Burner phones and lead-lined bags: a history of UK security tactics in Chinatheguardian.com5 points·by kawera·há 5 meses·0 comments
Ed tech is profitable. It is also mostly uselesseconomist.com3 points·by kawera·há 6 meses·2 comments
AI companies will fail. We can salvage something from the wreckagetheguardian.com107 points·by kawera·há 6 meses·99 comments
European Alternatives for Digital Productseuropean-alternatives.eu9 points·by kawera·há 6 meses·2 comments
Copywriters reveal how AI has decimated their industrybloodinthemachine.com10 points·by kawera·há 7 meses·1 comments
Attacking macOS XPC Helpers: Protocol Reverse Engineering and Interface Analysistonygo.tech8 points·by kawera·há 8 meses·0 comments
Ultra-HD televisions not noticeably better for typical viewertheguardian.com1 points·by kawera·há 9 meses·2 comments
AI, Wikipedia, and uncorrected machine translations of vulnerable languagestechnologyreview.com131 points·by kawera·há 9 meses·78 comments
What it's like to be on the frontline of a global cyber-attacktheguardian.com6 points·by kawera·há 9 meses·0 comments
5000 Podcasts. 3000 Episodes/Week. $1 Per Episodehollywoodreporter.com5 points·by kawera·há 10 meses·1 comments
kawera·há 5 meses·discussIn most of Brazil, the "t" or "d" followed by "i" is pronounced as "tch", like in "cheese".
kawera·há 5 meses·discuss> having a few large companies to watch over is better than millions of small micro-niche onesNot necessarily. The consequences of a few bad micro-niche ones would be, well, micro.