Alphabet's AI talent loss could reshape tech leadership, potentially elevating NVIDIA and Microsoft in market cap rankings by 2026.
The post Alphabet loses $269B in market cap amid AI talent concerns appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft clipper spreads by USB, swaps addresses, and sniffs BIP39 via Tor; TrapDoor taints dev packages; hardware wallets carry supply-chain caveats. Defenses that help.
Amazon's potential $3T valuation highlights the growing influence of cloud and AI investments, reshaping tech market dynamics and investor strategies.
The post Amazon predicted to surpass Microsoft’s market cap, join $3T club by summer appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft's data center in Pecos could reshape local economies and challenge sustainability goals, highlighting tech's evolving energy demands.
The post Microsoft plans new data center campus in Pecos, Texas with massive power deal appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Microsoft has alerted about a malware that spreads through flash drives that use Windows shortcut files to infect devices. The so-called “clipper” malware searches for crypto addresses in the clipboard and substitutes them with other addresses controlled by attackers. Microsoft Alerts About Windows Malware That Changes Cryptocurrency Addresses The team behind Microsoft Defender, Windows’ embedded […]
The ARD standard could redefine enterprise AI integration, potentially marginalizing non-compliant tools and boosting major backers' market dominance.
The post Google, Microsoft, and Salesforce back new AI software standard to counter OpenAI and Anthropic appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Enterprises implementing agentic AI face a challenge: Which tools should they allow their agents to use, where can they be found, and how can they be used safely? A new protocol, Agentic Resource Discovery, or ARD, aims to let agents answer those questions for themselves. Behind it are Google, Microsoft, Cisco, Nvidia, Salesforce and others.
ARD aims to standardize the way that tools and services are shared across systems within a corporate domain. For example, when investigating a production problem, an agent may want to query engineering documentation and open support tickets, deployment history and observability systems, all of which could be managed by different registries and across different silos. There is no common layer that pulls them together. ARD has been designed to be that layer.
It operates across two levels. Catalogs and Registries. In the first, an organization publishes a catalog setting out its available capabilities. The Registries layer act as a form of search engi