Ars Technica

  1. Lost opportunity: We could’ve started fighting climate change in 1971

    President Nixon's science advisors recommended building global CO2 monitoring network.

  2. Rocket Report: SLS workforce cuts; New Glenn launch to launch in the early fall

    "This is a vital component in our preparations for launch."

  3. Russia stands alone in vetoing UN resolution on nuclear weapons in space

    "The United States assesses that Russia is developing a new satellite carrying a nuclear device."

Latest Stories Continue >

  1. Tech brands are forcing AI into your gadgets—whether you asked for it or not

    The "AI mouse" is just the start.

  2. Three women contract HIV from dirty “vampire facials” at unlicensed spa

    Five patients with links to the spa had viral genetic sequences that closely matched.

  3. HMD’s first self-branded phones are all under $200

    HMD will still make Nokia phones but is shipping self-branded phones, too.

  4. Apple releases eight small AI language models aimed at on-device use

    OpenELM mirrors efforts by Microsoft to make useful small AI language models that run locally.

  5. Can an online library of classic video games ever be legal?

    Preservationists propose access limits, but industry worries about a free "online arcade."

  6. Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, Noble Numbat, overhauls its installation and app experience

    Plus Raspberry Pi 5 support, better laptop power, and lots of other changes.

  7. Millions of IPs remain infected by USB worm years after its creators left it for dead

    Ability of PlugX worm to live on presents a vexing dilemma: Delete it or leave it be.

  8. Toyota will spend $1.4 billion to build electric 3-row SUV in Indiana

    This is a different new 3-row EV from the one Toyota will build in Kentucky.

  9. Deciphered Herculaneum papyrus reveals precise burial place of Plato

    Various imaging methods comprised a kind of "bionic eye" to examine charred scroll.

Earlier Stories >

  1. FCC restores net neutrality rules that ban blocking and throttling in 3-2 vote

    Broadband lobby groups prepare lawsuit, calling rules a "net fatality."

  2. Honda to spend $11 billion on four EV factories in North America

    The new facilities are in addition to the previously announced EV hub in Ohio.

  3. School athletic director arrested for framing principal using AI voice synthesis

    Police uncover plot to defame principal with AI-generated racist and antisemitic comments.

Earlier Stories Continue >

  1. EPA issues four rules limiting pollution from fossil fuel power plants

    Coal to be hit hard, natural gas plants will have to capture carbon emissions.

  2. Garry’s Mod is taking down 20 years’ worth of “Nintendo Stuff”

    Creator: "They don't want you playing with that stuff... we have to respect that."

  3. In the face of bans, ByteDance tightens grip over US TikTok operations

    Relationship between TikTok, ByteDance deepens as tensions over the app’s ownership escalate.

  4. If Starship is real, we’re going to need big cargo movers on the Moon and Mars

    "I left SpaceX knowing the width of the Starship door."

  5. Qualcomm says lower-end Snapdragon X Plus chips can still outrun Apple’s M3

    Same NPU, same architecture as X Elite, but fewer cores and lower clock speeds.

  6. Reddit, AI spam bots explore new ways to show ads in your feed

    Reddit says its "communities are naturally commercial."

  1. A Polestar Phone now inexplicably exists

    Polestar normally makes electric cars, but now it's releasing a phone.

  2. We may have spotted the first magnetar flare outside our galaxy

    Not all gamma-ray bursts come from supernovae.

  3. Nation-state hackers exploit Cisco firewall 0-days to backdoor government networks

    Perimeter devices ought to prevent network hacks. Why are so many devices allowing attacks?

  4. Deepfakes in the courtroom: US judicial panel debates new AI evidence rules

    Panel of eight judges confronts deep-faking AI tech that may undermine legal trials.

  5. Chamber of Commerce sues FTC in Texas, asks court to block ban on noncompetes

    Noncompete clauses "benefit employers and workers alike," Chamber tells court.

  6. No more refunds after 100 hours: Steam closes Early Access playtime loophole

    It's largely a win against scammers, but a simple policy doesn't fit all games.

  7. Google can’t quit third-party cookies—delays shut down for a third time

    Google says UK regulator testing means the advertising tech will last until 2025.