Adobe proposes AI protection for artists

Levy Health aims to assist women in detecting fertility issues earlier

Caroline Mitterdorfer began her fertility journey after a cancer diagnosis at age 27. She co-founded Levy Health to help speed Read more

Lenovo’s newest designs show that PCs can still be enjoyable

Large corporations typically play it safe when it comes to consumer hardware, sticking to incremental updates year after year. Lenovo, Read more

PowerSchool reveals massive data breach: Hackers steal students’ sensitive info!

Welcome to the Edtech World Big news in the education tech world! PowerSchool, the edtech giant, recently experienced a data Read more

Telegram’s Crypto Wallet Debuts in the United States

Telegram Expanding Access to Crypto Wallet Telegram is now offering its crypto wallet to its 87 million users in the Read more

Adobe is launching its Content Authenticity web app in beta to help creators protect their work from deepfakes and content theft. The system uses digital fingerprinting and invisible watermarking to securely identify artwork. Adobe is also working on making content credentials accessible across the internet. The company is releasing a browser extension and an Inspect tool to help users discover and display content credentials online.

See also  Doublepoint introduces a new Apple Watch application for hands-free device control through gestures.

Belkin discontinues support for majority of Wemo devices and its accompanying Wemo application.

Instagram allows users to now share Spotify songs with sound to their Stories.