Garmin GPS watches: 2026 models tested across use cases
Original headline: “What Is the Best Garmin Watch Right Now? (2026)”
Wired's equipment testing evaluates current Garmin GPS-enabled fitness trackers against specific user profiles—casual hikers, backcountry skiers—rather than generic performance claims. This represents straightforward consumer guidance with minimal editorial ambition.
Read Full Article at WiredDolby Sues Snapchat Over AV1 Codec Patent Licensing
Dolby has initiated patent litigation against Snapchat over use of the AV1 video codec, claiming that industry declarations of AV1 as royalty-free do not supersede underlying patent claims. The case exposes a fundamental tension in open-source standards: whether patent holders can extract licensing fees even after industry consensus endorses a technology as patent-unencumbered. This affects the viability of AV1 as a truly open alternative to proprietary codecs like H.264.
Telnyx Python Package Compromised on PyPI Repository
A malicious actor gained control of the Telnyx Python package on PyPI, the primary package distribution service for Python developers, and injected compromised code. This represents a supply-chain vulnerability affecting any developer who installed the affected version—a recurring risk in open-source ecosystems where centralized repositories become single points of failure. The incident underscores the tension between convenience (a unified package index) and security (decentralized verification and signed releases).
Federal judge blocks Pentagon's supply chain designation for Anthropic
A federal judge blocked the Pentagon's classification of Anthropic, an AI company, as a supply chain risk and suspended Trump's order severing government contracts with the firm. The decision centers on whether AI vendor restrictions fall within presidential war powers or require statutory authority and raises substantive questions about AI security vulnerabilities, Chinese competitive dynamics, and the scope of executive emergency authority. This is the first judicial test of Trump's AI vendor restrictions.
Judge Blocks Trump Supply-Chain-Risk Designation for Anthropic
A federal judge temporarily enjoined the Trump administration's designation of AI company Anthropic as a supply-chain risk, allowing the firm to operate without the restrictive label pending further legal proceedings. The ruling reflects an early clash between executive authority to regulate strategic technologies and judicial skepticism of regulatory overreach. The case will likely inform how courts interpret the administration's emerging framework for controlling access to frontier AI capabilities—a significant question for technology policy given the undefined boundaries between national security and industrial protectionism.
Wikipedia Bans AI-Generated Content, Citing Quality and Attribution Concerns
Wikipedia's editorial community has formalized a prohibition on AI-written or AI-rewritten articles, citing systematic violations of core policies around verifiability, original research, and neutrality. The ban reflects a genuine institutional tension: AI tools can produce fluent, plausible-sounding content that nonetheless fails Wikipedia's epistemological standards—it sounds authoritative without meeting the citation and editorial discipline the encyclopedia requires. This decision matters because Wikipedia remains a primary knowledge source for billions and shapes what information systems consider 'ground truth,' making its gatekeeping function consequential even as AI systems improve; it also signals that quality control cannot be purely automated and requires human editorial judgment.