Study Shows Older Users Aren’t Sold on AI

Artificial intelligence is moving fast, and depending on who you ask, it’s either exciting or already exhausting. A recent study from Cisco and the OECD talks about a key hurdle: older users' AI adoption remains surprisingly low. This isn't just a minor blip. It's a generational gap that's shaping how quickly AI spreads in everyday life and business. More importantly, it reveals that one-size-fits-all AI strategies may leave a large portion of customers behind.

Data Centers Are Overwhelming Power Grids Worldwide

The digital economy runs on electricity. Every cloud app, AI model, and streaming service depends on massive infrastructure humming behind the scenes. Today, that infrastructure is growing so fast it’s starting to collide with a very real limit: available power. The explosion in data center energy consumption is pushing electricity networks worldwide to their limits, straining data center power grids. For proof, look no further than London. The AI Power Crunch Is No Longer Theoretical

Memory Crunch Drives Server and PC Prices Up

The tech hardware market is under pressure, and business owners are starting to feel it in their budgets. The memory crunch driving server and PC prices up isn't just a blip. It's a full-on shift in the tech supply chain that’s unlikely to change anytime soon. Understanding how High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM), Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM), and AI demand are affecting prices can help companies plan smarter upgrades and avoid surprise costs.

Tech-Fluent Leaders Gain an Early Edge in AI

Artificial intelligence is no longer a future-facing experiment tucked away in IT departments. It’s a boardroom priority. Business owners across industries are realizing that the organizations pulling ahead have leadership with the technological understanding to ask the right questions and move decisively. In this environment, tech-fluent leaders' AI strategies are becoming a defining factor between companies that adapt and those that fall behind. AI Has Officially Moved Into the Boardroom

Tech-Changing Lithium Discovery Found in Supervolcano

A collapsed supervolcano might not seem like it has much to do with modern technology, but a crater from an eruption 16 million years ago could solve a problem businesses have been wrestling with for years. Researchers discovered an enormous concentration of lithium-rich clay within the McDermitt Caldera, which stretches across the Nevada–Oregon border. Early estimates suggest the lithium discovery in the supervolcano could contain 20 to 40 million metric tons of lithium-bearing material, placing it among the largest known deposits on Earth.

107 Android Fixes Land: Make Sure You’re Protected

Google just rolled out one of the biggest Android security batches of the year, squashing 107 vulnerabilities across the entire ecosystem. If your business runs on Android phones or tablets, this patch isn’t optional. While many updates quietly address minor issues, these Android fixes stand out. Two of the bugs are already being exploited in real-world attacks: CVE-2025-48633 (information disclosure) and CVE-2025-48572 (elevation of privilege). That means attackers aren’t waiting to pounce on opportunities to steal, and you can’t afford to ignore the threat.

4.3M Hit By a Malicious Extension: Are You Affected?

News of yet another malicious extension making the rounds might feel like background noise at this point. But this one deserves your attention. Security researchers at Koi Security recently uncovered a long-running campaign, now known as ShadyPanda, that quietly infected 4.3 million devices and stole data via more than 100 seemingly harmless browser extensions on both Chrome and Edge. These extensions weren’t sloppy attempts or obvious scams. First introduced in the Chrome Web Store and Microsoft Edge Add-ons marketplace in 2018, the extensions did precisely what they promised, racked up glowing reviews, and flew entirely under the radar, lulling users into a false sense of security.

Worrying Security Flaws Threaten Every Cloud Provider

Running a business in the cloud used to feel like a guarantee of safety. But a new report is shaking that confidence. Researchers at Oligo have uncovered serious cloud security issues tied to Fluent Bit, a popular open-source log processing tool used by just about every major cloud provider, including AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, as well as anyone using containers or Kubernetes. That massive footprint makes any weakness a high-value target for cybercriminals.

ASUS AiCloud Routers Hit by New Security Flaw

When you’re juggling invoices, client calls, and everything else, the last thing you need is some hidden flaw in your network quietly letting attackers slip in. Unfortunately, that’s exactly what recently surfaced with ASUS AiCloud routers. ASUS has issued an urgent warning and a critical firmware patch to address a serious authentication bypass vulnerability that could open the door to remote code execution (RCE) attacks. If your office has one of these routers tucked in a corner somewhere, now’s a good time to give it some attention.

Microsoft Teams Bug Could Let Hackers Bypass Security

If your business relies on Teams for conversations, file sharing, and getting things done, you need to know about this Microsoft Teams bug recently discovered by cybersecurity researchers. A new feature designed to make collaboration easier has accidentally opened the door to attackers. If you don’t act now, this cross-tenant vulnerability could put your company data at risk. A “Convenience” Feature That Creates a Security Gap Microsoft recently rolled out a feature that lets any Teams user start a new chat with anyone simply by entering their email address.

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