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The Job Listing That Doesn’t Exist: How Fake Employment Postings Are Draining Americans’ Wallets and Identities

The American job market has long been a source of anxiety for millions of workers, but a growing and sophisticated threat is compounding that stress: fraudulent job postings designed not to hire, but to steal. From polished LinkedIn listings to text-message offers promising remote work at premium pay, scam job applications have become a booming criminal enterprise — and most victims don’t realize they’ve been targeted until it’s too late.

Google’s Threat Intelligence Report Reveals How Nation-State Hackers Are Weaponizing AI — And Why the Defenses Are Holding, For Now

Google has pulled back the curtain on how government-backed hacking groups from Iran, China, North Korea, and Russia are attempting to turn artificial intelligence into an accelerant for cyberattacks. The findings, drawn from Google’s own Gemini AI platform logs and published by its Threat Intelligence Group, paint a picture that is both reassuring and deeply unsettling: while AI has not yet produced the catastrophic, autonomous cyberweapon that many fear, it is already making state-sponsored hackers faster, more productive, and harder to detect.

Thread by Thread: How JoAnn Fabrics Stitched Together One of the Most Unusual Bankruptcy Exits in Retail History

When a beloved craft retailer files for bankruptcy, the typical playbook involves liquidation sales, shuttered storefronts, and a quiet corporate funeral. JoAnn Fabrics — the 81-year-old chain that has been a fixture in American strip malls and a lifeline for quilters, cosplayers, and DIY enthusiasts — did something far more unusual. It went through bankruptcy not once but twice in the span of roughly a year, and somehow emerged from the wreckage with a restructured balance sheet and a plan to keep operating.

The Ghost of Dark Sky Returns: How Apple’s Controversial Weather Acquisition Is Spawning a New Generation of Hyperlocal Forecasting Apps

When Apple acquired Dark Sky in March 2020, it sent shockwaves through the weather app community. The beloved hyperlocal forecasting service, known for its minute-by-minute precipitation predictions and clean interface, was gradually absorbed into Apple’s own Weather app before the standalone Dark Sky app was shut down permanently at the end of 2022. For millions of devoted users — many of whom had paid for the app and its API access — the loss felt personal.

Anthropic Is Watching OpenAI’s Stargate Stumbles—and Taking Notes on What Not to Do

When OpenAI announced its $100 billion Stargate data center initiative with SoftBank earlier this year, it was pitched as the most ambitious infrastructure project in the history of artificial intelligence. But behind the fanfare, the project has encountered a series of operational and logistical challenges that are now serving as cautionary lessons for its chief rival, Anthropic, as the Claude maker plans its own massive infrastructure buildout.

Apple Opens the CarPlay Mic: Third-Party AI Chatbots Are Coming to Break Siri’s Monopoly Behind the Wheel

For more than a decade, Siri has been the sole voice assistant available to drivers using Apple CarPlay. That exclusivity is about to end. Apple’s announcement at its 2025 Worldwide Developers Conference that it will allow third-party AI chatbots to operate within CarPlay marks one of the most significant policy reversals in the company’s history — and one that could reshape how millions of drivers interact with technology on the road.

Inside the Ivanti VPN Breach: How Chinese Hackers Exploited Enterprise Gateway Flaws to Compromise Dozens of Organizations

A sweeping cyberespionage campaign linked to Chinese state-sponsored hackers has compromised dozens of organizations worldwide by exploiting critical vulnerabilities in Ivanti VPN appliances, according to a detailed report that underscores the persistent threat posed by flaws in enterprise network gateway devices. The findings reveal a sophisticated operation that leveraged known and zero-day vulnerabilities in Ivanti Connect Secure, the widely deployed remote-access VPN product used by thousands of corporations and government agencies globally.

The Invisible Watermark War: Why Big Tech’s Plan to Label AI-Generated Content Is Already Failing

The internet is awash in synthetic media. AI-generated images, videos, and audio clips now circulate at a scale that would have been unimaginable just three years ago, and the tools to create them grow more accessible by the month. In response, a coalition of technology companies, camera manufacturers, and standards bodies has rallied behind a technical specification called C2PA — the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity — which embeds cryptographic metadata into files to certify their origin.

Tesla Pulls the Plug on Model S and Model X: What the End of an Era Means for the Company’s Future

Tesla Inc. is officially winding down production of its two longest-running vehicles — the Model S sedan and the Model X SUV — marking the end of a chapter that defined the electric vehicle maker’s rise from a Silicon Valley startup to one of the most valuable automakers on the planet. The decision, while not entirely unexpected, carries significant implications for Tesla’s product strategy, its positioning in the luxury EV market, and the broader trajectory of the company under Elon Musk’s leadership.

When Governments Target the Press First: How Authoritarian Regimes Use Journalism Crackdowns as a Blueprint for Broader Repression

Across the globe, a familiar pattern has emerged with alarming consistency: before authoritarian leaders move against civil society, opposition parties, or the general public, they first go after the journalists. The suppression of independent media has become the opening act in a well-rehearsed playbook of democratic erosion — one that has played out from Moscow to Manila, from Budapest to Dhaka, and increasingly in democracies that once considered press freedom an unassailable norm.