- Free software from Google aims to protect political candidates from cyberattacks
- The cryptocurrency industry is going mainstream—time for some self-regulation
- Throwing robots at an assembly line won’t solve a factory’s problems
- Millions more Facebook users’ data was left open for anyone to access
- The Best of the Physics arXiv (week ending May 12, 2018)
- Yes, Atlas is running, but please don’t freak out
- Carnegie Mellon is set to offer the first undergrad degree in AI in the US
- This company hopes its cryptocurrency can help the internet of things reach its true potential
- Congo aims to stop its Ebola outbreak with an experimental vaccine
- Facebook is getting better at detecting hate speech, but it still has a long way to go
- Subcutaneous Fitbits? These cows are modeling the tracking technology of the future
- An “efail” in email could let hackers read your encrypted messages
- India has an AI plan—but it’s a long way from catching up with China and the US
- Kenya’s first satellite is now in Earth orbit
- I lost a bet, and now I am going to let millions of strangers check whether we’re related
- The White House says a new AI task force will protect workers and keep America first
- The White House’s cybersecurity tsar has been dethroned
- Insect-size robots are breaking their tethers
- Inside the business model for botnets
- Here comes a more precise version of CRISPR
- Video games could be serious tools for historical research
- People are freaking out about Google’s extremely human-sounding phone-call-making AI
- Democrats have released thousands of Russian-linked Facebook ads
- Net neutrality rules in the US aren’t quite dead yet