More top reads FlowGPT is the Wild West of GenAI apps: OpenAI's GPT Store is great; however, not everyone wants to only use OpenAI's models. FlowGPT decided to create its own app store for generative AI models where users can build their own apps, make them public and earn tips for their contributions. Meet Particle, a new AI news reader: Some former Twitter engineers are out to use AI to help people process news and information. Called Particle.news, the startup entered into private beta with a personalized "multi-perspective" news reading experience where AI will summarize the news for you. It also claims to do so in a way that fairly compensates authors and publishers. BLKFAM launches kids’ programming: BLKFAM, which considers its platform "the first and only Black-owned and Black-focused family streaming service," launched with over 1,000 hours of kid-friendly animation titles. The free, ad-supported family streaming service is backed by Whoopi Goldberg, who is also BLKFAM's creative director. More original live-action and animated series are set to debut throughout 2024. Meta drops lawsuit against Bright Data: Meta has decided not to move forward with a lawsuit against Israeli web-scraping company Bright Data, which was accused of scraping Meta's own data when Meta was a customer. It may be that Meta also didn't like that the court recently ruled in favor of Bright Data on a breach of contract claim, saying that Meta hadn't presented sufficient evidence that proved the firm had scraped anything other than public data. UiPath pivots: After Rob Enslin joined the enterprise SaaS company as co-CEO in 2022, he went to work reorganizing the company's structure, sales motion and product focus. Today, its growth rates have not only bounced back to double digits, but have also posted consecutive quarters of accelerating growth. Things are not going well for ConnectWise: Two of the popular remote-access tool's easy-to-exploit flaws are now "being mass exploited, with hackers abusing the vulnerabilities to deploy ransomware and steal sensitive data." We still don't know the extent of the damage, but given the number of devices, it could be in the millions. Speaking of hacks: Days after the notorious Russia-based LockBit ransomware group was knocked offline by a sweeping, years-in-the-making law enforcement operation, it has returned to the dark web with a new leak site and new victims. I think LockBit rather enjoys a good cat-and-mouse game with law enforcement, don't you? Instagram and its Friend Map feature: Want to know where your friends are? Instagram is working on a feature for that. Should the feature go public, it would be copying from Snapchat, but also appealing to people who want to tell their friends about a swinging hotspot. |
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