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Mark Cuban’s Blunt AI Warning: You’re Either Learning or You’re Getting Lazy — And the Difference Will Define Your Career

Mark Cuban has never been one to mince words. The billionaire entrepreneur, former owner of the Dallas Mavericks, and longtime Shark Tank investor has built a reputation on directness — and his latest pronouncement about artificial intelligence is no exception. According to Cuban, the workforce is rapidly splitting into two camps: those who use AI as a tool for genuine learning and skill development, and those who use it as a crutch to avoid doing real work. The implications, he argues, will be career-defining.

Apple Draws a Line in the Sand: Brazil’s NFC Payments Battle Exposes the Global Fight Over iPhone Tap-to-Pay Access

In a courtroom showdown that could set precedent for how smartphone makers manage their proprietary hardware worldwide, Apple is locked in an escalating dispute with Brazilian banks over access to the iPhone’s near-field communication (NFC) chip — the tiny piece of technology that makes tap-to-pay transactions possible. The stakes extend far beyond Brazil’s borders, touching on antitrust enforcement, platform control, and the future of mobile payments in markets where regulators are increasingly willing to challenge Big Tech.

A Simple Bug in a Student Admissions Portal Left Thousands of Children’s Personal Data Wide Open

A security vulnerability in a widely used student admissions platform exposed the sensitive personal information of children and their families, raising fresh concerns about the state of data protection in educational technology. The flaw, which was discovered by a security researcher and reported to the company, allowed unauthorized access to names, dates of birth, home addresses, and other identifying details of minors — all through a straightforward manipulation of the website’s URL.

Reload Bets $2.275M That Companies Need an HR Department for Their AI Workers

A new startup is making a provocative wager: as companies deploy dozens or even hundreds of AI agents across their operations, they will need a dedicated management layer to hire, monitor, evaluate, and even fire those digital employees. Reload, an AI employee agent management platform, has raised $2.275 million in pre-seed funding and launched what it calls the first AI employee designed to manage other AI agents the way a human resources department manages people.

OpenClaw’s Security Crisis: How a Promising AI Framework Became Too Dangerous for Its Own Creators to Share Freely

When Meta, Google DeepMind, and a coalition of leading artificial intelligence companies quietly began restricting access to OpenClaw — an open-source AI framework originally designed to accelerate robotics and autonomous systems research — the move sent shockwaves through the AI development community.

OpenAI’s $100 Billion Fundraise at an $850 Billion Valuation Rewrites the Rules of Venture Capital

The artificial intelligence company that began as a nonprofit research lab is on the verge of closing the largest private funding round in history — a $100 billion deal that would value OpenAI at more than $850 billion, according to multiple reports. The sheer scale of the transaction dwarfs anything previously seen in private markets and signals a new era in how capital flows toward AI development.

The $2 Trillion Private Credit Boom Faces Its First Real Stress Test — and the Cracks Are Starting to Show

For the better part of a decade, private credit has been Wall Street’s most celebrated growth story — a $2 trillion asset class that promised steady returns, low volatility, and insulation from the wild swings of public markets. Fund managers pitched it as a superior alternative to traditional fixed income, and institutional investors poured in.

ICE’s Billion-Dollar Bet on Microsoft Azure: Inside the Surveillance Infrastructure Reshaping Immigration Enforcement

Immigration and Customs Enforcement is dramatically expanding its cloud computing and data infrastructure through a sweeping partnership with Microsoft, a move that has drawn sharp criticism from civil liberties organizations and raised pointed questions about the scope of government surveillance capabilities in the United States.

Goldman Sachs Sees Oil Crashing Below $40: How Iran Sanctions, Trade Wars, and OPEC Politics Could Reshape the Energy Market

Goldman Sachs has issued one of its most bearish oil price forecasts in years, warning that Brent crude could plunge to as low as $40 per barrel by late 2026 under a worst-case scenario that combines a global recession with an unwinding of OPEC+ production cuts. The projection, which sent ripples through energy trading desks and corporate boardrooms alike, reflects a confluence of geopolitical and macroeconomic pressures that are fundamentally altering the calculus for oil markets.

Honor’s Thinnest Foldable Yet Makes Its Global Debut Not at a Tech Show, but at the Winter Olympics

In a marketing move that blurred the line between consumer electronics and international sport, Honor chose the 2025 Asian Winter Games in Harbin, China, as the stage to publicly unveil its latest foldable smartphone — the Honor Magic V6. Rather than reserving the debut for a conventional product launch or a mobile technology conference, the Chinese manufacturer opted for a venue with global television exposure and an audience that extends well beyond gadget enthusiasts.