constant stream of curated content
by Korben - about 35 minutes
Vous connaissez sans doute la stéganographie, l'art de planquer des messages secrets un peu partout, mais avez-vous déjà entendu parler de la stéganographie inversée ? Non ? Eh bien, laissez-moi vous présenter Gibberifier
.
L'idée est géniale puisqu'il s'agit de rendre un texte totalement illisible pour une IA (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, et consorts) tout en le laissant parfaitement clair pour nous, pauvres humains. C'est un peu comme parler une langue que les machines ne comprennent pas.
Le secret de cette technique réside dans l'utilisation de caractères Unicode de largeur zéro (comme le fameux U+200B) qui sont des caractères qui existent informatiquement mais qui ne prennent aucune place à...
by Le Monde - about 55 minutes
Le président américain a déclaré dimanche que le régime iranien était prêt à « négocier » après ses menaces d’opération militaire, ajoutant qu’« une rencontre est en cours de préparation ». Il a cependant prévenu que les Etats-Unis pourraient « devoir agir avant une rencontre ».
by Conspiracy Watch - about 1 hour
Auteur à succès mondial, l'écrivain suisse est mort à 90 ans. Retour sur l'itinéraire d'un géant du faux.
by Courrier International - about 1 hour
Partager en famille le mode vie des nomades numériques : le projet peut faire rêver mais les écueils sont nombreux, comme le montrent les témoignages rassemblés par “The Guardian”.
by Torrentfreak - about 2 hours
Pirate sites and services can be a real challenge for rightsholders to deal with. In India, however, recent court orders have proven to be quite effective.
Indian courts have issued pirate site blocking orders for over a decade. Initially, these orders were relatively basic, requiring local Internet providers to block specific domain names.
Super Dynamic++ Anti-Hydra Injunctions
These regular injunctions were only partially effective. After the High Court granted a blocking injunction, pirate sites would often switch to new domains, requiring rightsholders to return to court to get these blocked as well.
To deal with this problem, the dynamic injunction was invented. These orders were issued to more...
by daryo Bluesky - about 2 hours
Here are over 20 gadgets that’ll help you achieve your New Year’s resolutions
https://www.theverge.com/gadgets/855851/new-years-resolution-gifts-ideas-2026-tech-gadgets-fitness
by Journal du Lapin - about 3 hours
Vu chez RR Auction, un prototype de Macintosh TV. C’est le premier Macintosh noir, et c’est une machine qui même dans sa version commerciale est assez rare. Il était estimé à 5 000 $ et est parti pour 2 116 $ tout de même. Il y a quelques erreurs dans la description. Elle indique par exemple que la caméra est plus sombre que sur la version finale alors que c’est le récepteur infrarouge. Pour le reste, il y a un clavier Apple Keyboard II et une souris Apple noire. On peut voir quelques stickers (orange) pour indiquer que c’est un prototype, l’absence de prise antenne (et donc probablement de la carte tuner) et le fait que la machine utilise un lecteur de CD de type caddy.
On voit le lecteur de...
by Le Taurillon - about 3 hours
Dans son discours sur l'état de l'Union 2025, Ursula von der Leyen a promis une “stratégie européenne de lutte contre la pauvreté”, un arsenal social ambitieux pour éradiquer la pauvreté d'ici 2050. Mais alors que 93 millions d'Européens vivent déjà dans la précarité, cette promesse, qui sonne familière, est passée largement inaperçue. Sans budget massif ni cadre contraignant, la crédibilité de cette stratégie, éclipsée par les débats sur la défense et la géopolitique, reste plus que jamais en question. La pauvreté, un fléau négligé
En 2024, 93,3 millions de personnes vivaient sous le seuil de pauvreté ou d'exclusion sociale dans l'UE, soit un Européen sur cinq. En 2023, ce...
by HackAdAy - about 4 hours
It used to be a rite of passage to be able to do the math necessary to design various bipolar transistor amplifier configurations. This doesn’t come up as often as it used to, but it is still a good skill to have, and [Void Electronics] walks us through a common emitter amplifier in a recent video you can see below.
The input design parameters are the gain and the collector voltage. You also have to pick a reasonable collector current within the range for your proposed device that provides enough power to the load. You also pick a quiescent voltage which, if you don’t have a good reason for picking a different value, will usually be half the supply voltage.
The calculations are approximate since the...
by BBC - about 4 hours
The US president says Iranian leaders have called "to negotiate", but adds the US "may have to act" before a meeting.
by Le Monde - about 5 hours
Suspectées de véhiculer des travaux idéologiques, les universités ont le sentiment de servir désormais de boucs émissaires à une partie des responsables politiques, à droite ou à l’extrême droite.
by Le Monde - about 5 hours
Ce spectre agité par le premier ministre en réponse à des motions de censure a ulcéré les personnalités et les élus du « socle commun », qui réclament le recours au 49.3 pour doter le pays d’un budget.
by Courrier International - about 5 hours
Le président républicain a affirmé dimanche qu’une réunion était en préparation avec les dirigeants de la République islamique, aux prises avec une vaste contestation qu’ils répriment dans le sang. Trump n’a toutefois pas écarté la possibilité d’une intervention militaire. Une option qui divise l’administration conservatrice, rapporte la presse américaine.
by Le Monde - about 5 hours
Chiffres à l’appui, attestant d’une baisse du nombre d’homicides, le commissaire en chef Mark Rowley tente de contrer les attaques du président américain sur l’incapacité supposée du maire de la capitale anglaise, Sadiq Khan, d’y contenir la violence.
by BBC - about 5 hours
The Marty Supreme star is among the big winners at the Globes and gets a boost in his quest for an Oscar.
by Courrier International - about 6 hours
La découverte d’une espèce extrêmement rare de “Rafflesia”, à Sumatra fin novembre, a été abondamment relayée sur Internet. Mais elle a également provoqué d’intenses débats en Indonésie sur le colonialisme académique : la presse locale souligne l’invisibilisation des chercheurs non-occidentaux ainsi que l’omniprésence des symboles du colonialisme dans les noms scientifiques.
by Courrier International - about 6 hours
Contre vents et marées, Samir Mansour, l’un des libraires les plus renommés de l’enclave palestinienne, a continué de vendre des livres et d’encourager de jeunes talents à écrire durant les deux années de guerre dévastatrice, raconte le “Financial Times”. Aujourd’hui, ce quinquagénaire à l’esprit vif dit vouloir poursuivre sa mission et faire triompher l’amour de la lecture sur la mort.
by Le Monde - about 6 hours
Prenant acte des menaces américaines sur le Groenland et des réserves de plusieurs Etats de l’Union européenne vis-à-vis de l’aide à l’Ukraine, l’expert militaire allemand Carlo Masala appelle à repenser la défense du Vieux Continent en dehors du cadre de l’OTAN et de l’UE.
by BBC - about 6 hours
He called the probe "unprecedented", following his refusal to lower interest rates after demands by Donald Trump.
by HackAdAy - about 7 hours
Variable capacitors may be useful, but the air gap that provides their capacitance is their greatest weakness. Rather than deal with the poor dielectric properties of air, some high-end variable capacitors replace it with a vacuum, which presents some obvious mechanical difficulties, but does give the resulting capacitor a remarkable quality factor, high-voltage performance, and higher capacitance for plate area than their air-gapped brethren. [Shahriar] of [The Signal Path] managed to acquire a pair of these and took a detailed look at their construction and performance in a recent video. The vacuum capacitors don’t use quite the same parallel plate design as other variable capacitors. They instead make the...
by QZ - about 8 hours
Powell has labored to avoid a direct confrontation with the White House in its scorched-earth effort to pressure the Fed into cutting borrowing costs
by BBC - about 9 hours
The new law, which came into effect in December, is aimed at protecting children from online harm.
by The Brighter Side - about 9 hours
Researchers at the University of British Columbia and Dalhousie University have found a young galaxy cluster that appears far hotter than theory allows. The international team, working with the National Research Council of Canada and using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, reported the discovery in the journal Nature. The study was led by Dazhi Zhou, a doctoral student in the UBC department of physics and astronomy. The work also involved Dr. Scott Chapman, a professor at Dalhousie University and an affiliate professor at UBC, who carried out much of the research while at the National Research Council of Canada. The scientists focused on a distant system called SPT2349–56. It existed just 1.4...
by HackAdAy - about 10 hours
At the risk of starting a controversy: is there anyone who goes to the effort of setting up Home Assistant who wouldn’t really rather be living on the Enterprise-D? If such a person exists, it’s not [steve-gibbs5], who has not only put together a convincing LCARS dashboard on an Android tablet, but has also put together an easy-to-follow Instructable so you can too. In case you’ve been monkishly avoiding television since the mid-1980s, LCARS is the high-tech touchscreen interface used on Star Trek: The Next Generation and its sequels. It’s an iconic, instantly-recognizable aesthetic, and we think [Steve] nailed it, even if he was taking design cues from Voyager, which is… not everyone’s favorite...
by The Verge - about 10 hours
Billy Woods has one of the highest batting averages in the game. Between his solo records like Hiding Places and Maps, and his collaborative albums with Elucid as Armand Hammer, the man has multiple stone-cold classics under his belt. And, while no one would ever claim that Woods' albums were light-hearted fare (these are not party records), Golliwog represents his darkest to date.
This is not your typical horrorcore record. Others, like Geto Boys, Gravediggaz, and Insane Clown Posse, reach for slasher aesthetics and shock tactics. But what Billy Woods has crafted is more A24 than Blumhouse. Sure, the first track is called "Jumpscare," an …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Torrentfreak - about 10 hours
The data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only.
Downloading content without permission is copyright infringement. These torrent download statistics are only meant to provide further insight into piracy trends. All data are gathered from public resources. This week we have one newcomer on the list. “Zootopia 2” is the most shared title. The most torrented movies for the week ending on January 12 are: Movie Rank
Rank last week
Movie name
IMDb Rating / Trailer Most downloaded movies via torrent sites 1
(1)
Zootopia 2
7.6 / trailer 2
(3)
Predator: Badlands
7.5 / trailer 3
(6)
Wicked: For Good
6.8 / trailer 4
(5)
Wake Up Dead Man: A...
by io9 - yesterday at 23:55
The 2026 Hollywood awards season starts tonight.
by BBC - yesterday at 23:21
The move comes after protests against immigration enforcement have been held across the US after a woman was shot by an ICE agent.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:14
Trump administration's global influence strategy runs through the AI supply chain.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:15
Here come some new challengers to 'DC K.O.,' which just further turns the whole event into a mini-version of 'Injustice 3.'
by io9 - yesterday at 22:10
Of course, bitcoin critics would argue there is nothing truly gained here in terms of energy efficiency.
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 22:07
The classic thought experiment about a horse-sized duck and a hundred duck-sized horses is more than a joke. It captures a deep tradeoff between quantity and quality that shows up in nature, including in the tiny societies under your feet. How Ant Societies Tackle the Quantity–Quality Dilemma A new study shows that some ant species solved this tradeoff by going all in on numbers. Instead of building each worker as a heavily armored fortress, they invest less in individual protection and redirect those nutrients into making more ants. That choice, the researchers found, did not doom those species. It paid off. Colonies with cheaper, less protected workers often became bigger and more evolutionarily...
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
EDM (Electrical Discharge Machining) is one of those specialised manufacturing processes that are traditionally expensive and therefore somewhat underrepresented in the DIY and hacker scenes. It’s with great delight that we present EnderSpark, a solution to not one but two problems. The first problem is how to perform CNC operations on hard-to-machine materials such as hardened metals (without breaking the bank). The second problem is what to do with all those broken and forgotten previous-generation Creality Ender 3D printers we know you have stashed away.
To be honest, there isn’t much to a cheap 3D printer, and once you ditch the bed and extruder assembly, you aren’t left with a lot. Anyway, the first...
by io9 - yesterday at 20:25
The music of Guy Moon spanned classic Nick cartoons, 'The Brady Bunch,' and 'Johnny Quest.'
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:19
Earlier this month, The Guardian published an investigation that showed Google was serving up misleading and outright false information via its AI overviews in response to certain medical inquiries. Now those results appear to have been removed. According to the original report: In one case that experts described as "really dangerous", Google wrongly advised people with pancreatic cancer to avoid high-fat foods. Experts said this was the exact opposite of what should be recommended, and may increase the risk of patients dying from the disease.
In another "alarming" example, the company provided bogus information about crucial liver func …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Verge - yesterday at 20:00
It happens every year: we set ambitious New Year's resolutions - work out more, spend less, keep the house cleaner - full of optimism and motivation. Then life happens, and suddenly it's June and you can't recall what your resolutions even were. But it doesn't have to be that way. Sometimes the problem isn't a lack of motivation but rather a lack of tools, the kind that can make those goals feel more manageable and easier to achieve. After all, the right gear can help turn good intentions into habits that actually last.
Below, we've rounded up a few of our favorite tools, all of which are designed to help our readers achieve many of the m …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Conspiracy Watch - yesterday at 19:56
L'actu de la semaine décryptée par Conspiracy Watch (du 05/01/2026 au 11/01/2026).
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 19:00
At some point during our primary school careers, most of us probably constructed a simple compass, often by floating a magnetized needle on a cork in a cup of water. The water in such a configuration not only lets the needle spin without friction, but also dampens out (so to speak) the needle’s tendency to swing back and forth across the north-south line. Liquid-filled compasses use the same principle, but even well-made compasses can develop bubbles when exposed to temperature or pressure variations. Rather than accept this unsightly state of affairs, [The Map Reading Company] designed a new kind of liquid-free, inductively-damped compass.
It’s hard to design a compass that settles quickly, even if it...
by New Yorker - yesterday at 18:48
With demonstrations in dozens of cities across Iran, Ali Khamenei and his regime are faced with a dilemma.
by The Verge - yesterday at 18:26
If you're one of the many, many people who received a password reset email from Instagram the other day, the company says it fixed the issue. What was the issue? Unclear. We reached out to Meta for clarification and have yet to receive a response. All we know is that an "external party" triggered the emails, and Instagram says you can safely ignore them. The company posted on X that the issue had been fixed and also claimed there was no breach of its systems. This seemingly contradicts reports from Malwarebytes, which said that information on 17.5 million Instagram accounts, including usernames, physical addresses, phone numbers, and email …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 18:07
Australia’s construction sector may be on the brink of a quiet revolution, one built from soil, water, and something most people throw away. Engineers at RMIT University have developed a new building material that dramatically cuts carbon emissions while giving waste cardboard a second life. The material, called cardboard-confined rammed earth, could reshape how homes and small buildings are designed, especially in a warming world under pressure to reduce emissions. Concrete has long been the backbone of modern construction, but it comes with a heavy environmental cost. Cement and concrete production account for roughly 8 percent of global carbon emissions each year. At the same time, Australia sends more...
by The Verge - yesterday at 17:57
GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen is in line to potentially earn $35 billion in stock options, so long as the company hits a $100 billion market cap. One way to hit that target is by cutting costs, and one way of cutting costs is to close down a bunch of stores. The company closed 590 stores in fiscal year 2024, and said in a recent SEC filing that it anticipates "closing a significant number of additional stores in fiscal 2025." With the fiscal year set to end on January 31st, it appears the race is on, and according to a blog tracking closures, GameStop is planning on shuttering (or already has) over 430 stores this month.
As of Sunday, January 11t …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Les Décodeurs - yesterday at 17:41
Vous n’avez pas suivi l’actualité samedi 10 et dimanche 11 janvier ? Voici ce qu’il s’est passé pendant ces dernières quarante-huit heures.
by La Horde - yesterday at 16:40
Devant l'institut du Monde Arabe (1 rue des Fossés Saint Bernard, 75005, Paris) -
Initiatives
by La Horde - yesterday at 16:33
Nouveau rassemblement lundi dès 11h00 devant la mairie d'Hénin-Beaumont. -
Initiatives
by La Horde - yesterday at 16:32
Riposte antifasciste accueille Felicien Faury, sociologue du vote RN. -
Initiatives / Rencontres et débats
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 16:07
Deep inside the brain, every thought and memory begins with a burst of electrical activity. For years, scientists have tried to watch that activity in real time by shining lasers into the brain. Now a new tool lets brain cells light themselves from within, turning them into tiny living lanterns. Lighting Up the Brain From Within About a decade ago, a team of neuroscientists started asking a bold question: “What if we could light up the brain from the inside?” said Christopher Moore, a professor of brain science at Brown University. Instead of blasting tissue with outside light, they wondered if neurons could make their own glow. That idea led to the launch of the Bioluminescence Hub at Brown’s Carney...
by Korben - yesterday at 14:20
Cet article fait partie de
ma série spéciale hackers
. Bonne lecture !
Le 7 août 2019, dans le Mississippi, des centaines d'enfants rentrent de leur premier jour d'école. Cartables sur le dos, ils s'attendent à retrouver leurs parents pour raconter leur journée.
Mais à la place, ils découvrent des maisons vides ou des usines encerclées par des agents fédéraux. Ce jour-là, l'ICE (les services d'immigration américains) mène la plus grande opération de l'histoire du pays en un seul État : 680 personnes sont arrêtées, menottées et embarquées dans des camionnettes blanches. Source L'enquête qui a mené à ces rafles n'a pas été montée "à l’ancienne" sur un tableau en liège avec des...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 14:01
“Can Big Astronomy be nimble and economical? Eric Schmidt, the former chief executive of Google, and his wife Wendy are betting on yes. Schmidt Sciences, which is part of the Schmidts’ philanthropic efforts, is financing the construction of four major new telescopes, including one destined for orbit, that will rival the capabilities of NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. And the organization aims to have all four telescopes up and running within four years, a sprint compared with the decade or longer span that world-class astronomical facilities often take to complete… Schmidt Sciences has for several years quietly financed preliminary design studies, technology development and prototypes. The organization...
by The Brighter Side - yesterday at 13:51
A new study offers fresh hope for people living with type 2 diabetes and obesity. Researchers report progress toward a pill that lowers blood sugar and boosts fat burning without cutting appetite or weakening muscles. The findings come from a collaboration between Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm University. The drug works very differently from popular treatments like Ozempic. Those medications rely on gut and brain signals to reduce hunger and are usually given by injection. While effective, they often bring nausea, stomach issues, appetite loss, and muscle decline. The new approach aims to avoid those problems by targeting how muscles use energy. Instead of telling the brain to eat less, the treatment...
by Paul Jorion - yesterday at 13:34
 Joseph Le Hyaric (1923-2014)
by Wired - yesterday at 13:30
I've spent almost a year testing dozens of heat protectants for hair. Whether you’re blow-drying, curling, or straightening, these are the best formulas I've found.
by Wired - yesterday at 13:00
This is a promising stand-alone Dolby Atmos soundbar for music fans, but it still needs a few software tweaks.
by daryo Bluesky - yesterday at 12:40
📷 Lensball • ○ ◯
by Wired - yesterday at 12:30
Sony’s latest full frame mirrorless is a hybrid powerhouse with features to impress both video and still photographers.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
Capote’s journalistic transgressions were serious, but there is no denying the awesome influence of his work.
by Wired - yesterday at 12:00
Traditionally sleep coaches treat babies. But now more and more anxious, screen-attached grownups are the ones who need nursing.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
With Cove, his fourth restaurant, in Hudson Square, the twenty-seven-year-old wunderkind chef cooks with a new expansiveness.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 12:00
The U.S., once Denmark’s closest ally, is threatening to steal Greenland and attacking the country’s wind-power industry. Is this a permanent breakup?