The Auto Wire on MSN
Georgia Car Dealer Surrenders to Police Over Alleged Odometer Rollback Scheme
A Gwinnett County auto dealer turned himself in to police last week after an investigation uncovered allegations that ...
Experiencing phone heating issues? Learn the common causes, from heavy apps to poor charging habits, and discover practical ...
Opinion
After overspending by millions, School District of Lancaster must bolster accountability [editorial]
School District of Lancaster officials proposed millions of dollars in budget cuts and hired an independent auditor Tuesday following the discovery of a $9.6 million deficit left over from the 2024-25 ...
API key exploitation is more than hypothetical. In a different context, a student who reportedly exposed a GCP API key on GitHub last June was left nursing a $55,444 bill (later waived by Google) ...
In 2026, AI agents and autonomous tools are increasingly moving beyond isolated experiments to integrated processes that function at scale across critical systems. As agents and generative AI ...
A SINGLE mother in her 40s, who works as an insurance salesperson in Sibu, suffered losses of nearly RM9,000 in an online scam. Read full story ...
Rest of World on MSN
Gig workers in Africa have been helping the U.S. military. They had no idea
Data labelers for the company Appen say they have little insight about how their work is used.
Five major GitHub repositories targeted by the autonomous AI bot “hackerbot-claw” were compromised through various injection and exploitation techniques.
Researchers at Unit 42, a security arm of Palo Alto Networks, have documented real-world attacks, and they’re as dumb as it gets. Hidden text on websites simply asks AI to “ignore previous ...
In A Friend, a Murderer, members of a social circle discover one of their closest is a killer.
Explorers entered what appeared to be a fully functioning hospital — only it had been abandoned for years. Blood samples, used needles, medical machines, and even brain specimens were still inside.
A pair of US lawmakers are calling for an investigation into how easily spies can steal information based on devices’ electromagnetic and acoustic leaks—a spying trick the NSA once codenamed TEMPEST.
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