2024 Porsche 911 S/T review: Threading the needle

The S/T celebrates the 60th anniversary of the 911 and is limited to just 1963 examples.

A porsche 911 S/T

Enlarge / I wouldn't blame you if you lost track of all the different variations on the Porsche 911. This is the latest, and currently, the most desirable. (credit: Bradley Iger)

Although Porsche is in the midst of taking its BEV technology mainstream, the company hasn't lost sight of the fact that its high-performance reputation was built on the 911.

Over the past few years, the automaker has developed a myriad of different versions of the iconic sports car, resulting in offerings that currently range from plush open-top cruisers to hardcore track monsters, along with special edition models like the off-road-tuned Dakar and heritage-inspired Sport Classic. You might be wondering, then, if there's really an opportunity for a new performance-focused model to stand out in the 911 lineup.

On the surface, the S/T seems to tread much of the same ground already occupied by the GT3 Touring, an iteration of the track-ready GT3 that ditches the large fixed rear wing for the smaller, aesthetically subtler active rear spoiler found on Carrera models. But as lovely to drive as the GT3 Touring is, it feels like a conceptual afterthought.

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Researchers create AI worms that can spread from one system to another

Worms could potentially steal data and deploy malware.

Researchers create AI worms that can spread from one system to another

Enlarge (credit: Jacqui VanLiew; Getty Images)

As generative AI systems like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini become more advanced, they are increasingly being put to work. Startups and tech companies are building AI agents and ecosystems on top of the systems that can complete boring chores for you: think automatically making calendar bookings and potentially buying products. But as the tools are given more freedom, it also increases the potential ways they can be attacked.

Now, in a demonstration of the risks of connected, autonomous AI ecosystems, a group of researchers has created one of what they claim are the first generative AI worms—which can spread from one system to another, potentially stealing data or deploying malware in the process. “It basically means that now you have the ability to conduct or to perform a new kind of cyberattack that hasn't been seen before,” says Ben Nassi, a Cornell Tech researcher behind the research.

Nassi, along with fellow researchers Stav Cohen and Ron Bitton, created the worm, dubbed Morris II, as a nod to the original Morris computer worm that caused chaos across the Internet in 1988. In a research paper and website shared exclusively with WIRED, the researchers show how the AI worm can attack a generative AI email assistant to steal data from emails and send spam messages—breaking some security protections in ChatGPT and Gemini in the process.

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Staatstrojaner Pegasus: Spyware-Hersteller muss Quellcode an Whatsapp aushändigen

Im Jahr 2019 warf Whatsapp der NSO Group in einer Klage vor, 1.400 seiner Nutzer gehackt zu haben. Nun soll der Messengerdienst Einblicke in den Spyware-Quellcode erhalten. (NSO, Onlinedurchsuchung)

Im Jahr 2019 warf Whatsapp der NSO Group in einer Klage vor, 1.400 seiner Nutzer gehackt zu haben. Nun soll der Messengerdienst Einblicke in den Spyware-Quellcode erhalten. (NSO, Onlinedurchsuchung)