China's Deepseek has shaken up the world of AI. Elon Musk, king of video games? Well, maybe not 🔐 #WEEKLY ~ February 2nd
Trump's memecoin undermines the credibility of the industry. Apple is a dying company with no vision and no real growth. "Everything I say leaks," Zuckerberg says in leaked recording
You're reading paid english version of #TYDEN. It's always up to twice as long as the free version (which is not available in english anyway). More information, more context, more details. In the subscription settings of your account it’s possible to choose which version (Czech, English, podcast) you want to receive by email/notification. Thousands characters, thousands words, to read. Every sunday.
Some cryptocurrency executives worry that Trump's memecoin is undermining the industry's credibility just as cryptocurrencies are trying to gain a prominent place in mainstream finance. (New York Times)
Anthropic CEO says limiting China's access to AI chips is "existentially important". Dario Amodei argues we must limit China’s access to AI chips so we can live under all powerful American-owned AI as opposed to all powerful Chinese-owned AI. (404)
Vodafone has made the "world's first satellite video call" using a regular smartphone via SpaceMobile satellites. The service is due to launch in Europe in 2025. (TheVerge)
Netskope and Armis, which deal with cybersecurity, claim that "hundreds" of companies and government agencies around the world are trying to block DeepSeek over fears of data leaks. (Bloomberg)
The CDC has been ordered to remove words like "transgender" and "LGBT" from its website. A CDC employee spoke to Gizmodo about the "unprecedented" changes. (Gizmodo)
Apple is a dying company with no vision and no real growth. I've felt for years that Apple is just a freight train running on inertia. (Mac Performance Guide)
Internet, webdesign
Interview with Paul Krugman about leaving the NYT in 2024 after his newsletter was canceled and editing his column "became extremely disruptive," Substack. (CJR)
Nielsen plans to discontinue its TV ratings product, which uses consumer panels exclusively, in Q4 2025 and switch to a tool combining panels with smart TV and other data. (WSJ)