back to top

Tech Stories

AI Content Got Too Real. Now OpenAI and Nvidia Are Using Google’s Watermarking System
Three years ago, Google introduced a watermarking system for AI-generated content called SynthID. Nobody was required to use it. It was just Google's answer to a problem the rest of the industry hadn't fully admitted existed yet. Now OpenAI is using it. So is Nvidia. So are ElevenLabs and Kakao. And Google says SynthID has already been applied to 100 billion images and videos, plus 60,000 years worth of audio. The timing matters. AI-generated images and video have gotten good enough that the old tells, the extra fingers, the smeared text, the wrong shadows, are mostly gone. What replaces them as a detection method isn't human judgment. It's watermarking inserted into the content at the point of generation, before it ever reaches anyone's feed. SynthID is Google's bet on how that works at scale, and a growing number of the industry's biggest names are now betting alongside it.
There's a quiet assumption baked into how most people think about AI models. Bigger means better. More parameters means more capable. If you want the best results, you run the biggest thing you can afford. Qwen3.6-27B makes that assumption uncomfortable. It's a 27B dense model, fully open source under Apache 2.0, and on agentic coding benchmarks it beats Qwen3.5-397B — a model nearly fifteen times its size — across every major test. That's not a rounding error or a cherry-picked metric. It's a consistent pattern across SWE-Bench, Terminal-Bench, and frontend code generation. This doesn't mean bigger models are dead. It means the gap between what you can run locally and what only clusters could handle a year ago just got a lot narrower.
GPT-5.4 Is Outperforming Humans at Work. But the Real Story Is What OpenAI Isn't Telling You
OpenAI dropped their latest model yesterday and buried inside the benchmarks is a number that deserves more attention than it's getting. On GDPval, a test that puts AI agents through real professional tasks across 44 actual occupations, GPT-5.4 matched or outperformed human professionals 83% of the time. The previous version sat at 71%. That's not a small jump. And this isn't GPT writing emails or summarizing documents anymore. This version can move a mouse, click buttons, fill out forms, and work across applications the way a person sitting at a desk would. It scored 75% on OSWorld, a benchmark that tests exactly that. The average office worker scores 72.4%. The model is already better at operating a computer than most people who use one for a living & 83% is just the beginning of what this release actually means.
Not Everything Needs AI 7 Powerful Alternatives to the Apps Everyone Uses
I use AI everyday & I recommend it to others as well. In the right places, it saves me time & genuinely improves how I work. But I’ve also noticed something else. There’s a lot of hype right now, and it’s pushing AI into apps that never really needed it in the first place. Just because something can have an AI layer doesn’t mean it should. For some of the most popular apps people use every day, I honestly don’t feel the need for it. The core job those tools do hasn’t changed. Adding AI doesn’t always make them better. Sometimes it just makes them heavier or more expensive. So instead of rejecting AI entirely, I got selective. I kept it where it helps me. And for everything else, I switched to tools that focus on doing their job well without trying to be smart. Here are 7 powerful alternatives to some of the most common apps people rely on
OpenAI Wanted Distribution on the iPhone. Apple Had Other Plans
OpenAI was supposed to become part of the iPhone experience. Apple would finally have an AI answer for Siri. ChatGPT would sit in front of hundreds of millions of users. It didn't work out that way. According to Bloomberg, OpenAI has brought in outside legal counsel to explore its options, including a formal breach-of-contract notice against Apple. The integration that was supposed to funnel billions in new subscriptions toward ChatGPT instead got buried deep enough that most iPhone users probably don't know it exists. One OpenAI executive put it plainly: "They basically said, 'OpenAI needs to take a leap of faith and trust us.' It didn't work out well."
Kimi K2.6 Turn Your Documents Into Reusable Skills
There's a particular kind of frustration that comes with doing great work and then starting from scratch the next time you need to do it again. You wrote a brilliant research report last month. The structure was tight, the sourcing was solid, the tone was exactly right. Now a client wants something similar and you're staring at a blank page again. The previous report is sitting in a folder somewhere, useful as a reference but not as a tool. Kimi K2.6 is trying to fix that specific problem. And the way it goes about it is different enough from what other models are doing that it's worth paying attention to. The model itself is a 1T parameter MoE released under a Modified MIT license, more on what that means practically in a moment. But the architecture is almost secondary to what Moonshot AI built around it. Document to Skills, Agent Swarm, full stack generation from a single prompt. It's a system designed around the idea that one person should be able to operate like a team.
YouTube Will Search for AI Fakes of You. All It Needs Is a Video of Your Face
For most of YouTube's history, if someone uploaded a convincing fake of you, your options were limited. File a report, hope someone reviewed it, wait. The tools that actually worked, the ones that proactively scanned for your likeness across millions of uploads were reserved for verified creators, then politicians, then journalists and then celebrities. As of now, that changes. YouTube is opening likeness detection to anyone over 18. Zero subscribers, no verification badge or public profile required. If your face ends up in an AI-generated video you never agreed to, YouTube will now look for it. That's the good part but there is another part you should know before you enroll.

Discover Softwares

Discover Apps

Discover AI Apps

Modly: Open Source Local AI Image-to-3D Model Generator

You've got a photo and you want a 3D model. Normally that means paying per generation on some cloud service that uploads your image to a server you'll never see. Modly skips all of that. It's a desktop app that converts any photo into a fully usable 3D mesh, right on your own GPU. No files leaving your machine. Drop an image in, the AI handles background removal automatically, reconstructs the geometry, and hands you a model ready to open in Blender, Unity, Unreal, or whatever you're working in.

OpenCode Desktop: The Free Open Source AI Coding Editor

OpenCode Desktop is a powerful, open-source AI coding agent designed to help developers write, debug, and refactor code efficiently. With its GUI desktop version, OpenCode works like a full-featured code editor while integrating AI-powered coding assistance. It supports multiple programming languages and offers multi-session support, real-time code suggestions, and integration with over 75 AI model providers, including Claude, GPT, Gemini, and many more. You can also use the free models included or connect your preferred model for enhanced coding productivity.

Z-Image Turbo ComfyUI: Complete Installation Guide For Windows, Linux & macOS

Z-Image Turbo stands out as one of the most efficient and high-quality open-source image generation models available today. With its powerful 6B-parameter Single-Stream DiT architecture, bilingual text rendering, sub-second inference speed, and exceptional photorealistic output

Maestro: Run Multiple AI Coding Agents in Parallel (Cross-Platform)

Maestro solves a problem most developers accept: AI coding assistants only work one task at a time. You ask Claude to build Feature A. You wait. Then you ask it to fix a bug. You wait again. Context switching piles up, and progress stays stubbornly serial. Maestro takes a different approach. It lets you run 1 to 6 AI coding sessions in parallel, each inside its own isolated git worktree, with its own terminal, branch, and shell environment. No stepping on each other’s changes. No guessing which agent touched what.

Discover Games

Content Creation

Find Content Creation Niche with 3 easy steps

3 Simple Steps to Find Your Niche as a Content Creator

0
If you're thinking to start your content creation journey, the first question that comes in your mind could be "What to Create?" and when you scroll through Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn, and see creators with clear focus on their niche like fitness, finance, coding, fashion, motivation. Most of the new creators probably wonder at this point that if everything is already being created then what should we create?
Five proven ways to boost instgram reels reach

5 Proven Ways to Boost Your Instagram Reels Reach in 2025

0
Instagram is continuously evolving and so do we, when I created my first page, during the initial stages my reels were barely getting views,...
10 Faceless YouTube Channel Ideas

10 Faceless YouTube Channel Ideas In 2026

0
Finding the perfect niche can feel challenging if you don't want to show your face in YouTube videos