constant stream of curated content
by Conspiracy Watch - about 29 minutes
À force d’être brandi à tort et à travers, le mot « négationnisme » risque de perdre sa signification historique et sa charge morale. L’historien Henry Rousso explique pourquoi son extension polémique pose un problème de fond.
by Wired - about 49 minutes
Make a recovery plan now to avoid losing access to your account in the future.
by Le Monde - about 55 minutes
Selon le chef de l’administration militaire régionale, sept personnes ont été tuées, dont deux enfants, et 15 blessées par une frappe nocturne russe contre un immeuble d’habitation de la deuxième ville d’Ukraine. Un précédent bilan, samedi matin, faisait état de cinq morts.
by Korben - about 59 minutes
Anthropic et Mozilla viennent de publier les résultats d'une collaboration menée en février. En deux semaines, le modèle Claude Opus 4.6 a analysé près de 6 000 fichiers C++ du code source de Firefox et découvert 22 vulnérabilités de sécurité, dont 14 classées haute gravité. Toutes sont déjà corrigées dans Firefox 148.
Un chasseur de bugs d'un nouveau genre
C'est l'équipe de red team d'Anthropic qui a contacté Mozilla pour tester son système de détection de failles par IA sur le code source de Firefox. Le modèle Claude Opus 4.6 a d'abord été lâché sur le moteur JavaScript du navigateur, avant d'être étendu au reste de la base de code.
Vingt minutes après le début de l'analyse, il...
by Zataz - about 59 minutes
Après une cyberattaque revendiquée, YggTorrent annonce sa disparition puis prépare déjà le lancement d’un nouveau projet baptisé YGG.
by HackAdAy - about 2 hours
Modern-day receivers are miracles of digital audio and video processing, but compared to their more analog brethren, they can come with a host of new and fascinating faults. The Onkyo TX-SA806 and SR806 receivers were released back in 2008, with [Tony359] recently getting the latter variant in for repair. Described as having weird digital distortion on the audio outputs, this particular issue got fixed by recapping the PCB with all the digital processing in the first video on this receiver, but this left the second issue unaddressed of a persistent hum, which is the topic of the second video on this repair.
Capacitor C5662 in the Onkyo TX-SR608 receiver with a slight bulge.
With the easy fix of recapping of...
by Korben - about 2 hours
AGENTS.md, c'est un standard émergent que les agents IA comme Copilot, Codex ou
Jules
lisent avant de toucher à votre code. Plus de 60 000 projets open source l'utilisent déjà pour guider ces agents dans leur repo et y'a un développeur qui a eu l'idée géniale de retourner ce truc contre eux.
Ross A. Baker a créé
no-agents.md
, un petit projet hébergé sur Codeberg (pas sur GitHub, c'est voulu ✊) qui fournit un fichier AGENTS.md d'une trentaine de lignes, prêt à copier dans votre repo. Sauf que au lieu d'expliquer aux agents comment bosser sur votre projet, il leur interdit TOUT ! Lecture de fichiers, review de code, analyse statique, accès aux issues et aux pull requests, entraînement sur le...
by Torrentfreak - about 2 hours
In the race to build the most capable LLM models, several tech companies sourced copyrighted content for use as training data, without obtaining permission from content owners.
Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, was one of the companies to get sued. In 2023, well-known book authors, including Richard Kadrey, Sarah Silverman, and Christopher Golden, filed a class-action lawsuit against the company.
Meta’s Bittersweet Victory
Last summer, Meta scored a key victory in this case, as the court concluded that using pirated books to train its Llama LLM qualified as fair use, based on the arguments presented in this case. This was a bittersweet victory, however, as Meta remained on the hook for...
by Le Monde - about 3 hours
La metteuse en scène et actuelle directrice du Théâtre Gérard-Philipe de Saint-Denis remplace le dramaturge libano-canadien, qui quitte ses fonctions le 8 mars.
by daryo Bluesky - about 3 hours
le théâtre… au cinéma
https://www.lemonde.fr/blog/correcteurs/2026/02/15/trois-films-sur-le-theatre/
by Courrier International - about 4 hours
Dans la capitale burkinabè, Ouagadougou, les perruques font fureur auprès des clientes qui y trouvent un gain de temps et d’argent. Mais “Studio Yafa”, qui s’est promené dans plusieurs boutiques vendant ces accessoires, alerte aussi sur les risques sanitaires du port de la perruque.
by Courrier International - about 4 hours
Fabricante du Washlet, des toilettes avec fonction bidet, l’entreprise japonaise Toto avait essuyé des refus catégoriques des centres commerciaux aux États-Unis dans les années 1990. Mais elle voit ses ventes fortement progresser ces dernières années. Le journal japonais “Mainichi Shimbun” se penche sur ce succès inattendu.
by Courrier International - about 4 hours
Quand elle était enfant, la flamboyante confiture égayait ses goûters. L’an dernier, c’est avec gourmandise que la journaliste Lydia Wilson a découvert qu’il existait, dans le comté de Cumbria, un festival consacré à la marmelade. Avec sa mère et un ami, elle a décidé d’y participer. Elle raconte cette aventure sur le site “New Lines Magazine”.
by Courrier International - about 4 hours
C’est au Royaume-Uni qu’il a découvert l’univers du cabaret et appris à se jouer de tous les genres. L’Australien de 41 ans est actuellement en tournée dans son pays natal avec pas moins de trois spectacles queer mêlant stand-up, chanson et performance drag. “The Sydney Morning Herald” brosse son portrait.
by Journal du Lapin - about 4 hours
Avant SimpleText (l’ancêtre de TextEdit dans les Mac OS classiques), il y avait TeachText. C’est un petit programme qui permet d’ouvrir les fichiers textes simplement et rapidement. Et TeachText, disponible dans le System 7.1 et avant, a un petit Easter Egg. Je me demandais pourquoi il n’y avait pas de capture sur MacKiDo, j’ai (un peu) compris : quand on fait une capture avec le raccourci classique (command + shift + 3, comme en 2026), la fenêtre n’est pas capturée. Aucune idée de la raison. La capture n’affiche pas le menu
Du coup, j’ai sorti une carte d’acquisition. L’Easter Egg s’active en pressant command et option au moment de cliquer sur le menu  -> About TeachText....
by Courrier International - about 4 hours
Dans certaines cultures, retirer ses chaussures en entrant dans le logement de quelqu’un d’autre est une obligation à respecter, mais l’étiquette est moins stricte dans de nombreux autres pays. En Italie, “Specchio” analyse les raisons, “entre contrôle et lâcher-prise”, de ceux qui imposent le déchaussage et de ceux qui laissent le choix à leurs invités.
by Korben - about 4 hours
Le Wall Street Journal vient de révéler que des hackers liés au gouvernement chinois auraient infiltré un réseau interne du FBI dédié à la surveillance. Le système compromis gère les écoutes téléphoniques et les mandats de renseignement. L'enquête est en cours, et la Maison Blanche, la NSA et la CISA sont sur le coup, et ça fait mauvais genre.
Le système d'écoutes du FBI compromis
C'est le Digital Collection System Network qui a été visé, un réseau non classifié mais qui contient des informations sensibles pour les forces de l'ordre. On y trouve les retours de surveillance, les données liées aux mandats d'écoutes et des informations personnelles sur les personnes visées par des...
by BBC - about 5 hours
Ordinary Iranians reflect on seven days of conflict and where they see their country going next.
by HackAdAy - about 5 hours
Can you remotely unlock an encrypted hard disk? [Jyn] needed to unlock their home server after it rebooted even if they weren’t home. Normally, they used Tailscale to remote in, but you can’t use tailscale to connect to the machine before the hard drive decrypts, right? Well, you can, sort of, and [Jyn] explains how.
The entertaining post points out something you probably knew, but never thought much about. When your Linux box boots, it starts a very tiny compressed Linux in RAM. On [Jyn’s] machine using Arch, this is the initramfs.
That’s not news, but because it is an actual limited Linux system (including systemd), you can add tools to it. In this case, adding dropbear (an ssh server) and Tailscale...
by Le Monde - about 5 hours
Titulaire et brillant lors des deux premiers matchs du Tournoi des six nations, puis forfait contre l’Italie pour cause de blessure, l’ouvreur est de retour pour le déplacement à Edimbourg, samedi. A 27 ans, Matthieu Jalibert semble reprendre le fil d’une carrière internationale contrastée.
by Les Décodeurs - about 6 hours
Les élections municipales se profilent, avec leur lot de nouveautés. Entrez le nom de votre commune et Les Décodeurs vous expliquent comment le vote va se dérouler chez vous.
by Les Décodeurs - about 6 hours
Plus de 50 000 listes et 900 000 candidats se préparent dans les 34 944 communes de France et les arrondissements de Paris, Lyon et Marseille lors du scrutin des 15 et 22 mars.
by Le Monde - about 6 hours
Limiter l’usage de l’intelligence artificielle à certains contextes et interroger les réponses qu’elle fournit permet de ne pas abandonner certaines de ses aptitudes cognitives en chemin.
by Le Monde - about 7 hours
La guerre au Moyen-Orient risque de déclencher une bataille mondiale pour le gaz, dont le prix européen a bondi ces derniers jours. Plusieurs navires méthaniers ont dévié pour livrer leur cargaison en Asie.
by HackAdAy - about 8 hours
Usage of an automatic stoker. (Source: Claymills Pumping Station, YouTube)
Hacks are of all ages, with the Victorian-era Claymills Pumping Station being no exception. When its old Lancashire boilers from the 19th century were  finally replaced with modern 1930s boilers, the 1920s-era automatic stokers were bodged onto the new boilers with a rather ill-fitting adapter plate, as there was no standard Lancashire boiler design. Nearly a hundred years later it was up to the volunteers at this Victorian-era pumping station to inspect and refurbish this solution, before fitting it back onto the boiler.
Lancashire boilers have two flue channels in which the coal is burned, which used to be done purely by hand. The...
by The Verge - about 8 hours
The DJI Romo robot vacuums. | Image: DJI On Valentine's Day, I brought you a story that's since made headlines all around the world: How one man, just trying to steer his DJI robot vacuum with a PlayStation gamepad, discovered an entire network of 7,000 remote-control DJI robots ready to let him peek into other people's homes.
To be clear, DJI had already begun addressing some of the related vulnerabilities before the man, Sammy Azdoufal, showed The Verge just how much he could access. But it wasn't clear whether DJI would pay him for his discovery, particularly after how it treated security researcher Kevin Finisterre back in 2017 - or how soon DJI might fully patch the additiona …
Read the full story at...
by New Yorker - about 8 hours
In the new HBO docuseries, about petty disputes between homeowners, everyone has a gun, a grievance, and a security camera.
by BBC - about 9 hours
The president also calls on Tehran to pick new leaders who are "acceptable" to the White House after six days of war.
by BBC - about 10 hours
Ukraine has embarked on a programme to deploy armed robots on the battlefield against Russian forces.
by HackAdAy - about 11 hours
When thinking of humanity’s ability to harness wind energy, many people will conjure images of windmills from places like The Netherlands or Persia. But people have been using wind energy for far longer than that in the form of sailing ships. Using the wind for transportation goes back another four thousand years or so, but despite our vast experience navigating the seas with wind alone there is still some room for improvement. Many modern sailboats use a number of different pulleys to manage all of the rigging, but this new, open-source pulley can replace many of them.
The pulley, or “block” as they are sometimes called, is built with a polymer roller made out of a type of nylon, which has the benefit...
by New Yorker - about 11 hours
Idrissa Ouédraogo’s first feature, now streaming, is a tense drama of romance amid politics and a striking advance in cinematic form.
by QZ - about 11 hours
Platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket are facing bipartisan backlash as lawmakers warn that prediction markets are monetizing state secrets
by QZ - about 11 hours
Oil’s surge is now a gas-price problem, an airline problem, a bond-market problem, and after Friday’s jobs miss, a Fed headache for markets
by Wired - about 11 hours
Deveillance’s Spectre I, developed by a recent Harvard grad, wants to give people control over the always-on wearables surrounding their lives. The problem? Physics.
by The Verge - about 11 hours
A blog post from Valve on Friday initially seemed to throw cold water on the idea that the Steam Machine, Steam Frame, and Steam Controller would arrive in 2026 at all. But Valve tells The Verge it did not mean to suggest that - and that all three pieces of hardware will indeed ship this year, despite challenges from the ongoing memory shortage. Earlier today, Valve wrote that "we hope to ship in 2026," which sounded like a downgrade from Valve's earlier promises. As recently as last month, the company explicitly said it had not changed its plans to ship all three new hardware products "in the first half of the year," even though that its …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Wired - yesterday at 23:41
Marley Spoon has stripped Martha Stewart from its website and seems to be cooking a little differently. Here’s a review.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:30
Daniel Chong was ready to cut the scene, until Pixar legends Pete Docter and Andrew Stanton stepped in.
by io9 - yesterday at 23:00
AI’s projected water demand will create major problems not just for the average American, but for the industry itself.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:40
Tesla is already looking to take advantage of lower Canadian tariffs on Chinese EVs.
by io9 - yesterday at 22:30
Star Peter Claffey has hopes the very tall pair might meet again if the show gets more seasons.
by Wired - yesterday at 22:27
From cast-iron pans to mechanical watches, we’ve rounded up products that are made to last for decades.
by QZ - yesterday at 22:11
Prediction markets are luring teenage gamblers, and that's a problem as depression, addiction, and financial loss loom
by io9 - yesterday at 22:00
So was it AI or not?
by HackAdAy - yesterday at 22:00
Clocks come in many styles and sizes, with perhaps the most visually pleasing ones involving marbles. Watching these little spheres obey gravity and form clearly readable numbers on a clock has strong mesmerizing qualities. If you’re not into really big marble clocks, or cannot quite find the space for a desk-sized clock, then the tiny marble clock by [Jens] may be an option.
While he totally loved the massive marble clock that [Ivan Miranda] built, it is a massive contraption that’s hard to justify as a permanent installation. His take on the concept thus makes it as small as possible, by using a pick-and-place style arm to place the marbles instead. Although the marbles don’t do a lot of rolling this...
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:58
Grammarly's "expert review" feature offers to give users writing advice "inspired by" subject matter experts, including recently deceased professors, as Wired reported on Wednesday. When I tried the feature out myself, I found some experts that came as a surprise for a different reason - one of them was my boss. The AI-generated feedback included comments that appeared to be from The Verge's editor-in-chief, Nilay Patel, as well as editor-at-large David Pierce and senior editors Sean Hollister and Tom Warren, none of whom gave Grammarly permission to include them in the "expert reviews." The feature, which launched in August, claims to h …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:30
Don’t buy one unless you can see the “EX” label on the card and package. | Image: Cameron Faulkner / The Verge Unlike the original Switch, the Nintendo Switch 2 requires microSD Express cards for storing and playing games. While physically identical to microSD cards (aside from a small, easy-to-miss “EX” emblem etched onto the front of the card, as highlighted in the main image above), microSD Express cards are significantly faster. They advertise a 4.4x increase in transfer speeds over regular microSD cards. That speed boost is necessary for loading Switch 2 games that have more detailed textures and larger worlds than those that are possible on the original Switch. You may not need to buy one...
by New Yorker - yesterday at 21:19
The former Secretary of D.H.S. faced criticism for misspending funds, prioritizing her own self-promotion, and reflexively defending even the most brutal acts of the Trump Administration’s deportation efforts.
by The Verge - yesterday at 21:17
The US Customs and Border Protection says it currently can't comply with an order to process billions of dollars in refunds stemming from tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump. In a filing on Friday, CBP executive director Brandon Lord says the agency's digital import processing system is "not well suited to a task of this scale," as reported earlier by CNBC. The CBP's admission comes after the Supreme Court struck down the tariffs imposed by Trump under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) last month. This week, the International Trade Court ruled that importers impacted by the tariffs are entitled to refunds with i …
Read the full story at The Verge.
by Wired - yesterday at 21:17
Here’s a guide to all the models—plus Pixel case recommendations and smart software tricks to try.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 21:08
“The doctor kept hearing the same story from his patients. After taking GLP-1 weight-loss drugs and finally shedding those excess pounds, some had gone a bit rogue. They began spacing out the shots instead of injecting themselves every week. And it seemed to be working, said Dr. Mitch Biermann, an obesity and internal medicine specialist at Scripps Clinic in San Diego. ‘By the time the third person told me they were taking it every second or third week and still maintaining their weight, I started recommending it to other patients,’ he said. Dr. Biermann also conceived a study to test the strategy. Now the results of that research are in: After 36 weeks of follow-up, most of the patients who spaced out...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 21:06
“Weight loss drugs could help people avoid getting addicted to alcohol, tobacco and drugs such as cannabis and cocaine, a study has found. They could also reduce the risk of people already addicted to illicit substances having an overdose, ending up in hospital or dying, according to research published in the British Medical Journal. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists used to treat type 2 diabetes and obesity, such as Mounjaro and Ozempic, are thought to work by influencing the brain’s reward pathways in order to cut cravings. They help people feel fuller by mimicking the natural substance released after eating. The US study analysed 606,434 US veterans with type 2 diabetes, who were monitored for...
by Human Progress - yesterday at 21:02
“A new study across 38 countries found that among adults aged 20-45 who work from home at least one day per week, actual births since 2023 and planned family size are higher. This implies that an increase in remote work would boost fertility much more effectively than expensive pronatalist policies.” From Project Syndicate.
The post The Baby Bump from Remote Work appeared first on Human Progress.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:44
“The DNA foundation model Evo 2 has been published in the journal Nature. Trained on the DNA of over 100,000 species across the entire tree of life, Evo 2 can identify patterns in gene sequences across disparate organisms that experimental researchers would need years to uncover. The machine learning model can accurately identify disease-causing mutations in human genes and is capable of designing new genomes that are as long as the genomes of simple bacteria.” From Phys.org.
The post AI Can Now Design the Genetic Code for All Domains of Life appeared first on Human Progress.
by Human Progress - yesterday at 20:41
“Planned capital investment in South Africa surged last year as private commitments tripled, while government projects excluding state companies declined, according to a report by Nedbank Group Ltd. The value of newly announced plans climbed 16% to 705.6 billion rand ($44 billion), the lender said in its Capital Expenditure Project Listing report released Monday. Private firms committed to investing 382.5 billion rand, up from 116.2 billion rand in 2024. Major initiatives included Vodacom Group Ltd.’s 85.2 billion-rand expansion and modernization of digital infrastructure through network upgrades and an accelerated 5G rollout, and NT55 Investments’ planned 50 billion-rand inland port in the central...
by New Yorker - yesterday at 20:00
The director talks with the New Yorker staff writer Jelani Cobb about his movie, which has been nominated for a record-setting sixteen Academy Awards.
by New Yorker - yesterday at 20:00
As the conflict rapidly spreads throughout the Middle East, the New Yorker writers Dexter Filkins and Robin Wright discuss the stakes for Iran, the U.S., and the rest of the world.
by Asialyst - yesterday at 19:30
Le 9e congrès du Parti des travailleurs de Corée (PTC) qui s’est tenu à Pyongyang du 19 au 26 février - le troisième depuis l’arrivée au pouvoir de Kim Jong Un en décembre 2011 - a mis en scène de façon grandiose, digne des grandes heures de l’Union soviétique, la toute-puissance du grand leader, doté de la bombe nucléaire, plus que jamais en confiance depuis son alliance stratégique avec la Russie en 2024 et sa proximité avec la Chine.
by Asialyst - yesterday at 19:29
La guerre livrée depuis le 28 février par les Etats-Unis et Israël contre l’Iran laisse, une fois de plus, la Chine en simple spectateur et représente pour elle un revers économique et géopolitique potentiel. Mais elle pourrait par contraste en retirer un gain conséquent en Asie si les Etats-Unis devaient se retrouver enlisés pour une longue période sur un théâtre iranien très risqué.
by BBC - yesterday at 19:09
A drone attack on Azerbaijan has narrowed choices for airlines scrambling to respond to disruption in the Gulf.
by QZ - yesterday at 18:41
The economy shed 92,000 jobs in February, while white-collar woes worsened and long-term unemployment rose