TrustInTech
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AI Can Touch the Linux Kernel—But It Doesn’t Get to Own It

The Linux kernel runs the world. So when AI starts touching it, we should all pay attention. For the past year, AI coding assistants have quietly seeped into kernel development—the most battle-tested, review-obsessed, no-nonsense open-source project on Earth. And the reaction hasn’t been panic. It’s been paperwork. New tags. Stricter disclosures. A lot of side-eye.…
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Apple’s Privacy Pitch Survived — But the Fine Print Is Showing

Apple’s privacy moat just took a stress test. And it didn’t crack — but it did show hairline fractures investors can’t ignore. The FBI didn’t break Signal’s encryption. It didn’t force Apple to build a backdoor. Instead, in the 2026 Prairieland case, investigators pulled deleted Signal message previews from iOS’s notification database — data stored…
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Microsoft Can’t Court Developers by Day and Lock Them Out by Night

When Microsoft locks out the very developers who keep the internet’s plumbing running, investors shouldn’t shrug. They should ask a harder question: is Redmond quietly undermining the ecosystem that props up Azure’s AI empire? Recent reports show Microsoft suspended developer accounts tied to high-profile open-source projects like WireGuard and VeraCrypt. According to coverage from TechCrunch…
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Anthropic Didn’t Break Claude Code—It Shook Developer Trust

Did Anthropic’s February update break Claude Code? Not exactly. But it did something just as dangerous: it shook developer trust at the worst possible moment in the AI coding arms race. Over the past month, Hacker News threads have lit up with complaints about “regressions,” higher usage limits, and models that feel—according to some users—“dumber”…
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