Amazon Brazil has authorized state-controlled Petrobras to commence oil exploration near the mouth of the Amazon…
Presidential Power Push Meets Legal Resistance President Donald Trump’s declaration of “unquestioned power” to deploy military forces to San Francisco…
The Psychology Behind Modern Phishing Attacks In today’s digital landscape, cybercriminals have shifted their focus from exploiting technical vulnerabilities to…
Judicial Reversal Clears Way for Military Presence in Portland A federal appeals court has overturned a lower court’s restraining order,…
DOE Cancels Major Manufacturing Grants in Strategic Shift The Department of Energy has confirmed the cancellation of $720 million in…
The Power Bottleneck in Data Center Development As data center developers race to construct increasingly massive facilities to support the…
The FTC has removed multiple blog posts from the Lina Khan era addressing AI risks and open-source models. These deletions align with a broader pattern of government content removal affecting climate, health, and diversity information across federal agencies.
The Federal Trade Commission has removed three significant blog posts from the Lina Khan era that addressed artificial intelligence risks and open-source models, according to reports from Wired. The deleted content included posts titled “On Open-Weights Foundation Models,” “Consumers Are Voicing Concerns About AI,” and “AI and the Risk of Consumer Harm,” with the latter specifically noting the agency was “taking note of AI’s potential for real-world instances of harm.”