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The Apps Already on Your Phone That Security Experts Say You Should Delete Immediately

Millions of Android users are carrying potential security threats in their pockets — not from obscure, shadowy downloads, but from some of the most popular applications on the Google Play Store. Despite Google’s ongoing efforts to police its app marketplace, a growing body of evidence suggests that many widely downloaded apps engage in excessive data collection, display intrusive advertising, or worse, harbor outright malware. The question facing consumers is no longer whether to be cautious, but which familiar names on their home screens deserve a second look.

New Yorkers Want Robotaxis but Don’t Trust Them: The Paradox Stalling Autonomous Vehicles in America’s Biggest City

A striking contradiction sits at the heart of New York City’s autonomous vehicle future: residents overwhelmingly want robotaxis on their streets, but almost none of them are willing to actually ride in one. That tension — between aspiration and anxiety — may define the next chapter of urban transportation policy in the United States, and it carries implications far beyond the five boroughs.

Inside BinaryAudit: How Quesma Is Tackling the Hidden Risk of Closed-Source Software Dependencies

When organizations deploy commercial software, they typically trust that the vendor has done its due diligence on security, licensing, and code quality. But what happens when a closed-source binary ships with embedded open-source components that carry known vulnerabilities, restrictive licenses, or outdated dependencies? A new tool from database middleware company Quesma aims to shine a light on exactly that problem — and the implications for enterprise software procurement could be significant.

China’s Brain-Computer Interface Ambitions Are Accelerating — and the West Should Be Paying Attention

While much of the global technology conversation remains fixated on artificial intelligence and large language models, China has been quietly and aggressively building out its brain-computer interface (BCI) industry. From government-backed research initiatives to a growing roster of private startups, the country is positioning itself to become a dominant force in a field that could reshape medicine, defense, and human-machine interaction for decades to come.

Reddit’s Stock Freefall: How a 42% Plunge in Five Weeks Exposed the Fragility of an AI-Fueled Rally

When Reddit went public in March 2024, it was heralded as one of the most anticipated tech IPOs in years. The company behind one of the internet’s most influential discussion forums had finally made the leap to Wall Street, and for a time, investors rewarded it handsomely. But in recent weeks, the story has taken a dramatic turn. Reddit’s stock has plunged roughly 42% over the span of just five weeks, erasing billions in market capitalization and raising pointed questions about whether the company’s valuation ever made sense in the first place.

The Gravity Hole Beneath Antarctica Is Getting Stronger — and Scientists Are Racing to Understand Why

Deep beneath the ice sheets of Antarctica lies one of Earth’s most perplexing geological anomalies: a massive region where gravity is measurably weaker than anywhere else on the planet. Known formally as the Indian Ocean Geoid Low, this so-called “gravity hole” has puzzled scientists for decades. Now, new research suggests that this gravitational anomaly isn’t static — it’s intensifying. And the implications for our understanding of Earth’s interior dynamics, sea-level modeling, and even satellite navigation could be profound.

Microsoft’s China Warning: Brad Smith Tells U.S. Tech to Brace for a Subsidy-Fueled AI Onslaught

When Microsoft President Brad Smith speaks publicly about geopolitical competition, the technology industry listens. His latest remarks — a candid warning about Chinese government subsidies powering a new wave of artificial intelligence competition — have struck a nerve across Silicon Valley and Washington alike. At a moment when American AI companies are commanding trillion-dollar valuations and racing to build ever-larger models, Smith is urging the industry not to become complacent.

One Man, 7,000 Robot Vacuums: How a Security Researcher Accidentally Commandeered an Army of Ecovacs Devices

Dennis Giese didn’t set out to build a botnet of robot vacuums. The security researcher, well known in hardware hacking circles for his work on consumer IoT devices, stumbled onto something far more alarming than he anticipated when he discovered a vulnerability in Ecovacs robot vacuums that gave him the theoretical ability to commandeer approximately 7,000 devices across multiple countries.

Apple’s Next Power Move: Why a Premium Red iPhone Could Redefine the Company’s Luxury Playbook

For years, Apple has treated color as currency. The company’s careful deployment of exclusive hues — from the Desert Titanium of the iPhone 15 Pro to the Natural Titanium that became a status symbol among tech executives — has turned smartphone finishes into a form of brand signaling as potent as any logo. Now, according to multiple reports, Apple is preparing to make its boldest chromatic statement yet: a premium red iPhone, potentially arriving as early as the iPhone 17 Pro lineup expected this fall.

The Hidden Power Tool on Every Android Phone: Why Most Users Never Master Their Keyboard Clipboard

Somewhere between the predictive text suggestions and the emoji panel on your Android phone lies a feature that most users have either never discovered or never fully understood: the clipboard manager built directly into your keyboard app. While desktop users have long relied on clipboard history tools to manage copied text, images, and links, the mobile equivalent has quietly matured into a surprisingly capable productivity feature — one that the vast majority of Android’s billions of users continue to overlook.