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All the Ways Europe Is Ditching American Technology
Europe is done with American Big Tech. Since the start of President Donald Trump’s chaotic second administration last year, concerned governments and companies across the continent have accelerated plans to end their near-total reliance on technology from US firms. Alongside political declarations, home-grown European tech development, and millions in additional funding, a WIRED analysis has documented dozens of public instances of companies, governments, NGOs, and education establishments...
Americans lost nearly $900 million to AI-generated scams last year. It will likely only get worse
Americans lost nearly $900 million to AI-generated scams last year. It will likely only get worse From fake romances with soap opera stars to fictional FBI agents and MAGA influencers, AI has made it easier than ever for scammers to steal Americans’ money - Bookmark Americans lost close to a billion dollars to AI scams in one year - and cybersecurity experts fear this is only the beginning. Nearly $900 million was stolen in scams that incorporated AI in 2025, according to the first report of...
Dems slam Trump for making cybersecurity hold out the tin cup while splurging on ballroom and Jan. 6 'slush fund'
Democratic lawmakers criticised President Trump's spending priorities, arguing that proposed funding for a White House ballroom and a January 6 'slush fund' overshadowed cuts to cybersecurity. They highlighted that the administration was simultaneously pushing for deep cuts to cybersecurity funding while reducing support for vital state and local threat-sharing services. These concerns were raised during a House Homeland Security subcommittee hearing regarding the reauthorization of the State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program.
Trump's AI E-(I)-O could let feds pick winners and losers
After postponing a planned signing last month for an executive order addressing advanced cybersecurity AI models, President Trump has signed a largely similar version that’s just as questionably effective. The EO, signed in a private ceremony on Tuesday, directs various government agencies to take steps to protect their systems and data, as well as those of agencies they support, from cyber threats, while also facilitating access to advanced AI models that could help agencies bolster their...
Closing the Sim-to-Real Gap: An Evaluation Framework for Autonomous Cyber Defense Configuration of Commercial EDR
new Abstract: Leading commercial endpoint detection and response (EDR) products have shifted from operator-configured rule sets to multi-component systems where autonomous AI components operate alongside, and increasingly in place of, operator-deployed policies. Autonomous defense agents using commercial EDR as their hardening tool are no longer tuning a passive tool, but a black-box autonomous system capable of making vendor-specific decisions. We present the first evaluation framework for...
Policy on the AI Exponential
Policy on the AI Exponential In one of the side plots to The Lord of the Rings, two of the Hobbits attempt to rouse Treebeard—a wise but ponderous sentient tree—to defend his forest from an army that is cutting it down. The problem is that Treebeard operates at a very different speed than the Hobbits. It takes him a full day simply to say hello to another tree, so getting him and his peers to act fast enough is nearly impossible.
Trump signs scaled-back AI cybersecurity order
Trump signs scaled-back AI cybersecurity order The federal government will only have 30 days at best to review new models. On Tuesday, President Trump signed an executive order calling for the creation of a framework designed to give the federal government the capability to evaluate AI models.
CrowdStrike is a buy, just not yet. Here's why
CrowdStrike on Wednesday evening reported better-than-expected quarterly results and better-than-expected forward guidance, only to see its near-record-high stock sell off. The hot money that got in, looking for a Hewlett Packard Enterprise or Dell type post-earnings surge , no doubt booked profits, sending shares down more than 11% to around $664 each. We're not short-term thinkers.
What's behind Palo Alto's earnings sell-off — and how to proceed
Shares of Palo Alto Networks are down over 4% Wednesday, despite the cybersecurity provider delivering strong quarterly results the prior evening. This next-day move may seem a bit odd, given the company not only exceeded expectations for the reported quarter, but also issued guidance ahead of expectations for the current three-month period. So, what is the culprit?
We're upping our Palo Alto price target after strong earnings vanquish AI disruption fears
Palo Alto Networks reported a strong beat-and-raise quarter Tuesday night, putting to rest any lingering doubt that it will be disrupted by artificial intelligence. The stock was volatile in after-hours trading, but considering its blistering rally into earnings, it's not surprising to see this kind of reaction. Revenue for the company's fiscal 2026 third quarter increased 31% year over year to $3 billion, exceeding the Wall Street consensus estimate of $2.94 billion, according to LSEG.