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jsm386

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Submissions

Google Is Paying Publishers to Test an Unreleased Gen AI Platform

adweek.com
4 points·by jsm386·2 anni fa·0 comments

Study finds influence of smaller jersey numbers on perception

espn.com
68 points·by jsm386·3 anni fa·37 comments

Two Men Arrested for Hacking the Taxi Dispatch System at JFK Airport

justice.gov
16 points·by jsm386·4 anni fa·12 comments

Where Does All the Cardboard Come From?

nytimes.com
7 points·by jsm386·4 anni fa·0 comments

Figma's 50x ARR Multiple and What It Means for Startup Fundraising

tomtunguz.com
40 points·by jsm386·4 anni fa·11 comments

New York Moving Companies Go to War over Tech Secrets

curbed.com
3 points·by jsm386·4 anni fa·0 comments

Specifying Spring '83

robinsloan.com
6 points·by jsm386·4 anni fa·0 comments

Corporate lobbying ETF seeks to profit from influencing politicians

ft.com
2 points·by jsm386·4 anni fa·0 comments

comments

jsm386
·3 anni fa·discuss
Thanks - didn't see that browser beta is hover-hidden option under GPT-4 selected!
jsm386
·3 anni fa·discuss
Anecdotal: Even with Web Browsing enabled in the Options menu, it continues to report that the feature doesn't exist and cites the September 21 cut off. Odd!
jsm386
·17 anni fa·discuss
The Times' has a source with an interesting addition to the story: Google did not publicly link the Chinese government to the cyber attack, but people with knowledge of Google’s investigation said they had enough evidence to justify its actions.

A United States expert on cyber warfare said that 34 companies were targeted, most of them high-technology companies in Silicon Valley. The attacks came from Taiwanese Internet addresses, according to James Mulvenon, an expert on Chinese cyberwarfare capabilities.

Mr. Mulvenon said that the stolen documents were sent electronically to a server controlled by Rackspace, based in San Antonio.


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/13/world/asia/13beijing.html