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Týden Živě: Microsoft řeší hříchy Windows 11, ale Francie radši přechází na Linux

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 18:45
Microsoft slibuje, že napraví hříchy Windows 11. Za sliby ho hodnotit nechceme, i ty jsou ovšem lepší, než přístup firmy v posledních letech. Kuba je ke všemu skeptický, přesto dokáže najít světlý bod naděje. Chválí Microsoft Word, jak pěkně funguje. Současně si myslí, že OpenOffice a jeho nástupci ...
Kategorie: IT News

Boj o ČT míjí pointu. Kvalitu televizního vysílání a digitálních služeb neurčuje trh, ale Česká televize

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 17:45
V debatách o ČT se obvykle řeší obsah, politika nebo peníze. Často zaznívá, že komerční stanice by veřejnoprávní Českou televizi bez problémů nahradily. Jenže vedle programů existuje ještě jedna, méně viditelná vrstva – technická kvalita vysílání, na kterou jsou dnes diváci zvyklí. Kdo ji ale ve ...
Kategorie: IT News

Critical flaw in Protobuf library enables JavaScript code execution

Bleeping Computer - 18 Duben, 2026 - 17:09
Proof-of-concept exploit code has been published for a critical remote code execution flaw in protobuf.js, a widely used JavaScript implementation of Google's Protocol Buffers. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Microsoft Teams right-click paste broken by Edge update bug

Bleeping Computer - 18 Duben, 2026 - 16:11
Microsoft is warning that a recent Microsoft Edge browser update introduced a bug that breaks right-click paste in chats in the Microsoft Teams desktop client. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through April 18)

Singularity HUB - 18 Duben, 2026 - 16:00
Robotics

Physical Intelligence, a Hot Robotics Startup, Says Its New Robot Brain Can Figure Out Tasks It Was Never TaughtConnie Loizos | TechCrunch

“Physical Intelligence, the two-year-old, San Francisco-based robotics startup that has quietly become one of the most closely watched AI companies in the Bay Area, published new research Thursday showing that its latest model can direct robots to perform tasks they were never explicitly trained on—a capability the company’s own researchers say caught them off guard.”

Artificial Intelligence

Want to Understand the Current State of AI? Check Out These Charts.Michelle Kim | MIT Technology Review ($)

“If you’re following AI news, you’re probably getting whiplash. AI is a gold rush. AI is a bubble. AI is taking your job. AI can’t even read a clock. The 2026 AI Index from Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, AI’s annual report card, comes out today and cuts through some of that noise.”

Science

Sperm Whales Speak With a Complex Alphabet and Even Have ‘Vowels,’ Study FindsMatthew Phelan | Gizmodo

“Sperm whales: They’re just like us. An international team of researchers, including marine biologists and linguists, reports that it has detected signs of a ‘highly complex’ phonetic alphabet in the calls of sperm whales—including ‘vowels’ deployed in patterns akin to their use in human languages like Mandarin, Latin, and Slovenian.”

Biotechnology

The DNA Fix for AgingRoxanne Khamsi | The Atlantic ($)

“Now that scientists have described just how much mutation happens in aging, they’re curious if DNA repair might offer a counteracting force. In other words, does fixing DNA improve longevity? Biologists are taking different tacks to find out.”

Future

Why Do We Tell Ourselves Scary Stories About AI?Amanda Gefter | Quanta Magazine

“Suddenly, I understood the racing heart of the modern AI horror genre. It’s not intelligence we fear, but desire. A machine that knows a lot doesn’t scare us. A machine that wants something does. But can it? Want things? Can it crave power? Thirst for resources? Can it acquire the will to survive?”

Robotics

You Can Soon Buy a $4,370 Humanoid Robot on AliExpressMarco Trabucchi | Wired ($)

“Unitree is bringing its R1 to international markets. It arrives with some aerobatic capabilities and an entry-level price, but the question of what you’d actually do with it remains open.”

Tech

The Battle for OpenAI’s SoulMaxwell Zeff | Wired ($)

“Elon Musk’s lawsuit against Sam Altman will head to trial this month in an Oakland, California, federal courtroom, where nine jurors will settle a years-long dispute between the cofounders of OpenAI over the group’s founding mission. …Musk’s suit essentially accuses OpenAI of straying from its founding nonprofit mission: ensuring AGI, a highly capable AI system that can perform a wide range of jobs, benefits humanity.”

Tech

SpaceX Is Basically a Huge Meme StockJames Surowiecki | The Atlantic ($)

“Elon Musk likes to do everything on a grand scale. When he takes SpaceX public in the coming months, it will likely be the biggest initial public offering in history. …By conventional standards, SpaceX isn’t worth anything close to $2 trillion. The company is in fact relatively small and losing money. Yet there is little doubt that Musk will get the valuation he wants.”

Tech

43% of AI-Generated Code Changes Need Debugging in Production, Survey FindsMichael Nuñez | VentureBeat

“According to Lightrun’s 2026 State of AI-Powered Engineering Report, shared exclusively with VentureBeat ahead of its public release, 43% of AI-generated code changes require manual debugging in production environments even after passing quality assurance and staging tests. Not a single respondent said their organization could verify an AI-suggested fix with just one redeploy cycle; 88% reported needing two to three cycles, while 11% required four to six.”

The post This Week’s Awesome Tech Stories From Around the Web (Through April 18) appeared first on SingularityHub.

Kategorie: Transhumanismus

NAKIVO v11.2: Ransomware Defense, Faster Replication, vSphere 9, and Proxmox VE 9.0 Support

Bleeping Computer - 18 Duben, 2026 - 15:45
NAKIVO Inc. announced the general availability of NAKIVO Backup & Replication v11.2, focused on fast, reliable, and proactive data protection. [...]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Rusko zaplatí odškodné za sestřelení ázerbájdžánského civilního letadla. Nepřímo tím přiznává vinu za smrt 38 lidí

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 15:45
Moskva konečně odškodní pozůstalé po sestřelení letadla protivzdušnou obranou • Stroj zasáhla raketa mířená původně na nepřátelské ukrajinské drony • Přesná výše finanční kompenzace pro rodiny obětí zůstává utajena
Kategorie: IT News

Nový trend v podvádění u písemek. Chytré brýle s AI naskenují otázky a pošeptají odpovědi

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 14:45
Chytré brýle s kamerou a AI umí vygenerovat zcela správné odpovědi • V Číně si tyto tajné elektronické asistenty studenti pronajímají • Školy proto ruší online testování a chytré brýle zakazují
Kategorie: IT News

S3XY Buttons jsou tlačítka, která Musk v Teslách nechtěl. Dáte je, kam chcete, dělají, co chcete

Zive.cz - bezpečnost - 18 Duben, 2026 - 13:45
Jedním z nedostatků, na kterém se shodnou i fandové značky, je absence fyzických ovládacích prvků v interiéru vozů Tesla. Všechno řešíte na velkém displeji, ale ovládání hmatem je jistější a bezpečnější. Řešením jsou tlačítka S3XY Buttons. Jde o počin bulharské společnosti Enhance Automotive, jsou ...
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

S3XY Buttons jsou tlačítka, která Musk v Teslách nechtěl. Dáte je, kam chcete, dělají, co chcete

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 13:45
Jedním z nedostatků, na kterém se shodnou i fandové značky, je absence fyzických ovládacích prvků v interiéru vozů Tesla. Všechno řešíte na velkém displeji, ale ovládání hmatem je jistější a bezpečnější. Řešením jsou tlačítka S3XY Buttons. Jde o počin bulharské společnosti Enhance Automotive, jsou ...
Kategorie: IT News

Japonci se zajeli učit stavět drony na Ukrajinu. Výsledkem je dvoumetrový kluzák Shirana za 9 tisíc korun

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 11:45
Hlad po rychlé a levné konstrukci dronů pro obranný sektor stále roste a reaguje na to i japonský startup JISDA. Jeho inženýři vyvinuli malý kluzák ACM-01 Shiraha za pouhých 70 tisíc jenů (9 tisíc korun). Shirana slouží primárně jako výcviková platforma k jednorázovému použití, případné poškození ...
Kategorie: IT News

Co nového v aplikaci Mapy.com. Upozorní na obtížné úseky na pěších i cyklistických trasách

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 10:45
Sledujeme nové funkce, které s aktualizacemi přibývají do oblíbené mobilní mapové a navigační aplikace Mapy.com od českého Seznamu.
Kategorie: IT News

[Webinar] Eliminate Ghost Identities Before They Expose Your Enterprise Data

The Hacker News - 18 Duben, 2026 - 10:07
In 2024, compromised service accounts and forgotten API keys were behind 68% of cloud breaches. Not phishing. Not weak passwords. Unmanaged non-human identities that nobody was watching. For every employee in your org, there are 40 to 50 automated credentials: service accounts, API tokens, AI agent connections, and OAuth grants. When projects end or employees leave, [email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

$13.74M Hack Shuts Down Sanctioned Grinex Exchange After Intelligence Claims

The Hacker News - 18 Duben, 2026 - 09:59
Grinex, a Kyrgyzstan-incorporated cryptocurrency exchange sanctioned by the U.K. and the U.S. last year, said it's suspending operations after it blamed Western intelligence agencies for a $13.74 million hack. The exchange said it fell victim to what it described as a large-scale cyber attack that bore hallmarks of foreign intelligence agency involvement. This attack led to the theft of over 1 Ravie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Zasponzorovali daňoví poplatníci EU americké firmě vývoj? Co znamená, že Onsemi kupuje čipovou firmu z Brna

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 09:45
EU dotovala Codasip miliardami, teď ho kupují Američané • . • Onsemi v ČR posiluje, ale Evropa lobbuje proti cizím vlastníkům. • Akvizice může pohřbít ambice EU na vlastní procesory pro AI a servery.
Kategorie: IT News

Která expanze pro World of Warcraft je nejlepší? Seřadili jsme všechna rozšíření

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 08:45
Spousta her se pokusila sesadit WoWko z trůnu MMORPG her. Žádné se to ale nepodařilo a příběh Azerothu pokračuje dál. Pojďme se podívat na všechna rozšíření, která od vydání v roce 2004 vyšla.
Kategorie: IT News

Mirai Variant Nexcorium Exploits CVE-2024-3721 to Hijack TBK DVRs for DDoS Botnet

The Hacker News - 18 Duben, 2026 - 08:01
Threat actors are exploiting security flaws in TBK DVR and end‑of‑life (EoL) TP-Link Wi-Fi routers to deploy Mirai-botnet variants on compromised devices, according to findings from Fortinet FortiGuard Labs and Palo Alto Networks Unit 42. The attack targeting TBK DVR devices has been found to exploit CVE-2024-3721 (CVSS score: 6.3), a medium-severity command injection vulnerability affecting Ravie Lakshmananhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/[email protected]
Kategorie: Hacking & Security

Když budete příliš spoléhat na AI, riskujete kognitivní kapitulaci. Váš rozum se vzdá bez boje

Živě.cz - 18 Duben, 2026 - 07:45
Lidé přebírají chybné odpovědi umělé inteligence bez kritického zhodnocení • Falešná jistota způsobuje zvýšení sebedůvěry při omylech • Finanční motivace a zpětná vazba prokazatelně snižují nezdravou závislost
Kategorie: IT News

Slevy týdne: eSIM do zahraničí, parfémy, knihy i repasovaná elektronika

Lupa.cz - články - 18 Duben, 2026 - 05:15
Jarní nákupní sezóna přináší zajímavé akce napříč kategoriemi. Tentokrát najdete v přehledu slevy na cestovní eSIM karty, parfémy, kuchyňské nože, gratis kreditní kartu i výhodné repasované počítače. Řada akcí platí jen do konce tohoto týdne, takže se vyplatí neotálet.
Kategorie: IT News

World ID expands its ‘proof of human’ vision for the AI era

Computerworld.com [Hacking News] - 18 Duben, 2026 - 00:57

Identity management is a critical concern for any enterprise, and it’s becoming ever more complex and convoluted with the advent of AI agents.

World ID is taking a unique (and to some, controversial) approach to this challenge by building a ‘digital proof of human’ ecosystem for the internet. Today, at its “Lift Off” event, the Sam Altman co-founded initiative made a series of announcements, which included the launch of version 4.0 of its World ID protocol, a World ID app, World ID for Business, World ID for Agents, a new verification tool called Selfie Check, new monetization programs, and integrations with Zoom and Okta.

“It’s a re-engineering of the stack around a very simple idea: Humans should have a right to exceptional privacy and security,” Daniel Shorr, chief of staff to the CEO at Tools for Humanity, said at the event.

How ‘proof of human’ works

Billed as the infrastructure for the age of AI, World ID was co-founded by Altman and Alex Blania, and is being developed by technology company Tools for Humanity, whose iris imaging technology seeks to eliminate the need to provide emails, photos, or other personal details to prove identity.

World ID’s mission is to provide “proof of human” (POH), so that people know they are in fact interacting with another human being (or a bot on behalf of a verified human), rather than a deepfake or other unknown entity. The ideal is to reduce abuse, impersonation, fraud, and misinformation, and promote trust in online interactions.

POH ensures that only one account exists per user (‘one-person-one-ID’) via Tools For Humanity’s iris-scanning Orb device, which uses multispectral sensors and infrared light to capture high-res images of a human’s irises. These images are processed in seconds on-device to generate an ‘IrisCode,’ a unique cryptographic hash based on the iris’s unique details and textures.

IrisCodes are then compared to entries in the World Chain, a global blockchain-based database, to verify the user hasn’t previously registered. This check uses zero-knowledge proofs (ZKPs), a cryptographic prover-verifier mechanism, to confirm iris uniqueness without needing to link personal data.

If the IrisCode is identified as unique, the user receives a World ID that can be stored on their phone. IrisCodes are anonymized and fragmented across secure servers to minimize breach risks, preventing reverse engineering. The Orb also deletes original images by default.

Other World ID initiatives include Deep Face and Face Auth, which help identify deepfakes by performing private 1:1 face comparisons of selfies and Orb-captured images.

Tiago Sada, chief product officer at Tools for Humanity, emphasized the protocol’s open source nature, third-party auditing, and regular security updates. “It goes beyond standard end-to-end encryption, and it uses multiple primitives, including anonymized multi-party computation and zero knowledge proofs to protect you along the way,” he said at today’s event.

More than 18 million people across 160 countries have now verified their “humanness” via Orb and have used them more than 450 million times, execs said.

New World ID features

The new World ID 4.0 is a more scalable and powerful version of World ID that incorporates essential upgrades like key rotation (which detaches keys from identity), multi-party entropy (to ensure that every interaction is unlinkable), and finer credential controls (more ways to manage and protect information), Shorr explained.

It now includes a new verification method, “Selfie Check,” that can be used in lieu of Tools for Humanity’s Orb device. “Take a selfie and ‘boom, you’re in,’” Shorr explained. He noted that it’s not as robust as the Orb, but it’s “really, really compelling for specific use cases. Not every use case today requires the gold standard of Orb assurance.”

World ID also now includes agent delegation tools that essentially serve as what Shorr called “a power of attorney for your agent,” allowing it to perform actions on the user’s behalf.

“With the explosion of agents, the internet is fundamentally changing again,” he said. “How do you make sure the right humans are in the loop?”

This is especially important at critical moments where users or platforms need to ensure that a purchase or decision was intentional. At the same time, he said, “we don’t want Skynet.”

Security company Okta is now onboard, introducing Human Principal, a verification method based on World ID that is now available in beta.

World ID also announced upcoming new monetization efforts. Shorr noted that it’s difficult to monetize the network when you can’t share user data, but at the same time, being human is “incredibly valuable” in the age of AI, and the internet will want to know which users are human.

“We dug through the history books, and we came up with an inventively old approach: Fees,” he said. When services or developers ask for World ID proof, apps will pay a fee, not humans.

World ID and Zoom fighting deepfakes

Ensuring participants in Zoom calls are real people is another concern.

Brendan Ittelson, Zoom’s chief ecosystem officer, noted that deepfakes are more realistic than ever and the technology to create them is much more accessible, so it’s no longer a hypothetical ‘will this happen?’

Customers across Zoom’s user base are deeply concerned, he said, yet there are challenges with existing verification techniques and knowledge base options.

“The technology is evolving so fast, so doing detection techniques and all that is a constant cat and mouse game,” he said. “You really need a platform where you’re looking at [the question], ‘how can you validate someone and be privacy forward, but also have that strong human connection?’”

To address that problem, today’s announcements included the news that World ID is coming to Zoom. New capabilities will match live images with the Orb-verified ID on a user’s device when they log into a call. They can also verify themselves in real time; nothing leaves their device. World ID verification will be indicated by a badge in the user’s Zoom window.

Not everyone is convinced, though

While touted as a way to make the internet a safer, more democratic, and inclusive place, the ambitious initiative has been met with significant criticism.

Detractors, including the likes of notorious whistleblower Edward Snowden, warn of privacy and biometric data risks. They argue that storing iris data could create immense security problems, as well as the potential for its misuse and for unlawful surveillance.

Other criticisms are that World ID creates a central point of failure, requires blind trust in one company, and exploits vulnerable and developing nations. For instance, the initiative became massively popular in Kenya because iris scans were traded for Worldcoin cryptocurrency (WLD). This hinted at bribery, detractors note; the program has since been banned in the country, and is also either banned or suspended in Brazil, Indonesia, Hong Kong, and Spain.

Further, the initiative raises concerns around data protection laws, credential theft (which can be particularly catastrophic because irises are immutable), and ‘function creep’ that could eventually restrict access to sites and force participation in the program.

Indeed, Orbs, which began shipping in the third quarter of 2025, are purchased from the private Tools for Humanity organization and are owned by “community operators,” who verify World IDs with their devices and receive WLD tokens for their efforts.

Protecting this kind of biometric data is crucial, said David Shipley of Beauceron Security: He pointed to Apple’s approach, where biometric data is securely stored on-device, and only a digital expression based on that data is transmitted, never the original biometric data itself.

“This feels like a super-bad idea,” he said of World ID. While having a secure, verified digital ID as a service that can be trusted is much needed, it shouldn’t be delivered by a private sector entity, he contended.

“Private sector control of personhood feels Hollywood-style cyber dystopian,” said Shipley. “Proof of being human and proof of being a citizen are public goods and should be delivered by public bodies that can be held accountable through democratic representation.”

Kategorie: Hacking & Security
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