Vibe-coded site had hidden SQL injection flaw for months — a cautionary tale
Bob Starr built a website using vibe-coding — AI-assisted development with minimal manual review — and launched it straight away. Months later he discovered the site contained a hidden SQL injection vulnerability that could have left it wide open to attack. The case highlights the security risks of deploying AI-generated code without a proper security audit.
Google officially opened its second office in Kraków on Tuesday, adding 300 new positions to its Polish operations. The Kraków engineering hub already employs over 400 people, and the expansion is intended to support the company's continued growth in Poland. Google did not provide details on the recruitment timeline.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky will not attend the Ukraine Reconstruction Congress in Gdańsk, according to unofficial information from Polish Radio. The congress is a major international forum dedicated to planning Ukraine's post-war rebuilding. Zelensky had been expected to be one of the key figures at the event.
Many fish restaurants along the Baltic coast serve imported frozen fish rather than locally caught species. Customers are advised to avoid farmed fish like pangasius and tilapia, which are not Baltic species. The best choices are freshly caught local fish such as herring, flounder, cod, and sprat — species actually sourced from Polish boats.
An international research team led by scientists from the University of Freiburg, including Prof. Nuria Selva from the Polish Academy of Sciences' Institute of Nature Conservation in Kraków, published the first comprehensive study on war's impact on wildlife in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. Russia's 2022 invasion turned the unique nature sanctuary into an active war zone. Mammals in the area significantly altered their behaviour and daily activity patterns in response to military threats. The study is described as the first analysis of its kind examining how wildlife adapts to sudden, extre...
An ice-cold shower during a heatwave feels immediately refreshing, but experts warn it can have the opposite of the intended effect. Sudden cooling causes blood vessels to constrict, which can actually trap heat inside the body rather than releasing it. In extreme cases, rapid chilling may trigger dangerous physiological reactions, especially in people with cardiovascular conditions.
Bulgur wheat is increasingly appearing in everyday diets as a healthier alternative to couscous. It contains more fibre and has a lower glycaemic index, meaning it raises blood sugar more slowly and keeps you fuller for longer. Bulgur works well in main courses, salads, and vegetable bowls and is quick and easy to prepare.
Elon Musk's fortune amounts to roughly 3% of US GDP and is nearly five million times larger than the median American family's net worth, according to Prof. David Lay Williams writing in The New York Times. Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman warns that such extreme wealth concentration poses a real threat to democracy. Musk's wealth is comparable in scale to Switzerland's entire GDP.
Grzegorz Cybulski was once one of the world's finest long jumpers, setting a Polish record that stood unbroken for 26 years. Despite his exceptional talent, he was consistently unlucky at major championships and never claimed the medals expected of him. Today, the 74-year-old former athlete lives in a permanent care facility — the Dom Pomocy Społecznej (social care home) in Szczawno.
Bloomberg analysts Anna Edwards, Guy Johnson, Tom Mackenzie, and Mark Cudmore discussed the day's key market themes on "Bloomberg: The Opening Trade." The central signal of the session is that investors are not buying the dips — meaning falling asset prices are not attracting buyers as they typically would. This sentiment points to sustained caution and uncertainty across Wall Street.
Amflow, an e-bike brand spun out of drone maker DJI, has unveiled its TL series — an all-terrain eSUV-style electric bike designed for both bikepacking adventures and family commutes. The bike is powered by Amflow's compact Avinox M2 mid-drive motor producing 125Nm of torque. The top-tier model in the range is the TL Carbon.
India's Toonz Media Group and Tokyo-based Supersub LLC announced the co-production of "The Taste of Water," an animated feature documentary about Japanese sake, at the Annecy Animation Film Festival. The film is directed by Riki Ohkanda and executive produced by Ryo Nakajima, tracing the history, culture, and future of the iconic Japanese drink. The project is currently in production.
The Milwaukee Bucks have traded superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Miami Heat. Analysts are grading both sides of the blockbuster deal to determine which franchise came out ahead. The Bucks effectively begin a rebuild by parting with their franchise cornerstone, while the Heat land one of the NBA's premier players.
Scientific research shows that multi-day road trips have measurable benefits for the human brain. Changing landscapes, long routes, and unexpected situations activate cognitive processes including memory and concentration in ways that everyday routines do not. Researchers say the combination of novelty and sustained attention during road travel is key to these mental health benefits.
During a storm delay at the France vs. Iraq match in Philadelphia, Kylian Mbappé was visibly agitated and gestured sharply at the ground crew. After the match he explained he was ensuring both halves of the pitch were dried equally, so neither team would gain an unfair advantage from uneven playing conditions.
US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer travelled to India this week to meet with Indian officials and push forward stalled negotiations on an interim trade agreement. Both sides have stepped up efforts to resolve the outstanding differences preventing a deal from being finalised.
Jon Stewart ridiculed Donald Trump's personal involvement in overseeing the renovation of Washington's algae-covered reflecting pool on The Daily Show. He sarcastically remarked that viewers must have hoped the president himself would take charge of the cleanup, joking that the water looked like it had been replaced with Mountain Dew.
Gartner forecasts that around 40% of enterprise applications will include task-specific AI agents in 2025, up from just 5% the previous year. Embedding AI agents directly into legacy systems risks bypassing approval workflows, exposing restricted data and creating unauditable transactions. Security experts argue that safe agentic AI must emulate human oversight behaviours to close the growing governance gap.
Agentic AI is moving rapidly from boardroom ambition to enterprise reality. Gartner forecasts that roughly 40% of enterprise applications will incorporate task-specific AI agents this year, up from just 5% last year. This surge forces every CIO, CISO, and technology leader to consider: What should AI be allowed to access, and how should it operate once inside the enterprise?Many organizations begin by embedding AI agents directly into legacy systems, connecting them to backend databases, APIs, and workflows in the name of speed. While this inline approach can work in modern, well-governed environments, it often bypasses the approval workflows and controls that legacy systems were built around. Agents can access restricted data, skip approvals, or execute transactions without a complete, attributable record. The result is a growing governance gap. Decisions tied to sensitive data can’t be reliably reconstructed or defended with the same confidence as human-driven work. Even advanced models stall in pilots because organizations can’t prove how outcomes were produced. The solution is not to slow AI adoption. It’s to change how AI interacts with the systems that already run the business.When AI bypasses the system, it breaks itConsider a finance workflow in an ERP software system. An agent updates vendor bank details and pushes a payment through a fast-track path, bypassing a required approval step and segregation-of-duties check. Later, when the transaction is questioned, the organization can’t prove who approved the change, why it was made, or whether proper controls were followed. That’s where accountability breaks down. Changes are made inside core systems, but the evidence is incomplete, inconsistent, or disconnected from the system of record. Emulated human behavior offers a more secure and practical path. These agents operate exactly as a human employee would: logging in with standard credentials, navigating the existing user interface, reading screens in context, following established workflows, and executing tasks while remaining fully subject to every control already in place. No new APIs. No raw backend data exposure. No rewriting of decades-old business logic or security rules. The guardrails designed to protect against human error or misuse — validations, permissions, approvals, and audit logging — remain 100% intact. This UI-first approach is especially effective for organizations running mission-critical processes on older platforms. Building secure, governed APIs for legacy systems is expensive and time-consuming, often leaving out protections built into the interface layer. While emulated human agents may not match the speed of direct backend calls, they provide far more valuable enterprise advantages: immediate deployability, ironclad accountability, and zero disruption to proven controls. Secure operation doesn’t require avoiding AI. It requires rethinking how it fits into the systems around it.Preparing for emulated human in the enterpriseThree priorities can help organizations prepare for the emulated human approach as AI scales into critical workflows.1. Place AI at the points where work happensMost enterprise AI strategies assume deeper backend integration creates better automation. In environments shaped by legacy systems, it often does the opposite: introducing new complexity while bypassing the workflows and controls already built into the interface layer. Instead, focus AI at the points where it can operate without requiring systems to be rebuilt. This approach dramatically reduces integration overhead, limits exposure of core systems, and allows AI to scale within existing operating models rather than forcing costly modernization.2. Align AI accountability with human accountabilityAgents should operate under named identities and the same policies as employees. They preserve approval workflows, follow role-based permissions, and generate the same audit artifacts — including log entries, change histories, tickets, and recorded approvals — that organizations already rely on to review human activity. This removes the dangerous two-tier governance model where AI operates under different standards than employees. Organizations can maintain visibility, accountability, and established compliance and risk management controls as AI takes on greater responsibility.3. Design for adaptability rather than brittle automationTraditional robotic process automation (RPA) relied on rigid, click-by-click scripts that broke the moment screens changed or exceptions appeared. Emulated human agents interpret context in real time, adjust to variation, and continue operating, just as skilled employees do. That adaptability is essential in dynamic enterprise environments where policies change, exceptions are common, and systems are rarely static. Instead of constant break/fix maintenance, organizations gain AI that can operate more resiliently inside real-world workflows.Scaling AI with the systems already in placeAs agentic AI scales, enterprises will be judged not only by the intelligence of their systems but by their ability to govern them. The pressure to balance innovation with control will only intensify. The most durable strategies will be those that embed AI safely within the systems already in place, rather than racing around them. When an agent’s actions can be audited and justified with the same rigor applied to a human colleague, it’s finally ready for production. That’s how secure, scalable AI will be defined in the enterprise.We feature the best small business software.This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives, our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit
Poland's Financial Ombudsman has issued a warning about a new scam in which fraudsters impersonate insurance companies and send fake emails claiming the recipient is owed a refund for an overpaid premium. The real aim is to steal payment card details from unsuspecting victims. Recipients are urged to ignore such messages and avoid clicking any links.
Former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko posted a social media appeal calling for de-escalation in Polish-Ukrainian relations, stressing that Poland is Ukraine's strategic ally and has taken in over one million Ukrainian refugees. His statement came days after he renounced the Order of the White Eagle, Poland's highest state honour. He urged both sides to halt the diplomatic spiral.
South Korea's Foreign Ministry announced on Tuesday that all North Korean soldiers captured by Ukraine who wish to do so will be allowed to settle in South Korea. Seoul's offer extends to troops who fought on Russia's side, marking a significant humanitarian and geopolitical gesture by the South Korean government.
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