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Scam.ai Announces Qualcomm Partnership, Launches Halo Deepfake Detection Model at Computex 2026
New partnership brings on-device deepfake detection to video calls on desktop
SAN FRANCISCO, June 29, 2026 — Scam.ai today announced a partnership with Qualcomm and the launch of Halo, an on-device deepfake detection model for live video calls.
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xFusion scales enterprise AI from edge workstations to liquid-cooled data centres
xFusion presented scalable enterprise AI computing models at ISC 2026, transitioning hardware from edge devices to data centres.
Enterprise technology buyers attending the Hamburg exhibition sought practical production frameworks. Hardware selection processes regularly fail to account for physical operating limits. Relying on public APIs exposes proprietary commercial data.
xFusion engineers responded with a four-tier hardware portfolio.
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Best Automated Security Testing Tools for Modern DevSecOps
Modern DevSecOps needs security checks that run before release day. Teams now write code, build services and deploy updates at a pace that manual review cannot match. That’s why they use automated testing, as it helps catch routine flaws before they reach production.
The pressure has grown. Verizon’s 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report found that vulnerability exploitation caused 20 percent of breaches as an initial access route, up 34 percent from the prior report.
0:44
Advances in Natural Language Processing Are Changing Professional Networking
Natural language processing is reshaping professional communication on online platforms, enabling more relevant and personalised networking interactions. As AI-driven systems increasingly comprehend and generate human language, these technological advances affect how users pursue and maintain professional connections, presenting both opportunities and challenges in authentic relationship-building.
Professional networking now relies on a growing ecosystem of AI-powered tools that affect how people initiate and manage online connections.
1:02
Wimbledon adds IBM AI tools for live match coverage
The All England Lawn Tennis Club is adding new AI-powered features to Wimbledon’s digital platforms through its ongoing work with IBM.
The updates will be available through the Wimbledon app and wimbledon.com as first-round matches begin on Monday.
1:11
HP accelerates enterprise workflows with OpenAI Frontier
HP has scaled its OpenAI Frontier integration across global operations to optimise enterprise workflows and accelerate output.
The hardware manufacturer initiated testing of the platform in February 2026. Early pilot programs yielded verified operational gains in software engineering and cybersecurity remediation. Expanding these initial trials into an enterprise-wide operating model requires connecting access protocols, contextual data, and evaluation metrics. Frontier supplies this connective tissue.
Implementation metrics indicate high usage among technical staff.
1:29
Samsung and SK Hynix plan $590 billion chip investment as AI demand sends memory prices soaring
Samsung and SK Hynix, backed by the South Korean government, are pouring $590 billion into new chip factories and packaging centers as AI data center demand surges. According to Jefferies, memory prices could climb to 50 percent per quarter through 2027.
1:39
Claude Code runs a GitHub repo's hidden malware without verification, giving attackers full control
Security researchers at Mozilla's 0DIN platform have shown how a single compromised GitHub repo can take over a developer's machine the moment an AI coding tool like Claude Code runs its setup. The catch: the malicious code only loads at runtime via a DNS query, invisible in the repo, to scanners, and to the AI agent itself.
The article Claude Code runs a GitHub repo's hidden malware without verification, giving attackers full control appeared first on The Decoder.
1:55
The US military used AI to pick thousands of targets but missed a note saying one was a school
The probe into a missile strike on an Iranian school exposes serious gaps in the US military's targeting infrastructure. AI is supposed to close them.
The article The US military used AI to pick thousands of targets but missed a note saying one was a school appeared first on The Decoder.