Iran's Cyber War Goes Mainstream: Bomb-Shelter Spyware, Stryker Wiped, and 5,800 Attacks
Since the Iran War began February 28, 2026, nearly 50 Iran-linked hacker groups have launched 5,800 tracked attacks — including bomb-shelter spyware synced to the second of missile strikes, real-time device wipes at Stryker, a claimed 375TB Lockheed breach, and the hacking of FBI Director Kash Patel. Sara Voss breaks down the most sophisticated cyber-physical war campaign in history.
Read More
Apple Kills the Mac Pro After 20 Years — And the Mac Studio Is the Reason Why
Apple quietly removed the Mac Pro from its website — ending a 20-year run for its most powerful desktop. The culprit? The Mac Studio, which now matches the Mac Pro's performance at a fraction of the price. Here's what this means for pro users, and what Apple has coming next.
Read More
Anthropic Accidentally Leaked Its Most Powerful AI Ever — And It's Called Claude Mythos
A CMS misconfiguration at Anthropic exposed nearly 3,000 unpublished assets — including existence of "Claude Mythos," a model the company calls "by far the most powerful we've ever built" and a genuine cybersecurity risk. Here's what leaked, what it means, and why Anthropic is restricting it to cyber defenders first.
Read More
Weekly Brief #011: SpaceX IPO, MCP at 97M, Car Breathalyzer Hack, Shield AI $12.7B
This week: SpaceX files for the largest IPO in history at $1.75 trillion, MCP quietly becomes the infrastructure backbone of agentic AI with 97 million installs, a car breathalyzer vendor gets hacked leaving court-ordered drivers stranded, and Shield AI raises $2 billion at $12.7 billion. Plus Google's Pixel March Drop and everything else you missed.
Read More
SpaceX Is Filing for IPO at $1.75 Trillion — The Biggest Public Offering in History
Elon Musk is planning to take SpaceX public at a $1.75 trillion valuation — which would make it the sixth-largest company in America by market cap. Here's what that means for retail investors, the venture market, and the future of space.
Read More
The Car Breathalyzer Hack: When Cybercrime Stops You From Driving to Work
On March 27, 2026, a cyberattack on a breathalyzer interlock vendor left court-ordered drivers unable to start their vehicles — not because they were drinking, but because a hacker flipped a switch. This is what IoT insecurity looks like in the real world.
Read More
Google Pixel March 2026 Drop + Android 16: Every New Feature Ranked
Google's March 2026 Pixel Drop delivers Android 16 updates, a new "Find the Look" Circle to Search feature, smarter Pixel Watch safety alerts, and more. We rank every update from essential to nice-to-have.
Read More
MCP Hits 97 Million Installs: The Invisible Protocol Running the Agentic AI Revolution
Anthropic's Model Context Protocol quietly crossed 97 million installs in March 2026 — making it the de facto standard for AI agents that actually do things. Here's why MCP matters more than any single model release.
Read More
The Weekly Brief #010: Reflection AI at $25B, Apple's 6 Incoming Launches, TELUS Breach
This week: Reflection AI hit $25B, Apple launched 6 more products, and TELUS suffered the year's biggest data breach. Your complete weekly tech roundup.
Read More
Aura Got Breached: 900,000 Records Stolen From an Identity Protection Company — The Ultimate Irony
Aura, which sells identity theft protection, had 900,000 customer records stolen in a breach. Here's the security irony, what was taken, and what to do now.
Read More