Anzeige: Gardena 18V Akku Wand-Schlauchbox im befristeten Angebot
Die neue Gardena-Akku-Wand-Schlauchbox Powerroll im Detail: automatisches Aufrollen, wetterbeständig und aktuell mit 24 Prozent Rabatt bei Amazon. (Amazon, Akku)
Just another news site
Die neue Gardena-Akku-Wand-Schlauchbox Powerroll im Detail: automatisches Aufrollen, wetterbeständig und aktuell mit 24 Prozent Rabatt bei Amazon. (Amazon, Akku)
Inwin ist unter anderem für seine extravaganten und extrem teuren Signature-PC-Gehäuse bekannt. Die elfte Version setzt diese Tradition fort. (Gehäuse/Kühlung/Netzteile, PC-Gehäuse)
Onlineshopping gehört für viele zum Alltag. Fallstricke und Täuschungen sind dabei große Ärgernisse, wie Verbraucherschützer beobachten. (Verbraucherschutz, Politik)
Der Adapterstecker überwacht die GPU-Leistungsaufnahme, optimiert die Kabelführung und warnt rechtzeitig vor Überhitzung. (Gehäuse/Kühlung/Netzteile, Grafikkarten)
Weniger Elektroautos und Ladesäulen, aber eine höhere Ladeleistung: Eine Studie zur Ladeinfrastruktur 2030 stößt auf Kritik der Energiewirtschaft. (Ladesäule, Elektroauto)
Cyberangriffe stellen eine erhebliche Bedrohung für Unternehmen dar. Ein spezialisierter Online-Workshop schärft das Bewusstsein für IT-Sicherheit bei Sysadmins. (Golem Karrierewelt, Sicherheitslücke)
Vaccine misinformation persists as measles cases are soaring.
For years, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has bluntly stated the truth: "Vaccines do not cause autism," the agency affirms on its website. Yet, nearly a quarter of Americans still don't believe it.
In an April 2024 survey by the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC) of the University of Pennsylvania, 24 percent of US adults denied or disputed that the CDC ever said that. Specifically, the survey asked them to assess the accuracy of the statement that the CDC has said there is no evidence linking vaccines to autism. Six percent called the statement "very inaccurate," and 18 percent said it was "somewhat inaccurate." An additional 3 percent responded that they were "not sure." Of the remaining 73 percent, only 41 percent considered it "very accurate," and 32 percent said it was "somewhat accurate."
The results are largely unchanged from responses in 2018 when survey respondents were asked the same question. In that year, 26 percent of adults reported that the statement was "very inaccurate" or "somewhat inaccurate."
With only weeks until the Games start, expect more to come, Microsoft says.
Last year, a feature-length documentary purportedly produced by Netflix began circulating on Telegram. Titled “Olympics have Fallen” and narrated by a voice with a striking similarity to that of actor Tom Cruise, it sharply criticized the leadership of the International Olympic Committee. The slickly produced film, claiming five-star reviews from the New York Times, Washington Post, and BBC, was quickly amplified on social media. Among those seemingly endorsing the documentary were celebrities on the platform Cameo.
A recently published report by Microsoft (PDF) said the film was not a documentary, had received no such reviews, and that the narrator's voice was an AI-produced deep fake of Cruise. It also said the endorsements on Cameo were faked. The Microsoft Threat Intelligence Report went on to say that the fraudulent documentary and endorsements were only one of many elaborate hoaxes created by agents of the Russian government in a year-long influence operation intended to discredit the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and deter participation and attendance at the Paris Olympics starting next month.
Other examples of the Kremlin’s ongoing influence operation include:
When OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei launched a new business called Nothing in 2021, the company promised to eliminate “the barriers between people and technology.” But so far what the company has actually built are a couple of unusual-looking…
When OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei launched a new business called Nothing in 2021, the company promised to eliminate “the barriers between people and technology.” But so far what the company has actually built are a couple of unusual-looking smartphones and accessories like wireless earbuds, with some distinctive features like LED lights on the back. In […]
The post Nothing CEO Carl Pei: Smartphones will be the main platform for “AI first hardware” appeared first on Liliputing.
Backup plan is $30 every month for service that’s meant to be used infrequently.
T-Mobile is hoping that home Internet customers who suffer from frequent service outages will pay $30 a month for a "backup" 5G plan. T-Mobile's new "Home Internet Backup," announced today, is intended to be used only when a user's primary home Internet service goes down.
One big drawback is that T-Mobile clearly intends for customers to subscribe to the $30 monthly plan indefinitely, even though a user likely wouldn't need it during some months and might need it for just a day or two in other months. The pricing terms make it so that canceling and resubscribing as needed is not feasible.
T-Mobile said the plan provides 130GB of 5G data each month, "enough to keep a typical household connected with Wi-Fi for up to seven days a month when their primary internet service goes down." After 130GB, speeds will be reduced to "up to" 600kbps.