SAN JOSE, Calif. — A fired Stanford researcher was given four years of probation for hacking into a cancer patient database and altering it in 2013. Naheed Mangi, 70, was convicted earlier this year of intentional damage to a protected computer. Prosecutors say that after being fired, she changed... Read more
Spokesman - Dec 28
Naheed Mangi, 70, was sentenced 12 years after her crime of conviction, which involved hacking into a Stanford database and changing patient data. Read more
The Mercury News - Dec 27
I open one source and end up 12 links deep. These 4 NotebookLM features stop that. Read more
Xda-developers - Dec 27
Next time you're primed to hold back a torrent of four-letter frustration, just let 'er rip instead. Read more
Upi - Dec 27
Researchers at Texas Biologics at The University of Texas at Austin recently made a discovery that they believe could "represent a paradigm shift" in virus treatment, according to the university. Read more
Kxan - Dec 26
Russia says it has made a proposal to France regarding Laurent Vinatier, a French researcher jailed for violating Russia’s foreign agent laws and who faces charges of espionage that carry a possible 20-year prison sentence. Read more
Rfi - Dec 26
Nikita Kotsehub turns AI research into real-world enterprise impact, building frameworks like FLoX for federated learning and deploying LLMs at scale. His work bridges theory and practice, solving complex workflow, legacy system, and edge-device challenges to create reliable AI tools that deliver... Read more
Hackernoon - Dec 25
The Three Wise Men in biblical texts may have finally been revealed, and it could rewrite the stories which claimed they were kings from the east. Read more
Mail Online - Dec 25
Jay Bharat Mehta’s research is redefining enterprise test automation by transforming it into an intelligent, predictive system. By combining AI, telemetry-driven learning, self-healing CI pipelines, and Zero Trust–aware validation, his work enables cloud platforms to anticipate failures, reduce t... Read more
Hackernoon - Dec 24
Drinking even a small amount of alcohol can increase your chances of developing mouth cancer by 50 per cent, according to a new study. Read more
Mail Online - Dec 24