HP May Finally Stop Screwing You When It Comes to Printer Ink

HP might finally be changing its printer business plan according to a new note by Morgan Stanley analysts. Typically HP sells printers for super cheap and then charges exorbitant prices for the required ink, leaving consumers paying hundreds a year if they want to keep this print … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Starlink Launch Makes SpaceX Largest Commercial Satellite Operator in the World

The successful launch of 60 new Starlink satellites means SpaceX now operates more commercial satellites than any other company in the world. It’s a major milestone for the Elon Musk-led company, which still needs to show it’s capable of responsibly managing its burgeoning megaco … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

The Decade Fandom Went Corporate

In the last twenty years, fandom and mass culture have basically merged. Fans and fandom spent the 2000s fighting for legitimacy and proving their combined worth. And corporations? Well, they spent the 2010s learning how to co-opt fandom to silence critics, manipulate press, and … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

The Current Heads of Apple TV+ Should Be Terrified

Apple just entered an exclusive partnership with Richard Plepler, one of the chief architects of HBO’s last two decades of success. According to the New York Times, Plepler’s new production company has a five-year exclusivity deal with Apple’s TV+. If Apple’s entertainment execut … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Google, Microsoft, and Big Tech Are Automating the Climate Crisis

In a deal that made few ripples outside the energy industry, two very large but relatively obscure companies, Rockwell Automation and Schlumberger Limited, announced a joint venture called Sensia. The new company will “sell equipment and services to advance digital technology and … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Neuroscientists Discover New Kind of Signal in the Human Brain

Scientists have uncovered a new kind of electrical process in the human brain that could play a key role in the unique way our brains compute. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Neuroscientists discover uniquely human form of neural signaling

Scientists have uncovered a new kind of electrical process in the human brain that could play a key role in the unique way our brains compute. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Chelsea Manning Responds After Top UN Official Labels Her Imprisonment 'Torture'

In her first public statement since a top United Nations official equated her imprisonment to torture, former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning reaffirmed her pledge to remain in jail rather than testify before a grand jury investigating WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

MS Seizes Hotrnall.com and Other Copycat Domains from North Korea-Linked Hackers

On Monday, Microsoft announced that it had taken control of 50 domains associated with a hackers believed to be operating out of North Korea. Unsealed court documents show that the domains include “hotrnall.com,” “office356-us.org,” and “mai1.info,” among other copycat URLs. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

How to (Hypothetically) Hack Your School's Surveillance System

This week, hacktivist and security engineer Lance R. Vick tweeted an enticing proposition along with a gut-punch headline: “Colleges are turning students’ phones into surveillance machines, tracking the locations of hundreds of thousands,” read the Washington Post link. The repor … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Ring and Amazon Sued for Security Camera Hacks They Blamed on Customers

Ring and its parent company, Amazon, are facing a class-action lawsuit over allegations of negligence, invasion of privacy, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment for the allegedly lax security standards that have left thousands of cameras vulnerable to hacking. This comes on … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

FDA approves first drug of its kind to treat acute migraines

People dealing with painful migraines will soon have a new treatment available. This week, the Food and Drug Administration approved a unique drug meant to shorten acute migraine episodes. It’s the latest treatment for a condition that’s historically had few. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Top Lawmakers Warn Against Private Equity Firm's .Org Takeover

A group of U.S. lawmakers on Monday raised concerns about the proposed sale of the .org top-level domain to a private equity firm by the organization created to manage it, a deal that has drawn significant scrutiny from digital rights groups and nonprofits since it was first ann … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

The Biggest Space News in 2020

It’s time to look ahead to the coming year and all things that will be happening in space exploration. With new missions to Mars, a probe returning to Earth with samples taken from an asteroid, and even more batches of Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites going into orbit, it’s going … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Chinese Hackers Bypass 2FA

A Chinese hacking group believed to operate on behalf of the Beijing government has learned how to bypass two-factor authentication (2FA) in attacks on government and industry targets, ZDNet reported on Monday. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

All the Species Declared Extinct This Decade

Lonesome George, the last of the Pinta Island tortoises, died in 2012. George’s story is the perfect extinction story. It features a charismatic character with a recognizable face, an obvious villain, and the tireless efforts of naturalists. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Recycling Renegade Ready to Tackle the Electric Vehicle Battery Crisis

In a warehouse in Chatsworth, California, rows upon rows of giant wooden crates are stacked forty feet high, in a scene somewhat reminiscent of the secret U.S. military installation shown at the end of Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost Ark. Instead of Biblical artifacts, though, … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

IBM Research Created a New Battery That Outperforms Lithium-Ion

With everything from cars, to trucks, to even airplanes going electric, the demand for batteries is going to continue to skyrocket in the coming years—but the availability of the materials currently used to make them is limited. So scientists at IBM Research have developed a new … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Hey Tom Cruise, What the Hell?

Tom Cruise is supposed to be an ally. This megawealthy superstar is supposed to, at the very least, understand how movies and television are viewed and support us nerds who want everything in widescreen with a perfectly calibrated rec.709 picture and zero motion smoothing. Why ha … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

My Dad Was a Spy, Maybe

I remember my first phone call from the FBI clearly. It was mid-May 2015. I was sitting in my dreary Midtown cubicle, chugging iced coffee and trying to hold out for the end of the day as a lowly junior reporter. My eyelids were drooping when my wrist buzzed. Someone was calling … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Unroll.me Settles with FTC for Rifling Through Its Users' Email to Find Receipts

Email cleanup service Unroll.me has settled with the Federal Trade Commission and must delete information it gathered from some consumers after it was revealed the firm was mining and selling data from users’ inboxes, the agency announced on Tuesday. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Airbnb Bans over 60 White Supremacists After Iron March Forum Database Leak

Short-term apartment rental site Airbnb has banned over 60 users of Iron March, the defunct white supremacist web forum that recently had its entire SQL database leaked to the internet, the company told Gizmodo. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

FTC Considering Steps to Block Facebook from Merging with Instagram and Whatsapp

The Federal Trade Commission is considering asking the courts to put a halt to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s plan to merge the technical backends of Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram on antitrust grounds, the Wall Street Journal reports. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

FCC Votes to Establish New 3-Digit Suicide-Prevention Number 988

A new nationwide 3-digit emergency line is intended to make the process of seeking help easier for those who need it. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

The FAA Knew

The Federal Aviation Administration was well aware of the fatal hazards with the Boeing 737 MAX before the March 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash and allowed the planes to continue carrying passengers, a report shows. As the Wall Street Journal notes, the FAA had estimated that thro … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Elon Musk Hits Traffic Pylon with New Cybertruck After Dinner in Malibu

Billionaire tech icon Elon Musk turned a lot of heads in Malibu, California on Saturday night when he showed up to a swanky restaurant in his new Tesla Cybertruck. But Musk’s night on the town included at least one embarrassing hiccup. The founder of Tesla and SpaceX hit a traffi … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

The Man Who Declared War on Gravity

In the 1900s, a millionaire who could, at best, be considered eccentric, declared war on gravity. He wrote tracts with titles like, "Gravity: Our Enemy Number One," and founded an institute to roll back the power of this deadly force. | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Jury Rules You Can Call Elon Musk a Pedo Guy

It took a federal jury in Los Angeles less than an hour to throw out a $190 million defamation case against Elon Musk. Calling someone a “pedo guy” to an audience of millions of Twitter followers isn’t an accusation, the jury decided, because words are tricky little devils that c … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

I Want That on a T-Shirt

Artists on Twitter say that their work is regularly stolen by armies of bots that generate t-shirts from popular designs—and they’ve got the receipts to prove it. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Neural Network Powers Lego Brick Sorter That Can Recognize Every Piece Ever

Lego becomes more and more enjoyable as your collection grows, until the point when your morass of plastic bricks becomes so overwhelming that it’s impossible to find the piece you’re looking for. At that point, you need to develop a sorting system, or do what Daniel West did, an … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Craigslist finally gets an official iOS app

Craigslist has long been a staple of the internet since it first launched in 1995—but surprisingly, it hasn’t had an official app in the decade or so since the smartphone era began. Well, that’s all changed. You can now find the official, free app for iOS. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

RIP D.C. Fontana, the Legendary Writer Who Helped Star Trek Soar

We credit much of the success of Star Trek to the vision of Gene Roddenberry, crafting a hopeful future for the heroes of his TV series to boldly go about in. But so much of what we love about the original Trek, its heart and its cleverness, is down to the work of writer and scri … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Deciding to Make Frozen II Was Much More Complicated Than You'd Expect

The idea of making a sequel to one of the biggest animated films of all time somehow seems more than just “obvious.” “Essential” is likely a better word. And yet, the filmmakers behind Frozen and the upcoming Frozen II say making a sequel wasn’t their first instinct and the road … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Don’t buy anyone a Ring camera

There’s a chance you had never heard of Ring cameras before Amazon bought the company for as much as $1.8 billion last year. It’s possible that Ring still wasn’t on your radar earlier this year, when reports emerged that the home security giant had partnered with scores of police … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Found Frozen in Permafrost, This 18,000-Year-Old Puppy Could Be a Deal

The DNA of an exquisitely preserved puppy found in Siberia doesn’t appear to fit the profile of a dog or a wolf, which means the specimen might be something in between. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Amazon Quietly Reveals Plan to Put Alexa in Almost Everything

Just when you thought Alexa wasn’t integrated into enough stuff, Amazon has casually announced a new way to add the artificially intelligent voice assistant to even the cheapest, dumbest things. The new technology is capable of running Alexa with the most basic processors and les … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Amazon's Own Numbers Reveal Staggering Injury Rates at Staten Island Warehouse

Since opening in September 2018, Amazon’s massive fulfillment center on New York’s Staten Island has garnered a reputation as grueling and unsafe, even among a logistics network broadly criticized as such. Now, leaked company documents reveal that injury rates at the warehouse, k … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Apple and Nvidia Are Over

The last vestiges of Nvidia and Apple’s long-term relationship are ending shortly. On Monday Nvidia published the release notes for the next update of its CUDA platform and noted that “CUDA 10.2 (Toolkit and NVIDIA driver) is the last release to support macOS for developing and r … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Did Google Wipe Its Employee's Personal Phone?

Google has found itself at the center of considerable backlash once again, this time for placing two employees on administrative leave for uncertain reasons, as well as for contracting famous union-busting firm IRI. At a worker-led rally Friday morning on the company’s San Franci … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Google Scientists Are Using Quantum Computers to Study Wormholes

Google researchers are figuring out how to study some of the weirdest theorized physics phenomena, like wormholes that link pairs of black holes, using experiments in a lab. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Guy Who Invented Annoying Password Rules Now Regrets Wasting Your Time (2017)

We’ve all been forced to do it: create a password with at least so many characters, so many numbers, so many special characters, and maybe an uppercase letter. Guess what? The guy who invented these standards nearly 15 years ago now admits that they’re basically useless. He is al … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

I Ditched Chrome for Safari and You Can Too

Based on my best estimates, I started using Google Chrome in late 2009, not long after the beta version for OS X came out. It was awesome, fast as hell, and full of neat little tricks that felt new at the time. (Remember when searching from the address bar was a revelation?) I lo … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Disney+ Has a Hacking Problem

Disney+ had a rocky launch last week, with technical issues and customer service complaints galore. Now, it looks as though Disney+ has a hacking problem as well. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Key Crazy: Inside the Wonderful World of Keyboard Fanatics

“Have you met Jacob?” It’s the first question they ask me, inside a small meeting room, deep in the heart of Facebook’s Menlo Park campus, where keyboard fans from across the Bay Area have braved the rain to show off their boutique builds. Many of them have spent thousands of dol … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Microsoft Hire Eric Holder to Audit AnyVision Face Recognition Surveillance

Microsoft is bringing on former US Attorney General Eric Holder to investigate whether AnyVision, a facial recognition company it invested in over the summer, violated Microsoft’s ethics guidelines, according to an NBC News report Friday. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

Farewell, Cortana

Come the end of January, it appears the Cortana app’s getting booted to the Microsoft assistant graveyard. At least poor Clippy will have some company now. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 4 years ago

The scientific reason why the honey badger doesn't have to give a s**t

This National Geographic honey badger video, with a hilarious voiceover from "Randall," went viral a few months ago. Seriously, though, why can the honey badger wake up from a cobra bite and be on his merry way? And why can it get stung repeatedly by a swarm of bees and "not gi … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 4 years ago