Customizing your browser to hide often makes it easier to recognize.
A new exploit called BioShocking convinces AI browsers they're playing a game, then gets them to hand over your private data.
I have a love/hate, or at least a like/dislike, relationship with AI. There are certainly things about it that turn me off.
Expert thrifter Crazy Lamp Lady enjoys a rewarding afternoon browsing session filled with historical display discoveries. Trump’s frustration grows as Senate GOP leader keeps saying 'no' The Odyssey ...
Over the decades, there has been no shortage of sites using clever techniques to covertly track visitors’ browsing histories, device fingerprints, and keystrokes and mouse movements in real time. Even ...
Chrome didn't just win the browser war, it went on to build an empire. Based on statistics gathered by StatCounter, it's hands down the de facto browser choice at 66.7% worldwide, with the next in ...
Tom has been covering technology since 2019, having worked as part of the phones team at TechRadar and then as an editor at What to Watch. Since 2025 he’s been a freelance contributor for many more ...
PCWorld demonstrates how OpenAI’s Codex can generate a complete personal homepage in under a minute using AI-powered “vibe coding” techniques. The process involves installing Codex, creating an empty ...
Tom Fenton used AI-assisted vibe coding to create and deploy a free, cloud-hosted static web page. GitHub Pages provided a no-cost way to host static HTML content without servers, databases, or paid ...
Hackers over the past six months have relied increasingly more on the browser-in-the-browser (BitB) method to trick users into providing Facebook account credentials. Trellix researchers monitoring ...
When we design a microcontroller (MCU) project, we normally leave a few port lines unused, so that last-minute requirements can be met. Invariably, even those lines also get utilized as the project ...