
ARM-Eigner: Softbank steigt bei Intel ein und wirbt Amazons KI-Chef ab
ARM macht Ernst mit KI-Hardware – Amazons leitender Hardware-Entwickler wechselt zum CPU-Entwickler. Der bekommt eine engere Bindung zu Intel. (Softbank, Intel)
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ARM macht Ernst mit KI-Hardware – Amazons leitender Hardware-Entwickler wechselt zum CPU-Entwickler. Der bekommt eine engere Bindung zu Intel. (Softbank, Intel)
Cyberkriminelle sind per Social Engineering in eine CRM-Plattform eingedrungen. Workday ist nur einer von vielen betroffenen Konzernen. (Datenleck, CRM)
Die Ukraine präsentiert ihren neuen Marschflugkörper FP-5 Flamingo, der US-Waffensystemen der 1950er Jahre ähnelt. (Militär, Politik)
Ein Versehen auf der Phillips-Hue-Website zeigt, dass offenbar vier neue Leuchtmittel, eine Bridge und eine Videotürklingel geplant seien. (Hue, Philips)
Finanzminister Klingbeil deutet Steuererhöhungen an. Eine Verlängerung der Kfz-Steuerbefreiung für E-Autos bis 2035 steht vor dem Aus. (Elektroauto, Auto)
Mit den Workshops der Golem Karrierewelt lassen sich die gesetzlichen Anforderungen zur Barrierefreiheit erfüllen und digitale Produkte gezielt verbessern. (Golem Karrierewelt, Unternehmenssoftware)
The Asus ROG NUC (2025) is basically what you get when you take the guts of a high-end gaming laptop and stuff them into a mini PC with a 3-liter chassis and plenty of ports. It’s also an expensive PC, with prices currently starting at $2599 for …
The Asus ROG NUC (2025) is basically what you get when you take the guts of a high-end gaming laptop and stuff them into a mini PC with a 3-liter chassis and plenty of ports. It’s also an expensive PC, with prices currently starting at $2599 for a model with an Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX processor, NVIDIA […]
The post Asus introduces cheaper ROG NUC (2025) mini gaming PC with Ryzen 7 255HX and RTX 5060 (China-only for now) appeared first on Liliputing.
Raspberry Pi’s single-board computers are full-fledged PCs that can work with a wide variety of accessories. But every now and then the folks that make the little PCs introduce first-party hardware that’s designed specifically for the platf…
Raspberry Pi’s single-board computers are full-fledged PCs that can work with a wide variety of accessories. But every now and then the folks that make the little PCs introduce first-party hardware that’s designed specifically for the platform. Last year the team launched the official Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2, an optional $60 accessory designed to […]
The post Raspberry Pi Touch Display 2 now comes in two sizes: 7 inches and 5 inches appeared first on Liliputing.
T-Mobile can’t overturn $92 million fine; AT&T and Verizon verdicts still to come.
A federal appeals court rejected T-Mobile's attempt to overturn $92 million in fines for selling customer location information to third-party firms.
The Federal Communications Commission last year fined T-Mobile, AT&T, and Verizon, saying the carriers illegally shared access to customers' location information without consent and did not take reasonable measures to protect that sensitive data against unauthorized disclosure. The fines relate to sharing of real-time location data that was revealed in 2018, but it took years for the FCC to finalize the penalties.
The three carriers appealed the rulings in three different courts, and the first major decision was handed down Friday. A three-judge panel at the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled unanimously against T-Mobile and its subsidiary Sprint.
Judge blocks FTC’s Media Matters probe as a likely First Amendment violation.
Media Matters for America (MMFA)—a nonprofit that Elon Musk accused of sparking a supposedly illegal ad boycott on X—won its bid to block a sweeping Federal Trade Commission (FTC) probe that appeared to have rushed to silence Musk's foe without ever adequately explaining why the government needed to get involved.
In her opinion granting MMFA's preliminary injunction, US District Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan—a Joe Biden appointee—agreed that the FTC's probe was likely to be ruled as a retaliatory violation of the First Amendment.
Warning that the FTC's targeting of reporters was particularly concerning, Sooknanan wrote that the "case presents a straightforward First Amendment violation," where it's reasonable to conclude that conservative FTC staffers were perhaps motivated to eliminate a media organization dedicated to correcting conservative misinformation online.