Technology
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Facebook Under Fire for Targeted Advertising About Orientation
Facebook may not use public data on sexual orientation for personal advertising, according to an opinion of Europe’s highest court. According to Advocate General ... -
British Watchdog is Looking at Collaboration Between Tech Companies in AI
The British competition authority CMA is critical of the artificial intelligence (AI) partnerships between Microsoft and the French start-up Mistral and between Amazon and ... -
Twitter is Making API Free Again for Public Notifications From Verified Accounts
Twitter makes an exception for verified services that share certain relevant notifications with the public. They may continue to use the API of the ... -
Code That ChatGPT Writes is Usually Insecure
One of the many uses of ChatGPT is that it can also write computer code. But according to researchers, it is usually unsafe. However, ... -
Alternative Browser Vivaldi Arrives at Version 6.0
Vivaldi launched version 6.0 of its eponymous browser on Tuesday. The alternative to Chrome, Edge, Safari and the like received several useful novelties, of ... -
Sharing Source Code Twitter Leaked on the Internet
Parts of the source code of the microblogging site Twitter have been online after a major data breach. This is evident from court documents. ... -
Facebook Founder Zuckerberg Charged With Ignoring Exploitation
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, who is also the CEO of parent company Meta Platforms, has been sued by shareholders. Pension and investment funds, among ... -
Advertising Rules for Virtual Coins: The Only Guarantee in Crypto is the Risk
Advertising for virtual currencies, such as Bitcoin, will be regulated from mid-May. For example, every advertising message will display the warning “Virtual coins, real ... -
Hugging Face and AWS will Collaborate on AI Creations
AWS is partnering with HuggingFace, a platform where developers share code and models around artificial intelligence, to make that code run more smoothly in ... -
Social Media Protection for the US Supreme Court
Two cases involving Google, Twitter and Facebook coming to court this week may partly determine the future of the Internet. First, the Supreme Court ...