27 Oct 2025

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More Than 60 UN Members Sign Cybercrime Treaty Opposed By Rights Groups

Countries signed their first UN treaty targeting cybercrime in Hanoi on Saturday, despite opposition from an unlikely band of tech companies and rights groups warning of expanded state surveillance. From a report: The new global legal framework aims to strengthen international cooperation to fight digital crimes, from child pornography to transnational cyberscams and money laundering. More than 60 countries were seen to sign the declaration Saturday, which means it will go into force once ratified by those states. UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres described the signing as an "important milestone", but that it was "only the beginning". "Every day, sophisticated scams, destroy families, steal migrants and drain billions of dollars from our economy... We need a strong, connected global response," he said at the opening ceremony in Vietnam's capital on Saturday. The UN Convention against Cybercrime was first proposed by Russian diplomats in 2017, and approved by consensus last year after lengthy negotiations. Critics say its broad language could lead to abuses of power and enable the cross-border repression of government critics.

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27 Oct 2025 3:07pm GMT

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Microsoft in court for allegedly misleading Australians over 365 subscriptions

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27 Oct 2025 2:54pm GMT

More big companies bet they can still grow without hiring

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27 Oct 2025 2:30pm GMT

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Electronic Arts' AI Tools Are Creating More Work Than They Save

Electronic Arts has spent the past year pushing its nearly 15,000 employees to use AI for everything from code generation to scripting difficult conversations about pay. Employees in some areas must complete multiple AI training courses and use tools like the company's in-house chatbot ReefGPT daily. The tools produce flawed code and hallucinations that employees then spend time correcting. Staff say the AI creates more work rather than less, according to Business Insider. They fix mistakes while simultaneously training the programs on their own work. Creative employees fear the technology will eventually eliminate demand for character artists and level designers. One recently laid-off senior quality-assurance designer says AI performed a key part of his job -- reviewing and summarizing feedback from hundreds of play testers. He suspects this contributed to his termination when about 100 colleagues were let go this past spring from the company's Respawn Entertainment studio.

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27 Oct 2025 2:01pm GMT

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Ubuntu Unity Project Faces Uncertain Future

Ubuntu Unity Project Faces Uncertain Future

Ubuntu Unity faces manpower shortages as lead dev Rudra has no time to maintain it, sparking a public call for help.

27 Oct 2025 1:55pm GMT

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New image-generating AIs are being used for fake expense reports

Software provider AppZen said fake AI receipts accounted for about 14% of fraud attempts.

27 Oct 2025 1:44pm GMT

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Pre-emptive Z80 multitasking explainer

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27 Oct 2025 12:39pm GMT

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OpenAI's Less-Flashy Rival Might Have a Better Business Model

OpenAI's rival Anthropic has a different approach - and "a clearer path to making a sustainable business out of AI," writes the Wall Street Journal. Outside of OpenAI's close partnership with Microsoft, which integrates OpenAI's models into Microsoft's software products, OpenAI mostly caters to the mass market... which has helped OpenAI reach an annual revenue run rate of around $13 billion, around 30% of which it says comes from businesses. Anthropic has generated much less mass-market appeal. The company has said about 80% of its revenue comes from corporate customers. Last month it said it had some 300,000 of them... Its cutting-edge Claude language models have been praised for their aptitude in coding: A July report from Menlo Ventures - which has invested in Anthropic - estimated via a survey that Anthropic had a 42% market share for coding, compared with OpenAI's 21%. Anthropic is also now ahead of OpenAI in market share for overarching corporate AI use, Menlo Ventures estimated, at 32% to OpenAI's 25%. Anthropic is also surprisingly close to OpenAI when it comes to revenue. The company is already at a $7 billion annual run rate and expects to get to $9 billion by the end of the year - a big lead over its better-known rival in revenue per user. Both companies have backing in the form of investments from big tech companies - Microsoft for OpenAI, and a combination of Amazon and Google for Anthropic - that help provide AI computing infrastructure and expose their products to a broad set of customers. But Anthropic's growth path is a lot easier to understand than OpenAI's. Corporate customers are devising a plethora of money-saving uses for AI in areas like coding, drafting legal documents and expediting billing. Those uses are likely to expand in the future and draw more customers to Anthropic, especially as the return on investment for them becomes easier to measure... Demonstrating how much demand there is for Anthropic among corporate customers, Microsoft in September said Anthropic's leading language model, Claude, would be offered within its Copilot suite of software despite Microsoft's ties to OpenAI. "There is also a possibility that OpenAI's mass-market appeal becomes a turnoff for corporate customers," the article adds, "who want AI to be more boring and useful than fun and edgy."

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27 Oct 2025 11:34am GMT

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10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him. Bad idea.

It's still legal to pick locks, even when you swing your legs.

27 Oct 2025 11:00am GMT

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Why KDE Linux Chose to Bet on Immutability Instead of Native Packages

Why KDE Linux Chose to Bet on Immutability Instead of Native Packages

KDE's Nate Graham explains why KDE Linux bets on immutability for stability and simplicity, moving away from traditional package systems.

27 Oct 2025 10:32am GMT

26 Oct 2025

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Linuxiac Weekly Wrap-Up: Week 43 (Oct 20 – 26, 2025)

Linuxiac Weekly Wrap-Up: Week 43 (Oct 20 – 26, 2025)

Catch up on the latest Linux news: KDE Plasma 6.5, VirtualBox 7.2.4, Jellyfin 10.11, Uptime Kuma 2.0, Valkey 9.0, Canonical Academy, new NTFS Linux driver, Alma 10.1 adds Btrfs support, and more.

26 Oct 2025 10:38pm GMT

25 Oct 2025

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Whale and dolphin migrations are being disrupted by climate change

Marine mammals are being forced into new and more dangerous waters, scientists warn.

25 Oct 2025 11:00am GMT