rss: npr

  • Takeaways from Trump's address. And, some GOP lawmakers shift stance on ACA subsidies
    During a nationwide address, President Trump says the U.S. is poised for an economic boom. And, some Republican lawmakers joined Democrats to force a vote on enhanced healthcare subsidies.
  • A new 'Avatar,' a marital stand-up story and a gut-wrenching drama are in theaters
    A new drama uses the real, gut-wrenching recordings of a call for help from Gaza to tell a harrowing and profound story.
  • Where we went: NPR's U.S. travel guide for the curious
    NPR's staff traveled a lot in 2025. From a Mardi Gras workshop to a festival celebrating the mythical Mothman, here are some places and events we thought you might want to check out, too.
  • Under Trump, 317,000 workers are out of the government. Here are 3 of their stories
    Mass firings, buyouts and heightened uncertainty led to an exodus of federal workers in 2025. More than 300,000 employees will be out of the government by the end of December.
  • ICE is reopening shuttered prisons as detention centers. Many have a troubled past
    In its push for more immigrant detention space, the Trump administration is reopening shuttered prisons in several states. Many of these facilities, closed amid allegations of abuse and mismanagement.
  • Mourners grieve 10-year-old slain in Bondi mass shooting as Australia's leader pledges new hate laws
    Hundreds of mourners bearing bright bouquets and clutching each other in grief gathered at a funeral in Sydney on Thursday for a 10-year-old girl who was gunned down in an antisemitic massacre during a Hanukkah celebration at Bondi Beach.
  • US announces massive package of arms sales to Taiwan valued at more than $10 billion
    The Trump administration has announced a massive package of arms sales to Taiwan valued at more than $10 billion that includes medium-range missiles, howitzers and drones, a move that is sure to infuriate China.
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning correspondent Peter Arnett has died
    Peter Arnett, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who spent decades dodging bullets and bombs to bring the world eyewitness accounts of war from Vietnam to Iraq, has died. He was 91.
  • FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says he will step down in January
    Bongino's tenure was at times tumultuous, including a clash with Justice Department leadership over the Epstein files. But it also involved the arrest of a suspect in the Jan. 6 pipe bomber case.
  • Federal court says troops can stay in D.C., and hints at prolonged deployment
    A federal appeals court in Washington, D.C. has ruled that National Guard troops can remain in the city for now. That decision comes after a different federal appeals court ruled that troops must leave Los Angeles earlier this week.


rss: bbc

  • Zelensky gives stark warning as EU leaders start crunch talks on Russia's frozen cash
    The leaders are deciding whether to loan tens of billions of euros in frozen Russian assets to fund Ukraine's military and economic needs.
  • Boys to be sent on courses to tackle misogyny in schools
    The measure is part of the government's strategy to tackle violence against women and girls in England.
  • The surprising truth about the generations that suffer loneliness the most
    Conversations around it often focus on the elderly. But by some measures, people in their 20s are the loneliest group in Britain
  • William and Catherine release annual Christmas card portrait
    A post shared on Kensington Palace's social media reads: "Wishing everyone a very Happy Christmas."
  • Police turned me from victim to offender after I reported assault at school
    Theo Rose was "misled" by police into accepting a sanction for violence he didn't admit, review finds.
  • How the court backlog became a huge problem - and why it's so hard to fix
    The Crown Court backlog is at a record high. BBC Verify takes a look at how we got here.
  • Briton who fought in Ukraine jailed for 13 years by Russia
    Former British soldier Hayden Davies, labelled a mercenary by Russia, will be sent to a maximum-security prison.
  • Why Sir David Attenborough wouldn't live anywhere else but London
    In a new one-off documentary, the broadcaster and conservationist comes home - to London.
  • Parents of sextortion victim sue Instagram owner Meta
    Murray Dowey from Dunblane was 16 when he became a victim of sextortion in 2023.
  • The 'fed up' Scottish town that voted for Reform UK
    Why did the people of Whitburn - and nearby Blackburn - choose Nigel Farage's party over others?


rss: the register

  • React2Shell exploitation spreads as Microsoft counts hundreds of hacked machines

    Security boffins warn flaw is now being used for ransomware attacks against live networks

    Microsoft says attackers have already compromised "several hundred machines across a diverse set of organizations" via the React2Shell flaw, using the access to execute code, deploy malware, and, in some cases, deliver ransomware.…

  • BBC tapped to stop Britain being baffled by AI

    Gov wants broadcaster to revive 1980s computer literacy magic – and maybe flog its archives to tech giants

    The UK government wants the BBC to help Brits understand AI and develop basic technology skills as part of the public broadcaster's next charter period.…

  • DVSA's clapped-out booking system gets bot slapped as new boss rides in

    18-year-old platform crumbles under 94M daily requests while resellers flog £62 tests for £500

    The UK's Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) has appointed a new chief exec to tackle spiraling waits for practical driving tests with bots overrunning its aging booking system.…

  • UK surveillance law still full of holes, watchdog warns

    Investigatory Powers Commissioner says reforms have failed to close oversight gaps

    The UK's Investigatory Powers Act 2016 (IPA) has several regulatory gaps that must be plugged in future legislative reforms, according to Investigatory Powers Commissioner (IPC) Sir Brian Leveson.…

  • Brit broadband grilling descends into farce over targets and definitions

    MPs press minister for answers – and get few

    If UK readers are perplexed by the country's seemingly shambolic state of broadband and telecoms, relative to other European nations, insight can be gleaned from a one-off evidence session conducted by Parliament.…

  • United Nations agrees to persist with multi-stakeholder internet governance

    World Summit on the Information Society resolves the world needs a permanent forum to discuss how we manage the 'Net

    The United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday reached consensus on a review of the world’s internet governance arrangements and preserved the current multi-stakeholder model that means governments are just one of many voices that debate the future of the internet.…

  • Micron says memory shortages are here for the foreseeable future

    Even with its new fabs coming online, demand will exceed supply

    Memory-maker Micron Technology has predicted that RAM shortages are here to stay, meaning higher prices for servers probably are, too.…

  • ServiceNow unworried by Salesforce firing shots across its bow

    Believes it can translate workflow smarts into AI ROI

    In October, Salesforce debuted Agentforce IT in a direct challenge to ServiceNow’s ITSM product, and analyst firm Forrester’s vice president and principal analyst Charles Betz rated it the “most credible threat” ServiceNow has ever faced.…

  • Purdue makes 'AI working competency' a graduation requirement

    GPT-before-GPA plan has faculty and students scratching their heads

    Purdue University last week said it will require incoming undergraduate students to meet an "AI working competency" requirement in order to graduate.…

  • Attacks pummeling Cisco AsyncOS 0-day since late November

    No timeline for a patch

    Suspected Chinese-government-linked threat actors have been battering a maximum-severity Cisco AsyncOS zero-day vulnerability in some Secure Email Gateway (SEG) and Secure Email and Web Manager (SEWM) appliances for nearly a month, and there's no timeline for a fix.…



rss: ars technica

  • NASA finally—and we really do mean it this time—has a full-time leader
    A long and winding road to reach NASA's headquarters in Washington, DC.
  • Physicists 3D-printed a Christmas tree of ice
    New method uses no freezing technology or refrigeration equipment—just water and a vacuum.
  • OpenAI’s new ChatGPT image generator makes faking photos easy
    New GPT Image 1.5 allows more detailed conversational image editing, for better or worse.
  • Man sues cops who jailed him for 37 days for trolling a Charlie Kirk vigil
    Cops may be fined for jailing a man over his Facebook posts.
  • FCC chair scrubs website after learning it called FCC an “independent agency”
    Meanwhile, Ted Cruz wants to restrict FCC's power to intimidate broadcasters.
  • Donut Lab’s hub motor meets WATT’s battery to create new EV skateboard
    A prototype of the EV platform will be shown off at CES next month.
  • Bursting AI bubble may be EU’s “secret weapon” in clash with Trump, expert says
    Spotify and Accenture caught in crossfire as Trump attacks EU tech regulations.
  • Trump admin threatens to break up major climate research center
    Major research institution dismissed as a source of "climate alarmism."
  • Google releases Gemini 3 Flash, promising improved intelligence and efficiency
    Google's Gemini 3 family is now complete with release of Gemini 3 Flash.
  • Browser extensions with 8 million users collect extended AI conversations
    The extensions, available for Chromium browsers, harvest full AI conversations over months.


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