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THURSDAY, 01 JANUARY 2026, 10:21

Science/Tech

NASA’s Largest Library Is Closing Amid Staff and Lab Cuts

Today at 09:00 AM, via Slashdot

NASA is closing its largest research library at the Goddard Space Flight Center amid budget cuts and campus consolidation, putting tens of thousands of largely non-digitized historical and scientific documents at risk of being warehoused or discarded. The New York Times reports: Jacob Richmond, a NASA spokesman, said the agency would review the library holdings over the next 60 days and some...

Newegg Promo Code: 10% Off in January 2026

Today at 08:20 AM, via Wired

Enjoy up to 10% off your entire order with today’s Newegg discount code and save with the latest deals for gaming PCs, laptops, and computer parts.

20% Off LG Promo Code & Coupons | January 2026

Today at 08:10 AM, via Wired

Save 20% with an LG promo code today, plus up to $1,000 off appliances, 40% off bestselling TVs and monitors, and more early Black Friday bundle offers that won’t last long.

Warren Buffett Retires As Berkshire Hathaway CEO After 55 Years

Today at 03:10 AM, via Slashdot

Warren Buffett is retiring as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway at age 95, ending a 55-year run that reshaped how generations of Americans think about investing. “The 95-year-old, often referred to as the ‘Oracle of Omaha’ and the ‘billionaire next door,’ will relinquish the title after a career that saw him turn a failing textile firm into one of the most successful asset managers in the world,”...

Stewart Cheifet, Computer Chronicles Host, Dies At 87

Today at 02:50 AM, via Slashdot

Pibroch(CiH) writes: According to the obituary linked, Stewart Cheifet of Computer Chronicles fame has died. The obituary states he passed Dec 28, 2025. Cheifet and Digital Research founder Gary Kildall hosted the public television show The Computer Chronicles starting in 1984, and Stewart continued to host the show well into the 1990s. He was well-known for his affable presence and adeptness...

Tech Startups Are Handing Out Free Nicotine Pouches to Boost Productivity

Today at 02:30 AM, via Slashdot

The Wall Street Journal reports that a growing number of tech startups are stocking offices with free nicotine pouches as founders and employees chase sharper focus and stamina in hyper-competitive AI-era work environments. The Wall Street Journal reports: Earlier this year, two nicotine startups — Lucy Nicotine and Sesh — made branded vending machines filled with flavored products for...

DarkSpectre Hackers Spread Malware To 8.8 Million Chrome, Edge, and Firefox Users

Today at 01:50 AM, via Slashdot

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Cyber Press: A newly uncovered Chinese threat group, DarkSpectre, has been linked to one of the most widespread browser-extension malware operations to date, compromising more than 8.8 million users of Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Opera over the past seven years. According to research by Koi.ai, the group operates three interconnected campaigns:...

OpenAI Is Paying Employees More Than Any Major Tech Startup in History

Today at 01:10 AM, via Slashdot

OpenAI is paying employees more than any major tech startup in history, with average stock-based compensation hitting roughly $1.5 million per worker in 2025. “That is more than seven times higher than the stock-based pay Google disclosed in 2003, before it filed for an initial public offering in 2004,” reports the Wall Street Journal. “The $1.5 million is about 34 times the average employee...

Trump Administration Removes Three Spyware-Linked Execs From Sanctions List

Today at 00:30 AM, via Slashdot

Reuters reports that the United States Department of the Treasury under the Donald Trump administration has lifted sanctions on three executives linked to the spyware firm Intellexa. Reuters reports: The move partially reverses the imposition of sanctions last year by then-President Joe Biden’s administration on seven people tied to Intellexa. The Treasury Department at the time described the...

France Targets Australia-Style Social Media Ban For Children Next Year

Yesterday at 23:50 PM, via Slashdot

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Guardian: France intends to follow Australia and ban social media platforms for children from the start of the 2026 academic year. A draft bill preventing under-15s from using social media will be submitted for legal checks and is expected to be debated in parliament early in the new year. The French president, Emmanuel Macron, has made it clear in...

NJ’s Answer To Flooding: It Has Bought Out and Demolished 1,200 Properties

Yesterday at 23:15 PM, via Slashdot

New Jersey has found its answer to the relentless flooding that has plagued the state’s coastal and inland communities for decades: buy the homes, demolish them and turn the land back into open space permanently. The state’s Blue Acres program has acquired some 1,200 properties since 1995, spending more than $234 million in federal and state funds to pay fair market value to homeowners...

NASA Craft To Face Heat-Shield Test on Its First Astronaut Flight Next Year

Yesterday at 22:30 PM, via Slashdot

An anonymous reader shares a report: Getting to space is hard. In many ways, getting back is even harder. NASA soon aims to pull off the kind of re-entry it last conducted more than 50 years ago: safely returning astronauts to Earth after they fly to the moon and back. The mission is a big moment for NASA, which will put a crew on its Orion ship for the first time. The flight will test the...

JPMorgan Says Javice Firms Billed Millions Just for ‘Attendance’

Yesterday at 21:51 PM, via Slashdot

JPMorgan Chase is now fighting to avoid paying $10.2 million in disputed legal charges racked up by Charlie Javice, the convicted founder of student-finance startup Frank, after court filings revealed her defense team billed more than $5 million simply for attending her fraud trial — including on days when court wasn’t even in session. A previously sealed Delaware court filing [PDF] released...

Net Neutrality Was Back, Until It Wasn’t

Yesterday at 21:10 PM, via Slashdot

The fight over net neutrality saw another turbulent year in 2025, as federal protections that seemed poised for a comeback in 2024 were first struck down by a court and then preemptively removed by the Trump administration’s FCC without a chance for public comment. The removal, The Verge summarizes in a report, was part of Chairman Brendan Carr’s “Delete, Delete, Delete” initiative targeting...

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