Reddit Adds Grey Checkmarks But Swears This Isn’t About Status
Reddit just rolled out verification badges. Yes, really. The platform that's always prided itself on anonymity now wants to confirm who you actually are.
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Reddit just rolled out verification badges. Yes, really. The platform that's always prided itself on anonymity now wants to confirm who you actually are.
YouTube TV started simple in 2017. One price, one bundle, everything included. That version is dying.
Microsoft just dropped data on 37.5 million Copilot conversations. The results? People aren't using AI for what Microsoft expected.
Linux offers around 250 active distributions. That's not freedom. That's overwhelming. But here's the truth: most of those systems don't matter. Around
Instagram just handed over the remote control. For the first time, you can actually see what topics its algorithm thinks you like and adjust them…
Adobe dropped a bombshell today. You can now use Photoshop, Acrobat, and Adobe Express
Black Friday spam felt brutal this year. Turns out it's worse than you thought. A new report from Proton, an encrypted email service, reveals that…
Google just flipped the switch on Gemini AI for Chrome on iPhone and iPad. Desktop and Android users got it earlier
Spotify's recommendation engine just got personal. The streaming giant rolled out "Prompted Playlist" in beta, letting users tell the algorithm exactly
Opera just launched Neon, its AI-powered browser. But there's a steep price attached. The Norway-based company wants $19.90 per month for access. That's
Online security sounds complicated. Firewalls, encryption, zero-day exploits—it's enough to make anyone want to throw their laptop in a lake.
French AI lab Mistral just launched two coding models and a command-line tool. The timing isn't subtle. Vibe-coding exploded this year. Cursor grabbed