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Technology News

DOGE Is Planning a Hackathon at the IRS. It Wants Easier Access to Taxpayer Data

Wired Top Stories - 4 hours 19 min ago
DOGE operatives have repeatedly referred to the software company Palantir as a possible partner in creating a “mega API” at the IRS, sources tell WIRED.
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Our 9 Favorite Pizza Ovens: Wood, Gas, and Electric (2025)

Wired Top Stories - 5 hours 20 min ago
Craving carb-y comfort? We picked our favorite outdoor ovens for backyards, countertops, or camping.
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Beyerdynamic Amiron 300 Review: Quiet Luxury

Wired Top Stories - 6 hours 21 min ago
If you’re looking for quiet luxury, these are the headphones for you.
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The 45 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now (April 2025)

Wired Top Stories - 7 hours 23 min ago
Dead Talents Society, Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, and Plankton: The Movie are just a few of the movies you should watch on Netflix this month.
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The 46 Best Shows on Netflix Right Now (April 2025)

Wired Top Stories - 7 hours 23 min ago
Adolescence, Devil May Cry, and The Residence are just a few of the shows you need to watch on Netflix this month.
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Dustland Delivery plays like a funny, tough, post-apocalyptic Oregon Trail

Ars Technica - 8 hours 53 min ago

Road trips with just two people always have their awkward silences. In Dustland Delivery, my character, a sharpshooter, has tried to break the ice with the blacksmith he hired a few towns back, with only intermittent success.

Remember that bodyguard, the one I unsuccessfully tried to flirt with at that bar? The blacksmith was uninterested. What about that wily junk dealer, or the creepy cemetery? Silence. She only wanted to discuss "Abandoned train" and "Abandoned factory," even though, in this post-apocalypse, abandonment was not that rare. But I made a note to look out for any rusted remains; stress and mood are far trickier to fix than hunger and thirst.

Dustland Delivery release trailer.

Dustland Delivery, available through Steam for Windows (and Proton/Steam Deck), puts you in the role typically taken up by NPCs in other post-apocalyptic RPGs. You're a trader, buying cheap goods in one place to sell at a profit elsewhere, and working the costs of fuel, maintenance, and raider attacks into your margins. You're in charge of everything on your trip: how fast you drive, when to rest and set up camp, whether to approach that caravan of pickups or give them a wide berth.

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Editorial: Mammoth de-extinction is bad conservation

Ars Technica - 9 hours 17 min ago

The start-up Colossal Biosciences aims to use gene-editing technology to bring back the woolly mammoth and other extinct species. Recently, the company achieved major milestones: last year, they generated stem cells for the Asian elephant, the mammoth’s closest living relative, and this month they published photos of genetically modified mice with long, mammoth-like coats. According to the company’s founders, including Harvard and MIT professor George Church, these advances take Colossal a big step closer to their goal of using mammoths to combat climate change by restoring Arctic grassland ecosystems. Church also claims that Colossal’s woolly mammoth program will help protect endangered species like the Asian elephant, saying “we’re injecting money into conservation efforts.”

In other words, the scientific advances Colossal makes in their lab will result in positive changes from the tropics to the Arctic, from the soil to the atmosphere.

Colossal’s Jurassic Park-like ambitions have captured the imagination of the public and investors, bringing its latest valuation to $10 billion. And the company’s research does seem to be resulting in some technical advances. But I’d argue that the broader effort to de-extinct the mammoth is—as far as conservation efforts go—incredibly misguided. Ultimately, Colossal’s efforts won’t end up being about helping wild elephants or saving the climate. They’ll be about creating creatures for human spectacle, with insufficient attention to the costs and opportunity costs to human and animal life.

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How the GameCube Controller Works on Nintendo Switch 2—and How You Can Get One

Wired Top Stories - 9 hours 23 min ago
One of Nintendo’s best and most influential controllers is making a comeback on Switch 2, alongside a host of classic games.
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Welcome to the Worst Allergy Season Ever

Wired Top Stories - 9 hours 23 min ago
Multiple US states have logged record pollen counts this spring, with climate change likely to blame.
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NSA Chief Ousted Amid Trump Loyalty Firing Spree

Wired Top Stories - 9 hours 53 min ago
Plus: Another DOGE operative allegedly has a history in the hacking world, and Donald Trump’s national security adviser apparently had way more Signal chats than previously known.
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Verizon’s Price Lock, a New Rolex, and Withings’ Blood Pressure Tech—Your Gear News of the Week

Wired Top Stories - 10 hours 23 min ago
Plus: Samsung debuts its Galaxy Tab S10 FE tablets, Ooni has bigger gas-powered pizza ovens, and Traeger solves a griddle riddle.
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The 11 Most WIRED Watches That Dropped at Watches & Wonders 2025

Wired Top Stories - 10 hours 23 min ago
A completely new Rolex, the most complicated wristwatch ever made, pieces that survive impacts of 10,000 g’s, and “magic ceramic”—the annual gathering of the watch world delivered big-time in 2025.
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Trump’s Tariffs Are Threatening the US Semiconductor Revival

Wired TechBiz - 10 hours 53 min ago
While the White House carved out a narrow exemption for some semiconductor imports, President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs still apply to GPUs and chipmaking equipment.
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Trump’s Tariffs Are Threatening the US Semiconductor Revival

Wired Top Stories - 10 hours 53 min ago
While the White House carved out a narrow exemption for some semiconductor imports, President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs still apply to GPUs and chipmaking equipment.
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The Affordable Car Is About to Go Extinct in the US

Wired Top Stories - 11 hours 23 min ago
As President Donald Trump’s tariffs set in, it may well be time to say goodbye to the under-$30,000 car.
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With new contracts, SpaceX will become the US military’s top launch provider

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-04-04 20:33

The US Space Force announced Friday it selected SpaceX, United Launch Alliance, and Blue Origin for $13.7 billion in contracts to deliver the Pentagon's most critical military to orbit into the early 2030s.

These missions will launch the government's heaviest national security satellites, like the National Reconnaissance Office's large bus-sized spy platforms, and deploy them into bespoke orbits. These types of launches often demand heavy-lift rockets with long-duration upper stages that can cruise through space for six or more hours.

The contracts awarded Friday are part of the next phase of the military's space launch program once dominated by United Launch Alliance, the 50-50 joint venture between legacy defense contractors Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

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Midjourney introduces first new image generation model in over a year

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-04-04 15:34

AI image generator Midjourney released its first new model in quite some time today; dubbed V7, it's a ground-up rework that is available in alpha to users now.

There are two areas of improvement in V7: the first is better images, and the second is new tools and workflows.

Starting with the image improvements, V7 promises much higher coherence and consistency for hands, fingers, body parts, and "objects of all kinds." It also offers much more detailed and realistic textures and materials, like skin wrinkles or the subtleties of a ceramic pot.

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Judge calls out OpenAI’s “straw man” argument in New York Times copyright suit

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-04-04 14:19

After The New York Times sued OpenAI in December 2023—alleging that ChatGPT outputs violate copyrights by regurgitating news articles—the ChatGPT maker tried and failed to argue that the claims were time-barred.

According to OpenAI, the NYT should have known that ChatGPT was being trained on its articles and raised its lawsuit in 2020, partly because of the newspaper's own reporting. To support this, OpenAI pointed to a single November 2020 article, where the NYT reported that OpenAI was analyzing a trillion words on the Internet. But on Friday, US district judge Sidney Stein disagreed, denying OpenAI's motion to dismiss the NYT's copyright claims partly based on one NYT journalist's reporting.

In his opinion, Stein confirmed that it's OpenAI's burden to prove that the NYT knew that ChatGPT would potentially violate its copyrights two years prior to its release in November 2022. And so far, OpenAI has not met that burden.

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Not just Switch 2: ESA warns Trump’s tariffs will hurt the entire game industry

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-04-04 13:36

This morning's announcement that Nintendo is delaying US preorders for the Switch 2 immediately increased the salience of President Trump's proposed wide-reaching import tariffs for millions of American Nintendo fans. Additionally, the Entertainment Software Association—a lobbying group that represents the game industry's interests in Washington—is warning that the effects of Trump's tariffs on the gaming world won't stop with Nintendo.

"There are so many devices we play video games on," ESA senior vice president Aubrey Quinn said in an interview with IGN just as Nintendo's preorder delay news broke. "There are other consoles... VR headsets, our smartphones, people who love PC games; if we think it's just the Switch, then we aren't taking it seriously.

"This is company-agnostic, this is an entire industry," she continued. "There's going to be an impact on the entire industry."

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NSA warns “fast flux” threatens national security. What is fast flux anyway?

Ars Technica - Fri, 2025-04-04 13:17

A technique that hostile nation-states and financially motivated ransomware groups are using to hide their operations poses a threat to critical infrastructure and national security, the National Security Agency has warned.

The technique is known as fast flux. It allows decentralized networks operated by threat actors to hide their infrastructure and survive takedown attempts that would otherwise succeed. Fast flux works by cycling through a range of IP addresses and domain names that these botnets use to connect to the Internet. In some cases, IPs and domain names change every day or two; in other cases, they change almost hourly. The constant flux complicates the task of isolating the true origin of the infrastructure. It also provides redundancy. By the time defenders block one address or domain, new ones have already been assigned.

A significant threat

“This technique poses a significant threat to national security, enabling malicious cyber actors to consistently evade detection,” the NSA, FBI, and their counterparts from Canada, Australia, and New Zealand warned Thursday. “Malicious cyber actors, including cybercriminals and nation-state actors, use fast flux to obfuscate the locations of malicious servers by rapidly changing Domain Name System (DNS) records. Additionally, they can create resilient, highly available command and control (C2) infrastructure, concealing their subsequent malicious operations.”

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