Trump Wants You to Choose a Space Force Logo for the Merch He'll Sell You

No one but defense contractors and their accountants knows why America needs a Space Force. But moments after announcing the new U.S. military branch, the Trump campaign gave us a hint at this arguably idiotic idea’s true purpose: Lining the campaign’s pockets. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Ancient Mass Graves Could Be Filled with Tsunami Victims

Many prehistoric mass graves located along coastlines around the world may be linked to ancient tsunamis, new research suggests. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Humans May Have Reached North America by More Than One Route

There’s an ongoing debate among archaeologists as to which route the first settlers of North America took to reach the continent. Some say these migrants travelled along an interior passage between two massive ice sheets, while others say they traversed along a coastal route. New … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Alex Jones Is Shirtlessly Screaming into the Void on Popular Google+

Anti-government conspiracy theorist turned pro-Trump mouthpiece Alex Jones found his hard-won followings on the web’s biggest platforms stripped away this week. In this day and age, there’s just nowhere left online for a red-blooded patriot to speak his mind. Nowhere, it seems, e … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Probiotic Supplements Might Be Giving Some People 'Brain Fog'

Given their current popularity, you might assume that probiotics—capsules containing a mix of “good” bacteria that are said to rebalance our gut’s bacterial content—would be perfectly harmless. But a team of gastroenterologists from Augusta University in Georgia is challenging th … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Small Dogs Pee Higher to Lie About Their Size

You just can’t trust a little dog. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Facebook Wanted Gizmodo to Kill Investigative Tool

Last year, we launched an investigation into how Facebook’s People You May Know tool makes its creepily accurate recommendations. By November, we had it mostly figured out: Facebook has nearly limitless access to all the phone numbers, email addresses, home addresses, and social … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Almost Nobody Is Using Amazon's Alexa to Actually Buy Stuff

Amazon may have sold millions of Echoes and other devices equipped with its voice-controlled Alexa smart assistant partially in the hopes that it could nudge users into letting an upbeat voice convince them to buy more crap. But it doesn’t appear to be working, according to a rep … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

IBM Watson Recommends Unsafe Treatments

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@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Plume Made Good Wifi Cheap

I’ve always had a frustrating relationship with the Internet thanks to where I lived. Long hallways or brick walls were in the way of a strong connection, requiring me to get inventive with Ethernet cables, antenna extenders, and SSID names. Mesh networks, which use multiple rout … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Hacking a Robot Vacuum

Buying a robotic vacuum cleaner probably sounds like a great idea. Who the hell likes to vacuum? But if it was marketed as an internet-connected device with a microphone and camera that wanders your house at all hours of the day, you should probably skip out. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Apple Kills App Affiliate Program in Pointless Dick Move

Apple is just one little bump away from being the world’s first trillion-dollar public company and following another solid earnings report, it’s announced that it will punish some of the people who helped build its success. Affiliates who’ve promoted apps and taken a small cut of … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

FB Censors US Activists and Falsely Claiming They 'Unwittingly' Planned Protest

Facebook on Tuesday announced its banning of eight pages, 17 profiles, and seven Instagram accounts that engaged in what it described as online political activity that was both “inauthentic” and ultimately an “abuse” of its platform. While the activity was not attributed to anybo … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Why Are Spaces in Science Fiction Not Wheelchair-Accessible?

Space, as we all know, is the final frontier. It’s the star-spangled playground in which our imaginations run amok, and the setting for stories that made us fall in love with sci-fi. Some of us spent hours pretending we were the Doctor’s companions, helping him find Gallifrey fro … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Google Developing Censored Search Engine for China

China has an army of internet censors who comb through the web and block information that the government doesn’t want its people to see. But the job of the censors is about to get easer if Google has its way. The tech giant is planning to release a new censored version of its sea … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

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@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Russian Scientists Claim to Have Resurrected 40,000-Year-Old Worms Buried in Ice

A team of Russian scientists is lining themselves up to be the opening cast of a John Carpenter film. Earlier this month, in the journal Doklady Biological Sciences, they announced they had apparently discovered ancient nematode worms that were able to resurrect themselves after … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

The 'Scutoid' Is Geometry's Newest Shape, and It Could Be All Over Your Body

Scientists have just defined a new shape called the scutoid (SCOO-toid) while studying epithelial cells, the building blocks of embryos that eventually end up forming our skin and lining our organs and blood vessels. They think the scutoid shape is extremely efficient at keeping … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

When a Stranger Decides to Destroy Your Life

Monika Glennon has lived in Huntsville, Alabama, for the last 12 years. Other than a strong Polish accent, she fits a certain stereotype of the All-American life. She’s blonde. Her husband is a veteran Marine. Her two children, a boy and a girl, joined the military as adults. She … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

The Expanse Is Being Turned into an RPG Thanks to Kickstarter

The world of the Expanse novels is getting a whole new tabletop RPG early next year. In many ways, it’s a return to the roots Ty Franck and Daniel Abraham’s award-winning book series actually began as, well before the beloved television show. | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Fake Paper Based on Star Trek Episode Was Published by a Scientific Journal

“Threshold” is one of the most infamous Star Trek episodes ever. You know what’ we’re talking about—the one with Warp 10 and the weird evolved amphibians. Well, it was also the recent subject of a fake scientific research paper submitted in a test to expose the ever-growing probl … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

When a Stranger Decides to Destroy Your Life

Monika Glennon has lived in Huntsville, Alabama, for the last 12 years. Other than a strong Polish accent, she fits a certain stereotype of the All-American life. She’s blonde. Her husband is a veteran Marine. Her two children, a boy and a girl, joined the military as adults. She … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

IBM Watson Reportedly Recommended 'Unsafe and Incorrect' Cancer Treatments

Internal company documents from IBM show that medical experts working with the company’s Watson supercomputer found “multiple examples of unsafe and incorrect treatment recommendations” when using the software, according to a report from Stat News. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Amazon's Rekognition Misidentifies 28 Members of Congress as Suspected Criminals

Amazon’s controversial face recognition software, called Rekognition, misidentified more than two dozen members of Congress as people arrested for crimes. The false identifications were made when the ACLU of Northern California tasked Rekognition with matching photos of all 535 m … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Windows Will Now Use Machine Learning to Decide Time for a Forced Update

Windows 10, Microsoft’s current version of its operating has long tormented users with a hard-to-bypass policy of forced updates. It will soon try to take the edge off by using machine learning to determine whether a user is actually using a computer when it updates. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Moon Could Have Been Habitable Once, Scientists Speculate

The Moon today is not habitable. It’s covered in potentially killer dust and seemingly dry as a bone. But though it seems wild to think, a new perspective wonders: What if the Moon used to be friendly to life? | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

There Is Now Just One Blockbuster Left in the US

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@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Giant Dinosaur Foot Identified 20 Years After Being Unearthed in Wyoming

The Black Hills mountain range, which stretches from South Dakota to Wyoming, is known for its lush forests, scenic waterfalls, and dense, intricate cave systems. But 150 million years ago, humongous, long-necked dinosaurs called sauropods roamed there—and scientists just identif … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Uber's 'Vomit Fraud' Sounds Worse Than Surge Pricing

As an Uber driver, you have to deal with low wages, an uncertain future, and the possibility of getting yelled at by the company’s billionaire founder. There’s also the more common issue of drunk people puking in your back seat. But a news report claims passengers in Miami are ge … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Dozens Sentenced for Call Center Scam Where Victims Bought iTunes Gift Cards

Dozens of defendants were sentenced to prison on a wealth of fraud, money laundering, and conspiracy charges relating to a complex call center scheme operating from India, the Department of Justice announced on Monday. A ring of scammers operating both in India and the U.S. coerc … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

People are calling astronomers when they can't find the star they paid to name

Professional astronomers are busy people. Some are mapping distant galaxies, others are listening for aliens, and more still are searching for habitable planets—which, it seems, we might one day need. But on occasion, they’re also called upon to do something that shouldn’t requir … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Experts Say Recent ‘Alien’ Mummy Study Was Deeply Flawed and Unethical

Earlier this year, scientists from Stanford University concluded that a strange skeleton known as the Atacama Mummy belonged to a human girl whose physical malformations were the result of several severe genetic mutations. A team of international experts is now questioning these … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Fastest-Spinning Particles Ever to Test the Limits of Physics

Scientists made nanoparticles that spin around each other a billion times per second, the fastest mechanical rotation on record. They want to use these spinning particles to study the very fabric of spacetime. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Experimental Painkiller Combines Best Parts of Botox, Opioids–at Least in Mice

Scientists are scrambling to find painkillers that can ease suffering without the addictive potential of opioids. One potential solution, a new study out Wednesday in Science Translational Medicine suggests, might involve creating modified versions of the common wrinkle treatment … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

America's Binge-Drinking Problem Is Even Worse Than We Thought

Many of us enjoy the odd glass of wine or beer, but every once in a while we like to throw down and get completely wasted. But for many Americans, these binge-drinking sessions aren’t as “every once in a while” as we’d like to believe. New research shows that nearly 20 percent of … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

More Young Adults Are Dying from Alcohol-Caused Liver Disease

Over the past few years, there’s been a steady rise in the rate of Americans who die by suicide and drugs each year. But while much of the attention surrounding these deaths has focused on the opioid crisis, a new study out Wednesday in the BMJ highlights a different aspect of th … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Mark Zuckerberg Has a Great Idea for How to Fix Facebook

In a new interview published today, Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg goes long on a wide range of topics including selling data, taking holocaust deniers at their word, fake news, and one simple idea that’s crazy enough, it just might work. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Why Google Just Got Hit with a Record $5B Fine

Considering Android’s massive mobile market share, this was pretty much an inevitability. But today it finally happened for real: The EU slapped Google’s parent company Alphabet with a record fine of nearly $5.1 billion for violating European antitrust regulations. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Walmart Reportedly Considers Cloning Netflix to Beat Amazon

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was anointed as the richest man in modern history this week, and he’s just a hair’s breadth away from being worth more than the entire Walmart dynasty. The original big-box retailer is feeling the pressure and is reportedly looking into launching it own … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Amazon Is Turning Tales from the Loop Series into a TV Show

Looks like Amazon Studios is getting into the role-playing business. It’s developing a sci-fi series based on Tales From The Loop, the crowd-funded art project from Simon Stålenhag that was also turned into a role-playing game. | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Amazon warehouse strike in Spain reportedly results in police clashes, arrests

The second day of a three-day strike by Amazon warehouse workers near Madrid coinciding with the e-commerce giant’s Prime Day promotion escalated significantly on Tuesday, with trade unions telling Spanish newspaper Público that police in riot gear had charged the strikers multip … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Microsoft's Brad Smith to Congress: Regulate Face Recognition

Microsoft’s president and chief legal officer, Brad Smith, called for federal regulation of face recognition in a new blog post on Friday. Half of all adults already have their face in a federal database, and vendors are supplying face recognition technology to schools, airports, … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Scientist Loses Award After Acceptance Presentation Full of Racy Photos

The Herpetologists’ League rescinded its annual Distinguished Herpetologist award after winner Dick Vogt showed racy photos during his acceptance address. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Every Tiny Speck of Light in This Image Is a Galaxy

To help us grok the immensity of the cosmos, the European Space Agency has released a remarkable image of space in which every point is an entire galaxy. If you didn’t feel insignificant before seeing this, you sure as hell will now. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Nearly Two Dozen People Injured After Lava Bomb Hits Hawaii Tour Boat

Earlier today, a basketball-sized chunk of molten rock slammed into a tour boat off the coast of Hawaii, injuring 23 people and sending at least four to the hospital. The incident happened near the Kilauea volcano, which has been erupting since early May. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Discovery of 14,000-Year-Old Toast Suggests Bread Can Be Added to Paleo Diet

Archaeologists have uncovered the earliest evidence of bread-making at a site in northeastern Jordan. Dating back some 14,400 years, the discovery shows that ancient hunter-gatherers were making and eating bread 4,000 years before the Neolithic era and the introduction of agricul … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Bluetooth is named after a medieval king who had a blue tooth

Bluetooth was never supposed to be called Bluetooth. Back in 1996, a consortium of companies—Intel, Ericsson, Nokia, and later IBM—decided to create a single wireless standard. Each company had been developing their own short-range radio technologies, but all the names they came … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

If you’ve ever sat down to watch your Roku-powered TV and thought, “Boy I wish I had some Roku-powered speakers to enhance this experience,” you are in luck. The set-top box maker just announced a new set of speakers that work exclusively with Roku TV televisions. It’s kind of a … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago