America is building data centers the way it once built shopping malls: quickly, everywhere, and with the unshakable belief that the future will sort out the parking. Except this time the “parking” is electricity—lots of it—delivered with the kind of reliability we typically reserve for oxygen. That brings us to the question posed by Ars…
Inside MIT Technology Review’s “Insiders Panel”: How the newsroom reads 2026’s tech signals (and why you should care)
MIT Technology Review publishes a lot of serious reporting about the future. But every so often, it also does something deceptively simple: it pulls back the curtain and lets readers watch the editors argue (politely) about what matters right now. That’s the basic promise behind the MIT Technology Review Insiders Panel, a recurring format that…
Cloudflare’s 2026 Threat Report: Why Attackers Now Optimize for “MOE” (and How Defenders Can Catch Up)
Cloudflare just dropped its inaugural 2026 Cloudflare Threat Report, and it reads less like a traditional “top 10 threats” list and more like a field guide to modern adversaries who have discovered a dangerous productivity hack: stop trying to be clever and start trying to be effective. The announcement, published on March 3, 2026 on…
Hetzner Warns of Phishing Emails Stealing Logins and Credit Card Data: What’s Happening, How It Works, and How to Lock Down Your Account
On July 5, 2024, hosting provider Hetzner published a blunt warning on its public status page: phishing emails were circulating “in the name of Hetzner,” aiming to steal customer login credentials and, in some cases, credit card details. The incident is listed as Status: Identified and Affected systems: General, which is status-page speak for “our…
Yobitel’s OPENFOAM HPC Enterprise Solutions on AWS: What You’re Actually Buying (and Why It Matters for CFD Teams)
Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has a reputation: it’s the kind of work that turns a perfectly reasonable engineering question (“will this wing stall?”) into an all-night infrastructure saga (“why is my solver waiting on a node that doesn’t exist?”). Open-source CFD tools like OpenFOAM lower licensing barriers, but they don’t magically eliminate the operational reality…
South Korea’s $5M Seized-Crypto Faceplant: When a Government Press Photo Becomes a Wallet Drain
South Korea’s government just delivered a painfully modern lesson in operational security: if you publish the keys, you publish the money. In late February 2026, South Korea’s National Tax Service (NTS) celebrated a high-profile enforcement action against tax delinquents — and then (apparently) helped drain a seized crypto wallet by accidentally disclosing its recovery phrase…
Designing Private Network Connectivity for RAG-Capable Gen AI Apps on Google Cloud: What the March 2026 Reference Architecture Gets Right (and What You Still Need to Decide)
Enterprises love generative AI right up until the moment someone asks a simple question: “So… does any of this data touch the public internet?” If your answer involves a long pause, a whiteboard marker, and the phrase “it depends,” you’re not alone. Retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) is a terrific way to make large language models more…
Modernizing with Agile SASE: What Cloudflare’s “Blog Takeover” Reveals About the Next Corporate Network
On March 2, 2026, Cloudflare published a short post with an unusually direct thesis: the corporate network has melted into a roaming, AI-assisted, coffee-shop-adjacent blob — and the only sane response is to modernize with what it calls agile SASE. The post, Modernizing with agile SASE: a Cloudflare One blog takeover, was written by Warnessa…
Protesting AI, and What’s Floating in Space: Why 2026 Feels Like a Two-Front Tech War
On March 2, 2026, MIT Technology Review published an edition of its weekday newsletter The Download titled “The Download: protesting AI, and what’s floating in space.” The original item (which you can read here: MIT Technology Review) stitches together two storylines that look unrelated at first glance: the intensifying public pushback against AI, and the…
Polymarket’s $529 Million Iran-Strike Betting Frenzy: Prediction Markets, Insider Risk, and the Coming Regulatory Hangover
On March 1, 2026, TechCrunch published a story that reads like a financial thriller written by someone who spends too much time on crypto Twitter: “Polymarket saw $529M traded on bets tied to bombing of Iran” by Anthony Ha. The headline number—$529 million—is the kind of figure that makes venture capitalists sit up straight and…
