Articles by Brajeshwar
5

I've Spent 25 Years Studying Loneliness. AI Is About to Make It Worse (fortune.com)

3

Execs Are Deploying Digital Twins to Do Their Work (wsj.com)

3

AI Is Being Used to Resurrect the Voices of Dead Pilots (techcrunch.com)

1

JetBrains Is Selling Independence as the Rest of AI Coding Picks Sides (thenewstack.io)

1

Google's AI Search Is So Broken It Can 'Disregard' What You're Looking For (theverge.com)

89

Ebola Outbreak Now Third Largest Recorded and "Spreading Rapidly" (arstechnica.com)

93

The FBI Wants 'Near Real-Time' Access to US License Plate Readers (wired.com)

1

Quantum 'Jamming' Could Help Unlock the Mysteries of Causality (wired.com)

2

Interview with the Engineer of Uruky, a Private Search Engine (theprivacydad.com)

3

Vulnerabilities in various GTK-based PDF readers (lwn.net)

3

Alleged Kimwolf Botmaster 'Dort' Arrested, Charged in U.S. and Canada (krebsonsecurity.com)

1

Snuffleupagus, a newly described species, is an adorable little predator (cbc.ca)

1

Chain Reactions: How Nonce Collisions in Ecdsa Compromise Polygon MEV Searchers (arxiv.org)

7

Samsung's memory chip employees negotiated $340k bonuses this year (theverge.com)

1

Fusion energy poised for simpler U.S. review (axios.com)

2

Tiny Flies Survive, Even Thrive on Snow (nautil.us)

3

The $58,000 TV bill: When DirecTV sued O.J. Simpson for piracy (arstechnica.com)

83

Deepfakes Tore a High School Apart (404media.co)

1

Nvidia's revenue blows past Wall Street expectations as AI boom accelerates (theguardian.com)

1

Neanderthals may have been doing dentistry 59,000 years ago – without anesthetic (cbc.ca)

6

A star gone rogue tears through the Galaxy (nature.com)

2

Literary AI Scandal Changes Everything (theatlantic.com)

2

Township Leader Resigns in Tears over OpenAI Data Center Death Threats (404media.co)

3

Scammers are abusing an internal Microsoft account to send spam links (techcrunch.com)

1

Alexander Grothendieck Revolutionized 20th-Century Mathematics (quantamagazine.org)

1

Microsoft warns of new Defender zero-days exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)

2

Investigating unauthorized access to GitHub-owned repositories (github.blog)

3

Two Researchers Are Rebuilding Mathematics from the Ground Up (quantamagazine.org)

3

'Fuck you, Bambu': How one private message could change the face of 3D printing (theverge.com)

8

Online child safety campaigners call for US inquiry into Roblox (theguardian.com)

3

Lawyer for Guy Who Sued Women Who Called Him 'Psycho' Caught Using AI (404media.co)

1

Boarding China's Last Bus (asteriskmag.com)

2

Privacy Shouldn't Be a Corporate Decision (eff.org)

1

Exploit released for new PinTheft Arch Linux root escalation flaw (bleepingcomputer.com)

57

Standard Chartered CEO walks back comment about 'lower-value human capital' (wsj.com)

3

Google to release first smart glasses since Google Glass flop (bbc.com)

3

The biggest data center ever is becoming a problem in Utah (theverge.com)

2

The Internet can't stop watching Figure AI's humanoid robots handling packages (arstechnica.com)

3

The brain's code seems to be in constant flux. Neuroscientists are baffled (nature.com)

20

Wi-Wi is wireless time sync at 1 nanosecond (jeffgeerling.com)

3

There's no such thing as "age verification" (pluralistic.net)

2

Something's Rotten in the State of macOS Icon Design (jim-nielsen.com)

1

Biosciences is growing chickens in a 3D-printed container (technologyreview.com)

1

GitHub will start paying some bug bounty hunters in swag instead of cash (thenewstack.io)

3

Standard Chartered to cut more than 7k jobs as it steps up AI use (theguardian.com)

1

Interpol 'Operation Ramz' seizes 53 malware, phishing servers (bleepingcomputer.com)

1

What Do Gödel's Incompleteness Theorems Mean? (quantamagazine.org)

2

Don't call yourself a Software Engineer, you are an AI Enabled Engineer (idiallo.com)

1

NextEra, Dominion announce merger to create U.S. power behemoth (axios.com)

2

Starlink raises prices across satellite internet plans (theverge.com)

2

The Prehistory of A.I. Slop (newyorker.com)

1

Testing Go CLIs with Testscript (rednafi.com)

2

CSS is hard because it solves hard problems (disassociated.com)

1

Microsoft testing adjustable taskbar, Start menu in Windows 11 (bleepingcomputer.com)

1

OVCS: Raspberry Pi–powered electric car (raspberrypi.com)

4

More than 100 UK datacentres plan to burn gas to generate electricity (theguardian.com)

4

Supercharging Immune Cells May Help Control HIV Long-Term (wired.com)

2

The clean-up cost of AI-generated code is what the velocity narrative leaves out (webflow.com)

1

Scientists Discover New Crystal Formed by Nuclear Blast (404media.co)

14

Reddit Is Blocking Some Users from Accessing Its Website from Mobile Devices (arstechnica.com)

2

Why Block Handed Goose to the Linux Foundation (thenewstack.io)

4

AI Sends a Grades into Overdrive (axios.com)

1

The software fix that could shrink AI's energy bill without new hardware (thenewstack.io)

41

Tesla reveals two Robotaxi crashes involving teleoperators (techcrunch.com)

92

DeepSeek-V4-Flash means LLM steering is interesting again (seangoedecke.com)

1

Popular node-IPC NPM package compromised to steal credentials (bleepingcomputer.com)

6

Microsoft Exchange, Windows 11 hacked on second day of Pwn2Own (bleepingcomputer.com)

1

GitHub takes aim at Claude Code and Codex with its new Copilot app (thenewstack.io)

1

Anthropic's $1.5B copyright settlement is getting messy as judge delays approval (arstechnica.com)

4

ArXiv to Ban Researchers for a Year If They Submit AI Slop (404media.co)

9

Build a radio wave detector with balls of aluminum foil (wired.com)

1

Even mild blows to the head disrupt the microbiome (nature.com)

2

Researchers unearth Southeast Asia's largest dinosaur (npr.org)

1

What Lamarck's Giraffe Got Right (nautil.us)

2

There's Something Living in Fog (nautil.us)

1

Social news aggregator Digg returns as AI and social media news aggregator (disassociated.com)

5

High-stakes courtroom drama of Musk vs. OpenAI hears closing arguments (theguardian.com)

2

GitLab is betting a 19th-century economic theory will shape its AI era (thenewstack.io)

1

From latency to instant: Modernizing GitHub Issues navigation performance (github.blog)

3

The U.S. has 1,200 AI bills and no good test for any of them (fortune.com)

82

AI is wiping out entry-level jobs (fortune.com)

1

AI Writing Hits a Ceiling (axios.com)

2

Microsoft warns of Exchange zero-day flaw exploited in attacks (bleepingcomputer.com)

4

Microsoft to automatically roll back faulty Windows drivers (bleepingcomputer.com)

5

Meta profited from illegal scam ads, California county lawsuit alleges (theguardian.com)

3

WhatsApp launches private 'incognito' conversations with its AI chatbot (bbc.com)

3

One in seven in UK prefer consulting AI chatbots to seeing doctor, study finds (theguardian.com)

2

How the Bird Eye Was Pushed to an Evolutionary Extreme (quantamagazine.org)

3

AI models are being used to predict conflict (economist.com)

2

Neanderthals Mastered Dentistry (nautil.us)

1

Protein in Homo erectus teeth suggests Denisovans gave us some of their DNA (arstechnica.com)

2

Solar drone with jumbo jet wingspan broke a flight record–then it crashed (arstechnica.com)

2

Perseverance Snaps a Selfie on Mars (nautil.us)

2

HMRC to use AI from British tech firm to spot fraud and tax return errors (bbc.com)

5

The Tarot Card Deck Created by Salvador Dalí (openculture.com)

2

US charges suspected Dream Market admin arrested in Germany (bleepingcomputer.com)

8

Dell confirms its SupportAssist software causes Windows BSOD crashes (bleepingcomputer.com)

1

Restoring the Flow: A Milestone in the Revival of the Everglades (yale.edu)

2

The SpaceX IPO is upending the stock market (axios.com)

1

KongTuke hackers now use Microsoft Teams for corporate breaches (bleepingcomputer.com)