Hackers Compromise Dozens of Popular Open Source Packages in Supply Chain Attack
Published on 2026-05-19T17:00:23.176684
Hackers Compromise Dozens of Popular Open Source Packages in Supply Chain Attack
OpenAI and Dell have partnered to bring Codex, an AI coding agent, to hybrid and on-premise enterprise environments. This collaboration aims to help enterprises deploy AI securely across their data and workflows. (Source: OpenAI Blog) Original
OpenAI and Malta have partnered to provide ChatGPT Plus to all Maltese citizens, along with training to build practical AI skills and use AI responsibly. This initiative aims to expand AI access and promote responsible usage. (Source: OpenAI Blog) Original
OpenAI is previewing a new personal finance experience in ChatGPT for Pro users in the U.S. Users can securely connect their financial accounts to receive AI-powered insights and guidance tailored to their financial context, goals, and priorities. (Source: OpenAI Blog) Original
Andrej Karpathy, co-founder of OpenAI, has joined Anthropic's pre-training team. Pre-training is a compute-intensive phase that gives Claude its core knowledge and capabilities, making it one of the most expensive steps in building a frontier model. (Source: TechCrunch) Original
The Light Phone, designed for minimal use, has partnered with Andrew Yang’s Noble Mobile. Noble Mobile offers incentives to users who reduce their screen time, promoting a healthier relationship with technology. (Source: TechCrunch) Original
Hackers have compromised dozens of popular open source packages in an ongoing supply chain attack known as Mini Shai-Hulud. This campaign has affected several open source projects and the developers and companies that use them. (Source: TechCrunch) Original
Plex's lifetime subscription cost will triple to $750 starting June 30 at 8:01 PM ET. The premium plan's price increase reflects the company's efforts to enhance its services and offerings. (Source: Engadget) Original
Nintendo has released a new mobile game called Pictonico! which turns photos into minigames. The free-to-download app draws inspiration from the WarioWare series, offering a unique and wacky gaming experience. (Source: Engadget) Original