Y Combinator-backed insurance tech startup Corgi has denied accusations by Papermark that it stole the latter's open-source software. Corgi insists no theft occurred, but the dispute has sparked wider questions about "vibe coding" — the practice of using AI to generate code without deep understanding of its origins or licensing. The controversy highlights growing legal and ethical risks in AI-assisted software development.
After weeks of negotiations, the Trump White House permitted AI company Anthropic to restore access to its most advanced model, Mythos, for a select group of US companies and government agencies. The model had previously been restricted. No further details about which organizations gained access were provided.
A black bear wandered into a residential backyard in Canada, sending the homeowners inside for safety. Before the bear could cause any damage, the family's house cat confronted and chased it away. Video of the encounter quickly went viral online.
Lionel Messi has been in stunning form at the World Cup hosted across the USA, Canada and Mexico, scoring five goals in just two matches. Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni has announced a decision regarding Messi's role going forward in the tournament, though the source does not specify what that decision entails.
Nicholas Rossi, 38, raped two girlfriends in 2008 and later fled to Scotland, where he faked his own death to evade justice. He was identified in 2021 by an attentive nurse who recognized him while treating him for Covid-19. Rossi has since died in Utah.
Hundreds of scientifically vetted NIH grant applications are stuck in administrative limbo due to new political screening procedures. The process requires mandatory reviews by top health officials and automated checks for 235 disfavoured terms in grant texts. Applications that passed peer review are now awaiting political clearance before funding can be approved.
Renegotiations of the USMCA trade agreement are testing the future of North America's auto industry, which has been built on decades of cross-border integration between the US, Canada and Mexico. American farmers are increasingly reliant on Canadian and Mexican export markets as other overseas destinations become harder to access. Years of energy infrastructure investment have created a cross-border energy market that defies political narratives.
Constant notifications and health-tracking features on smartwatches can trigger anxiety and stress in users. The author consulted doctors and experts to understand why wearables have this effect. Specialists suggest practical steps to reduce the negative psychological impact of wearing such devices.
The United States struck Iran in retaliation for what Washington says was an Iranian attack on a vessel in the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump publicly justified the military strikes. Tensions between the two countries have sharply escalated following the incident.
Despite leading the World Cup 2026 Golden Boot standings, Lionel Messi will be benched for Argentina's match against Jordan. Coach Lionel Scaloni has decided to rest his star player, having other plans for him in the tournament's later stages. Argentina has already secured their place in the knockout rounds.
Director Luca Guadagnino declined to comment on Amazon MGM's decision to drop his film "Artificial," a project about OpenAI founder Sam Altman, saying the situation is still ongoing. Speaking on Italian TV show "Otto e Mezzo" on Friday, he avoided specifics about the film. He did, however, share that artificial intelligence is "changing the identity of the world."
Huawei has unveiled a hardware compression card claiming a data reduction ratio of up to 90:1 under suitable workloads, specifically for backup data with high redundancy such as daily full virtual machine backups. The company says this is 20% higher than the leading enterprise storage alternative currently on the market. The card uses a proprietary algorithm family called HZU based on nonlinear transformation and forms part of Huawei's new OceanProtect X8100 and X9100 all-flash backup storage systems.
Huawei claims backup compression ratios reaching an extraordinary 90:1 levelPatented algorithms sit at the centre of Huawei's reduction strategyFour separate reduction stages shrink data before long-term storageHuawei has unveiled a hardware compression card claiming a data reduction ratio reaching as high as 90:1 under suitable workloads.The figure applies specifically to backup data carrying high redundancy, such as daily full virtual machine backups accumulated over time.Huawei says this result sits 20% higher than the leading alternative currently available across the enterprise storage market.A patented algorithm built around a nonlinear transformationThe card forms part of Huawei's all-flash OceanProtect Backup Storage systems, including two newly announced models, the X8100 and X9100.Compression relies on a proprietary algorithm family Huawei calls HZU, described by the company as using a fast nonlinear transformation paired with lightweight context prediction methods.Huawei says this approach outperforms the long-established Lempel-Ziv compression paradigm, boosting the achievable compression ratio by roughly 30% under comparable conditions.The dynamic technique is patented, covering both the deduplication and compression methods used throughout Huawei's wider backup architecture.Selecting the most suitable algorithm depends heavily on the specific backup policy and underlying data types involved in each deployment.Earlier generation OceanProtect systems achieved a comparatively modest 72:1 reduction ratio, meaning the newly announced generation also runs up to 50% faster.Reduction pipeline relies on dense SSD deploymentReduction happens across four distinct stages, beginning with preprocessing designed to clean incoming data before further processing occurs.This is followed by multi-layer, inline, and variable-length deduplication, then HZBC compression, and finally byte-level compaction applied to whatever data remains.The compression card additionally offloads up to 22% of processing demand away from the backup system's main CPU during operation.That offload matters because OceanProtect systems rely on all-flash media rather than cheaper disk-based alternatives for storage.Huawei specifically uses QLC storage media paired with an adaptive SLC zone reserved for frequently accessed hot data.This combination is intended to support faster data recovery once backups eventually need restoring during outages.Since SSD capacity costs considerably more than disk per terabyte, squeezing more effective storage out of the same physical drives directly improves the economics of an all-flash backup system.In that sense, the compression algorithm and the SSD architecture work together, with the algorithm doing the actual reduction and the flash media determining why that reduction pays off.Prospective customers will likely need to test the OceanProtect platform directly against their own backup data sets.Whether customers experience reductions approaching 90:1 will likely depend heavily on datasets, retention policies, and real-world deployment conditions.Via Blocksandfiles
A 2011 Physics Stack Exchange thread explains why kinetic energy scales with the square of velocity (½mv²) rather than linearly with speed. The answers draw on Newtonian mechanics and the definition of work. The thread resurfaced on Hacker News with 31 upvotes and one comment.
Rashad Bilal and Troy Millings, CEOs and co-founders of financial literacy platform Earn Your Leisure, appeared on Bloomberg's "The Close" to discuss their educational mission. The platform aims to help individuals achieve financial freedom and build generational wealth. They also discussed strategies for riding the tech stock wave with hosts Romaine Bostick and Katie Greifeld.
A 60-year-old man in Spain visited doctors with a worsening two-week headache and subtle behavioural changes. A CT scan showed multiple brain lesions with swelling that initially suggested cancer. Elevated IgE levels pointed instead to a parasitic infection, and the man was ultimately diagnosed with neurocysticercosis — tapeworm cysts in the brain — despite never having travelled internationally. The case was published in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.
A 60-year-old man in Spain went to the doctor complaining of a headache that he couldn't shake. It had started two weeks prior and was only getting worse. He also said he had noticed subtle changes in his behavior. In a neurological exam, doctors found he had a mild delay in his movements, but no other deficits. His blood work was generally normal except for elevated IgE, a signal of immune responses linked to allergies, autoimmune disease, and parasitic infections. The doctors did a computed tomography (CT) scan of his head and saw much more obvious evidence of a problem: There were multiple lesions distributed throughout his brain accompanied by swelling. In a case report in Emerging Infectious Diseases, the doctors reported working through the possible conditions that could explain all the findings. They noted that the man was not immunocompromised and had never traveled internationally. Their top suspicion was metastatic cancer.Read full article Comments
A US appeals court has ordered Harvey Weinstein to be resentenced, though his underlying conviction has not been overturned. Prosecutors said they will recommend a 20-year prison term. The former movie producer also faces sentencing in a separate New York conviction.
Actress Chloe Cherry, best known for her role in HBO's "Euphoria," has announced a memoir titled "Somewhere Dark and Hot." The book will chronicle her time working in the adult entertainment industry and her rise to public prominence through Sam Levinson's drama series. No release date has been announced yet.
The Paris Diamond League athletics meeting will go ahead despite an ongoing heatwave, organisers confirmed. Only competitions involving professional athletes will be held, with all other activities and events cancelled as a safety precaution. The decision reflects growing concerns about extreme heat at major outdoor sporting events.
GTA 6 will launch without a physical disc, making it a digital-only release. The article examines whether the gaming industry is following music and film into an almost entirely digital future. Rockstar's decision raises questions about game ownership, accessibility, and the long-term future of physical media in gaming.
Hub International Holdings Inc., an insurance broker backed by private equity firm Hellman Friedman, has confidentially filed for an initial public offering. The proceeds from the IPO are expected to be used in part to reduce the company's debt. No valuation or timing details have been disclosed.
An IEEE Spectrum article examines how artificial intelligence is making inroads into mathematics, prompting researchers to ask deep questions about the nature of proof, discovery, and the role of human mathematicians. The piece sparked discussion on Hacker News. Specific breakthrough examples are not detailed in the provided text.
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