Trump Campaign Reportedly Adds Former Cambridge Analytica Staff to 2020 Efforts

Cambridge Analytica, the shady political consulting firm best known for obtaining a whole heap of personal information from Facebook users without their consent, might be dead and gone. But some of its former employees are reportedly hard at work on the re-election campaign of Pr … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Our Galaxy Might Be Teeming with Habitable Exomoons

There are eight planets in our Solar System (sorry Pluto), but collectively, these planets host over 175 moons, one or two of which may even harbor life. Indeed, our galaxy, based on what we observe here, could be bursting with exomoons, a significant number of which may be capab … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Scott Walker Finally Gave Foxconn Enough Handouts to Get the Company US HQ in WI

Foxconn, the giant Taiwanese electronics manufacturer that works with everyone from Apple to Amazon, now has a North American headquarters in Milwaukee, Wisconsin after purchasing a large office building in the city, according to the Associated Press. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

How the puffer fish gets you high, zombifies you, and kills you

Puffer fish, or fugu, is well-known for being a dish that stands a good chance of killing the person it's served to. But people still eat it — partly because some people like living life on the edge, but mostly because all people like getting high. Find out how the puffer fis … | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Europe's GDPR Is Killing Email Marketing, to the Disappointment of No One

For the past month or so, inboxes the world over have been awash with emails about updated privacy policies and new permissions required by the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). You probably haven’t been reading those emails, and that’s bad news for emai … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

How Much Do Skyscrapers Actually Move?

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@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

NIH Pulls the Plug on Controversial Drinking Study Funded by Big Alcohol

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has abruptly halted its $100 million study meant to examine whether moderate drinking can be good for your heart. The decision, announced Friday, comes in the wake of a report commissioned by the federal agency that reaffirmed allegations f … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Democrats Ratchet Up Pressure on Facebook Over Unanswered Privacy Questions

House Democrats are working to keep a flame to Facebook’s feet ahead of the company’s anticipated responses to lingering concerns over the handling of user data, as well its ongoing efforts to weed out foreign-bought political ads targeting American voters. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Another DNA Testing Company Gets Fooled by Dog DNA

Consumer DNA testing is going to the dogs. A Canadian testing company has been accused of sending back supposedly human ancestry results on a faux sample that actually came from a chihuahua named Snoopy, CBC News reported Wednesday. Remarkably, it’s the second company reported to … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Microsoft Reportedly in Talks with Walmart to Build Checkout-Free Stores

Even though there’s only one Amazon Go location so far, it seems the existence of Amazon’s cashier-less, checkout-free convenience store has left some of the company’s biggest competitors wondering how they, too, can get in on futuristic retail. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Elon Musk's Boring Co. Wins Bid to Build High-Speed Underground Rail in Chicago

Elon Musk’s underground transportation business, The Boring Company, has won a bid to create an underground high-speed rail line from downtown Chicago to O’Hare International Airport. The company beat out at least four other developers for the project, and Chicago Mayor Rahm Eman … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Internet Luminaries Plead with EU to Squash Its Bad Copyright Bill

Once again European lawmakers are set to vote on a bill that promises to change the internet as we know it. Experts say a misguided update to copyright laws poses a serious danger to how we share news, upload fair use content, make memes, and build startups. Now, some of the pion … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

On Amazon’s Time

At the beating heart of Amazon’s unstoppable ecommerce expansion is a very basic promise: jobs. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Deepfake Videos Are Getting Impossibly Good

Fake news sucks, and as those eerily accurate videos of a lip-synced Barack Obama demonstrated last year, it’s soon going to get a hell of a lot worse. As a newly revealed video-manipulation system shows, super-realistic fake videos are improving faster than some of us thought po … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Photos from the Days When Thousands of Cables Crowded the Skies

Before most cables ran underground, all electrical, telephone and telegraph wires were suspended from high poles, creating strange and crowded streetscapes. Here are some typical views of late-19th century Boston, New York, Stockholm, and other wire-filled cities. | Continue reading


@io9.gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes allegedly looking to start another company

Elizabeth Holmes lost everything—and nearly $900 million of other people’s money—when her bunk blood-testing startup Theranos went into full meltdown, resulting in the layoff of nearly all staff and civil charges of “massive” fraud for Holmes and former company president Ramesh “ … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Canada Uses Excel as Random Number Generator for Immigration Purposes

Last year, Canada introduced a new lottery system used to extend permanent-resident status to the parents and grandparents of Canadian citizens. The process was designed to randomly select applicants in order to make the process fairer than the old first-come, first-served system … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Apple Isn't Your Friend

Apple has been steadily positioning itself as the anti-Facebook for a while now, and between verbal jabs aimed at the social media giant and privacy-focused product decisions, the patient goodwill campaign seems to be working. Unfortunately, Apple isn’t going to save us, and now’ … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Two Quantum Computing Bills Are Coming to US Congress

Quantum computing has made it to the United States Congress. If this field of quantum information is the new space race, the US doesn’t want to fall behind. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Apple Isn't Your Friend

Apple has been steadily positioning itself as the anti-Facebook for a while now, and between verbal jabs aimed at the social media giant and privacy-focused product decisions, the patient goodwill campaign seems to be working. Unfortunately, Apple isn’t going to save us, and now’ … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Instagram Reportedly Wants to Be YouTube Now

I’m sorry, but Instagram may start looking a lot more like YouTube in the future. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Students Pledge to Refuse Job Interviews at Google in Protest of Pentagon Work

Google will not seek to renew its artificial intelligence contract with the Department of Defense after it expires next year, Google Cloud CEO Diane Greene told employees last week. But despite the revelation that the contract has an end date, the pushback against it continues—wi … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Ticketfly Confirms Hack Exposed Personal Information of 27M People

One week after suffering a hack that took its website and services offline, events ticketing company Ticketfly revealed Thursday just how bad the data breach was, and it certainly doesn’t look great. According to the company, the personal information of 27 million users—including … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

US Hits 'WannaCry Hero' with More Malware Charges

Federal prosecutors charged security researcher Marcus Hutchins—better known by his online handle MalwareTech—with four new charges accusing him of creating and promoting malware used to steal financial information. Hutchins, recognized as the person responsible for stopping the … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Valve allows devs to put anything on steam unless illegal or trolling

Valve, the company behind the Steam platform that has achieved a near-monopoly on PC game sales, issued a blog post on Wednesday clarifying its content policies after it removed a mass shooting-themed game titled Active Shooter from its store in late May. According to Valve’s Eri … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Synthetic Brain-Destroying Human Prions Created in the Lab for the First Time

Researchers from Case Western Reserve University have synthesized an artificial human prion, a scientific first that could eventually lead to treatments for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and other deadly brain-wasting disorders. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

AMD's Status Competition with Intel Ramps Up

Almost as soon as Intel had announced its new 28-core beast, AMD took the stage at Computex and revealed the latest update to its Threadripper CPU, and it has more cores—32 cores to be exact. That’s more cores than you’ll ever need to do your tweets and fill out your spreadsheets … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Sony's RX100 Mark VI Has an 8x Optical Zoom with Image Stabilization

It’s no secret that camera sales are down, thanks mostly to the convenience and capabilities of smartphone shooters. Who wants to carry another device just to take pictures? That’s the question camera makers are currently facing, but with the Rx100 Mark VI, Sony has a solid answ … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

FCC Emails Show Agency Spread Lies to Bolster Dubious DDoS Attack Claims

As it wrestled with accusations about a fake cyberattack last spring, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) purposely misled several news organizations, choosing to feed journalists false information, while at the same time discouraging them from challenging the agency’s of … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

US Government Is Building a 'Media Influence Database' to Track Journalists

The Department of Homeland Security announced a public bid for third party companies to build a “media influence database” capable of tracking more than 290,000 news sources across the globe. First spotted by Bloomberg Law, the public bid would also track journalists and bloggers … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Microsoft Buys GitHub, and Some People Are Pissed

Microsoft is officially buying Github, the internet’s largest source code repository, for a cool $7.5 billion in stock, with Microsoft VP Nat Friedman assuming the role of GitHub’s CEO. The acquisition isn’t without its detractors, who say they are already ditching GitHub and loo … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Alt-Right Platform Gab's Mgmt Is Now Blaming a Leftist Conspiracy for Nazi Prob

Twitter knockoff Gab became one of the premiere destinations for members of the extremist “alt-right” banned or just looking to branch out from other social media sites like Twitter. Now, it’s devolving into a sludgy mess of paranoia and conspiracy theories. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Autonomous Cars Can Now Pick Up Passengers in California

California has announced a new pilot program that will allow self-driving cars to start moving normal customers around, a first for the state. Among the California Public Utilities Commission’s many stipulations, transportation companies providing autonomous rides must offer the … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Google Won't Renew Contract for Project Maven, Pentagon Drone AI Imaging Program

Google will not seek another contract for its controversial work providing artificial intelligence to the U.S. Department of Defense for analyzing drone footage after its current contract expires. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Atari's Linux based Retro Console Launches Pre-Orders, Quickly Crashes Indiegogo

After several delays and a whole lot of confusion, Atari’s retro console/set-top box thing is available for pre-order. We finally have more details on what this thing can do and apparently more people are hyped up about it than we expected. On Wednesday afternoon, Indiegogo was s … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Atari's Retro Console Launches Pre-Orders, Quickly Crashes Indiegogo

After several delays and a whole lot of confusion, Atari’s retro console/set-top box thing is available for pre-order. We finally have more details on what this thing can do and apparently more people are hyped up about it than we expected. On Wednesday afternoon, Indiegogo was s … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Tesla crashes into parked police suv

A Tesla sedan running in its autopilot mode crashed into a parked police car in Laguna Beach, California on Tuesday, per the Associated Press, resulting in “minor injuries” to the driver. The officer in charge of the cruiser at the time of the crash was not inside the vehicle and … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Scientists Model Rare Ball Lightning with Help from Tangled Skyrmion

There’s an eerie and incredibly rare phenomenon witnessed by few that has long puzzled scientists: ball lightning. These flashes, which typically appear in the evenings during thunderstorms and look like small, bright spheres, have gone mostly unexplained aside from some theories … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Massive Neutron Star Is the Definition of Extreme

Using a new technique, astronomers have documented one of the heaviest neutron stars known to science. It’s an important discovery for astronomers, but the newly recorded object is also providing an unprecedented opportunity to conduct particle physics research from a distance. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Facebook and Google Accused of Violating GDPR on First Day

When Mark Zuckerberg testified in front of members of the European Parliament on Tuesday, he insisted that Facebook was ready for Friday, the day when the European Unions’s strict new data privacy law went into effect. But users in Europe have already filed complaints against Fac … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

This-ai-knows-who-you-are-by-the-way-you-walk

Our individual walking styles, much like snowflakes, are unique. With this in mind, computer scientists have developed a powerful new footstep-recognition system using AI, and it could theoretically replace retinal scanners and fingerprinting at security checkpoints, including a … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Tesla Model 3 Sets Record Distance on a Single Charge, but It Won't Recharge

With electric vehicles rapidly becoming more viable for long distance trips, enthusiasts like to push the limits of what their cars can do on a single charge. Two men in Denver set out to break the record distance in a Model 3 this weekend and after 32 hours, they were victorious … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Ghostery Celebrates GDPR Day by Revealing Hundreds of User Email Addresses

Ad-blocking tool Ghostery suffered from a pretty impressive, self-inflicted screwup Friday when the privacy-minded company accidentally CCed hundreds of its users in an email, revealing their addresses to all recipients. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

The Supposedly Physics-Defying NASA Thruster Doesn't Work, New Research Confirms

If you want to send something deep, deep into space, it’s impractical to load it up with lots of heavy propellant. Scientists with their eyes on long-distance space travel have contemplated thrusters that wouldn’t need any propellant at all. The EmDrive, a copper cone that would … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

New PGP encryption exploits are being discovered almost every other day

For more than a week, PGP developers have been rapidly working to patch critical flaws in the legacy encryption protocol used for sending and receiving secure emails that’s widely relied upon by lawyers, journalists, dissidents, and human rights advocates, many of whom operate at … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Alphabet Shareholders and Employees Want Executive Pay Linked to Diversity Goals

A group of shareholders and several Google employees are teaming up to back a proposal that would tie executive compensation to the company’s ability to meet certain diversity goals. But Google’s parent company, Alphabet, is opposing the proposal, saying that linking executive pa … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Instapaper Is Blocking Users in Europe Until It Figures Out New Privacy Rules

Instapaper has informed its European users that it will temporarily cut off their access to the platform starting today. The reason? This Pinterest-owned service needs more than the two years it had to comply with the European Union’s new batch of privacy rules that go into effec … | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago

Apple Is Going to Let You Download All the Data It Collects About You

On Wednesday, Apple announced a new privacy website to help users better navigate just how much of their data is collected by the company, but so far, the feature is only available in Europe. | Continue reading


@gizmodo.com | 6 years ago