Signal creator Moxie Marlinspike has introduced a new AI assistant, Confer. This open-source platform offers data encryption, where no one can read the conversations, not even the server ...
Moxie Marlinspike—the pseudonym of an engineer who set a new standard for private messaging with the creation of the Signal Messenger—is now aiming to revolutionize AI chatbots in a similar way. His ...
The founder of Signal has been quietly working on a fully end-to-end encrypted, open-source AI chatbot designed to keep users’ conversations secret. In a series of blog posts, Moxie Marlinspike makes ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The interview Kash Patel recently gave alongside his girlfriend, country music performer Alexis Wilkins, was not a lapse in ...
The interview Kash Patel recently gave alongside his girlfriend, country music performer Alexis Wilkins, was not a lapse in judgment or a failure to read the room. It was not a distraction from his ...
Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell is the White House Correspondent for "The Daily Signal." Send her an email. Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is demanding answers from Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr.
The Pentagon’s latest report makes one thing clear: Signal protects conversations, but it was never designed to safeguard U.S. war plans — and using it that way carried real risk for American forces.
The Signalgate scandal that enveloped US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth in March appears to be symptomatic of a wider lax attitude towards the use of non-approved messaging apps by officials and ...
The Pentagon's watchdog has concluded that U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth risked endangering American troops when he shared sensitive information on the messaging app Signal earlier this year.
The inspector general concluded that the defense secretary violated the Pentagon’s instructions on using a private electronic device to share sensitive information. By John Ismay Reporting from ...
A Pentagon watchdog report has found that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth put U.S. service members at risk when he used the Signal messaging app to discuss a military strike in Yemen earlier this year.