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Google will save your Lens photos, Search Live recordings, and Translate audio for AI training
Google is making some changes to how it saves your interactions with Search. In an email sent to users, Google says it will save the images, files, audio, and video you use to search under a new "Search Services History" setting. That includes the images you search for with Google Lens, recordings from its real-time Search Live tool, voice searches, and phrases spoken into Translate, according to an update on the company's website.
The complete IPv4 address space, mapped
Free IPv4 lookup — owner, ASN, geolocation, PTR The complete IPv4 address space, mapped Find the owner, ASN, country, state/region, city, reverse DNS, PTR records, and allocation history of any of the 4.3 billion IPv4 addresses. Search by IP, CIDR, ASN, organization, country, state, or city.
Apple courts developers with privacy and context in AI comeback bid
At its 2026 Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple offered a vision of how to integrate AI with its products that stands out for its sobriety, responsibility, and plausibility. In contrast to the job-killing, security-breaking, human-replacing hype promulgated by the likes of Anthropic and OpenAI, company execs dialed down their usual superlative-laden effusiveness to convey how AI tools can actually help software developers, as well as those using Apple products. Capabilities like Safari's...
The Evolution of 'More Like This'
In many search scenarios, the user does not start from an empty query box, but from an existing result. A user opens an article and wants to find related material. A buyer views a product card and looks for close alternatives.
Big Tech extracts retirement-scale wealth from UK internet users, research shows
A new white paper from the Web3 Foundation claims that UK and European internet users generate significant commercial value for big tech companies through their data. The report estimates that the average person's data is worth over $1,600 annually, with a potential lifetime value reaching $189,405. The paper argues that users are effectively paying for "free" digital services with their personal information, highlighting the lack of genuine informed consent.
MH-53E Sea Dragon: Why US navy's mine-hunting is retiring after 40 years
As tensions in the Middle East continue to focus attention on maritime security and the strategic Strait of Hormuz, one aircraft has repeatedly found itself back in the spotlight: the MH-53E Sea Dragon. For nearly four decades, the massive helicopter has served as the US Navy's primary airborne mine countermeasures platform, capable of detecting, sweeping and neutralising naval mines that threaten commercial shipping and military vessels. However, the aircraft is now approaching the end of...
Ask HN: What are tools you have made for yourself since the advent of AI?
I've made a number of ceramic molds for slumping fused glass into bowls. As well as wooden templates for ceramic mugs. I've devised a few carrying tools to move glass frit paintings from my studio down to my barn where the kilns sit without spilling the glass.
The Feeling of Control Slipping Away
Back in the web-traffic-obsessed days of 2018, at a time of dawning awareness of how easily audiences online could be manipulated and spoofed by bots, the writer Max Read argued that the internet had crossed a threshold known as “the Inversion.” Not only had bots proliferated across the internet; they had come to constitute it. In outnumbering humans, bots were also loosening everyone’s grasp on the very reality of online experience.
Could the 7-Eleven breach affect you?
You may stop at 7-Eleven for coffee, gas, snacks or a quick drink. What you probably do not expect is to see the company's name tied to a data breach involving personal information.That is what happened after breach notification service Have I Been Pwned added 7-Eleven to its database. The service says the breach exposed about 185,000 unique email addresses.
Turning 65? Month-by-month plan to protect yourself
You have not turned 65 yet. But somewhere, your birthday may already be flagged in a database. That milestone is tied to Medicare eligibility, Social Security decisions and major financial choices.It can also put your name in front of insurance marketers, Medicare agents, lead generators and scammers around the same time.Here is the part many people miss: turning 65 can become a targeting event.