OpenAI's Codex MacOS app is a new hub where you can use AI agents to vibe code and create apps just by telling the AI what you want.
North Korean hackers are deploying newly uncovered tools to move data between internet-connected and air-gapped systems, spread via removable drives, and conduct covert surveillance.
An attachment named New PO 500PCS.pdf.hTM, posing as a purchase order in PDF form, turned out to be something entirely different: a credential-harvesting web page that quietly sent passwords and ...
If you want a fast, secure, and truly cross-platform local sharing method, LocalSend remains an incredibly versatile daily driver. Besides LocalSend, I also love KDE Connect. It allows you to sync ...
Two dozen journalists. A pile of pages that would reach the top of the Empire State Building. And an effort to find the next revelation in a sprawling case. Interview by Patrick Healy With Steve ...
Since last spring, OpenAI has offered Codex. What started life as the company's response to Claude Code is becoming something more sophisticated with the release of a new dedicated macOS app. At its ...
Jeffrey Epstein had advice for the Eastern European model who was establishing herself in New York. “its time you start an education,” he wrote to her in 2010, according to a trove of files released ...
The app gives developers a centralized workspace to manage multiple AI coding agents across projects without losing task context, OpenAI said. OpenAI has launched a standalone Codex app to manage ...
Elon Musk’s younger brother is scrambling to justify his extensive email trail with Jeffrey Epstein. Kimbal Musk, 53, was revealed to have exchanged warm emails with Epstein well after the disgraced ...
Files released by DoJ reveal the financier engaging in efforts to blunt the impact of the movement as it was gaining ground In August 2018, as the #MeToo movement spread across social media and women ...
The latest (final? who knows?!) tranche of Epstein files hit a week ago, leaving everyone still scrambling to parse through the millions of terrifying documents and photos. The files themselves, ...