10 Years After a Breakthrough Climate Pact, Here’s Where We Are
Valve enters the console wars
Valve is rebooting its failed Steam Machine initiative — and this time, it’s building the living room console itself
Valve is ready to rejoin the VR hardware race with the Steam Frame, a lightweight standalone SteamOS headset
At the same time, though, the scope of private life itself seems to be shrinking. Our experiences are flattened by the mass culture that everyone consumes, regurgitates, remixes (and that AI is now beginning to remix for us). Social science and marketing—combined with coercive technology—turn what seem, from the first-person perspective, like deeply personal choices into statistically predictable and controllable behaviors
Bayer considers exiting the glyphosate market
Sony reported that PlayStation 5 sales have reached 84.2 million units, officially surpassing every Xbox console ever released
The company even went so far as to partner with music library services and production companies under a program called Perfect Fit Content, or PFC. This saw the creation of fake or "ghost" artists that flooded Spotify with songs that were specifically designed to be pleasant and ignorable. It's music as content, not art. [...] Artists, especially new ones trying to break through, actually started changing how they composed to play better in the algorithmically driven streaming era. Songs got shorter, albums got longer, and intros went away. The hook got pushed to the front of the song to try to grab listeners' attention immediately, and things like guitar solos all but disappeared from pop music. The palette of sounds artists pulled from got smaller, arrangements became more simplified, pop music flattened
Meta is retiring Facebook's external Like and Share buttons for third-party websites on February 10, 2026, officially closing the book on a once-dominant traffic driver as usage declines and Facebook's role within Meta continues to shrink
Privacy activists say proposed changes to Europe's landmark privacy law, including making it easier for Big Tech to harvest Europeans' personal data for AI training, would flout EU case law and gut the legislation
Neom -- Saudi Arabia's hugely expensive, architecturally bizarre urban development project -- is floundering and close to collapse
Investors’ ‘dumb transhumanist ideas’ setting back neurotech progress, say experts
Big news, weil eigentlich ist ein "siebter Sinn" beim Menschen in der Art nicht bekannt gewesen
Hobart woman Renee Woodleigh is selling a 1937 edition of JRR Tolkien's classic The Hobbit.
She says it is a first edition, which a rare book specialist says could "absolutely" be true
The 512KB Club is a collection of performance-focused web pages from across the Internet.
To qualify your website must satisfy both of the following requirements: It must be an actual site that contains a reasonable amount of information, not just a couple of links on a page; Your total UNCOMPRESSED web resources must not exceed 512KB
I have contributed to the Support over 20 years, before the beginning of support.mozilla.org.
Today, November 4, we decided to end our SUMO Japanese community
superfan has recreated Frodo’s exact journey from Bag End to Mount Doom in a 10-hour virtual trek through Lord of the Rings Online, an 18-year-old MMO.
Despite Boromir’s iconic warning, it turns out you can, in fact, simply walk into Mordor