Dezinformáció

Unmasking Russia’s Troll Farm Empire: Inside the Kremlin’s Global Disinformation Machine

Oroszország trollgyár-birodalmának leleplezése: betekintés a Kreml globális dezinformációs gépezetébe

Az Internet Research Agency (IRA), Oroszország vezető trollgyára, Szentpéterváron működik, és 2013 körül alapították; 2015-re mintegy 400 fős személyzettel dolgozott 12 órás műszakokban. Az IRA munkatársai szigorú kvóták szerint dolgoztak: műszakonként 5 politikai poszt, 10 nem politikai poszt és 150–200 komment. A
szeptember 7, 2025

Technology News

  • Google tests floating app bubbles to boost Android tablet multitasking
    October 25, 2025, 8:34 AM EDT. Google is pushing for stronger multitasking on large-screen devices. After introducing a taskbar and windowing, it's now testing a floating bubble system that lets any app run in a draggable bubble. In the latest Android Canary 2510 builds, researchers found strings in Pixel Launcher hinting at a tutorial that shows how to drag an app to the screen's bottom corners to create a bubble, potentially powering two-, three-, or more-app layouts on Android tablets and future Android PCs. The feature, dubbed initially as "bubble anything.", was teased last year but thought scrapped; new evidence shows Google has refined it to align with tablet UI, alongside the ongoing taskbar enhancements.
  • Under-the-Radar AI Stock SoundHound AI Could Deliver Market-Beating Returns
    October 25, 2025, 7:38 AM EDT. SoundHound AI is an under-the-radar play in the AI space with a $7.7B market cap that could surge if its growth projections hold. The company blends generative AI with audio recognition, targeting sectors like restaurant drive-thrus and automotive digital assistants, and expanding into healthcare and financial services. Q2 revenue jumped 217% to $42.7 million, fueling optimism that management's goal of 50%+ annual organic growth could deliver substantial returns-even if the stock trades at a premium. Several top banks are already a client base, with renewals and increased spending signaling traction. The key risk remains valuation, but if SoundHound AI sustains its momentum, this small-cap AI name could outperform the broader market.
  • Charging a Tesla Monthly Costs Significantly Less Than Fueling a Ford Escape
    October 25, 2025, 7:36 AM EDT. New comparison shows that charging a Tesla at home is far cheaper than fueling a Ford Escape. With a Tesla Model 3 using about 25 kWh per 100 miles, 1,100 miles per month equals roughly 275 kWh. At off-peak rates as low as $0.10/kWh, monthly charging can be about $27.50; even with some public charging, a blended figure around $47 is plausible. By contrast, a Ford Escape averaging 28 mpg would use about 40 gallons for the same distance, at roughly $3.80/gal, or about $150/month. The result: electricity is cheaper by well over $100/month. The payoff on a home charger, typically $1,000-$2,000, can be recovered relatively quickly, especially with solar panel pairing.
  • Gear News of the Week: Another AI Browser Debut, Nimo Infinity Beta Launch, and Aura Ink Wireless E-Paper Frame
    October 25, 2025, 7:34 AM EDT. Two AI browsers launched this week: Atlas by OpenAI and Nimo Infinity by Nimo, a Chromium-based canvas browser that builds Dynamic Apps by connecting your favorite apps. Nimo Infinity runs on macOS in beta (Windows coming) and uses an AI assistant (Anthropic's Claude) to create tailor-made interfaces that fuse data from apps like Google Calendar and Gmail. The beta offers a free tier and a $20/month plan for core features; the Dynamic App canvas can stall during setup. Separately, Aura unveiled the Aura Ink, a wireless E-Paper frame with a three-month battery life, powered by E Ink's Spectra 6 and designed to display photos in a newspaper-like print style.
  • AI Is Coming for Museums: Potentials and Pitfalls in Cultural Institutions
    October 25, 2025, 7:32 AM EDT. At the Museums of Tomorrow Roundtable in San Francisco, museum leaders gathered at NVIDIA to test how AI can reshape culture. The demonstration room showcased the hardware behind today's LLMs and the pace of computing growth, while directors pressed questions about new uses-such as training models to speak international sign language. The conversation framed a tension: AI offers extraordinary potential for museums but risks misalignment with cultural needs. As executives emphasized the gap between real and fabricated needs, attendees considered AI as both a creative partner and a tool that must be deployed thoughtfully. The takeaway: identify applications that genuinely benefit visitors and institutions, address accessibility, ethics, and authenticity, and proceed with careful experimentation rather than hype.