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Teleportation just moved closer to reality… 🤯
The dream of 'Star Trek' style travel moves closer to reality, but it comes with a terrifying existential catch.
Scientists at the University of Rochester and Purdue University have reached a major milestone in quantum mechanics, demonstrating that teleportation may be possible between electrons. Building on decades of research that successfully teleported photons, this National Science Foundation-funded breakthrough utilizes quantum entanglement—a phenomenon where particles remain connected across vast distances. Unlike science fiction transporters that move physical objects, this process transmits the precise quantum information of a state to a new location, effectively reconstructing the subject using the building blocks available at the destination.
While the potential for instant space travel is tantalizing, the human element introduces profound ethical and philosophical dilemmas. Because the process requires scanning every atom and reconstructing that data elsewhere, the original version of the subject is destroyed. This raises a haunting question: would a teleported human truly be the same individual, or merely a perfect biological copy? As physicists like John Clauser warn that such technology might equate to personal 'death' followed by replication, society must eventually decide if the convenience of the stars is worth the risk of losing our fundamental selves.
source: National Science Foundation. Award Abstract #1809343: Quantum Information Transfer Between Electrons. University of Rochester and Purdue University.
- NexServ Technologies, a managed IT services firm specializing in secure solutions for regulated SMBs since 1999, celebrates reaching $10 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR), a key SaaS metric signaling scalable, predictable growth.
- The post's graphic highlights "Secure. Compliant. Reliable." values, directly tying the milestone to client trust in HIPAA-aligned services amid rising cybersecurity demands in healthcare and finance sectors.
- This fresh February 6, 2026, announcement, it serves as a subtle marketing pivot to reinforce brand loyalty and prospect for expansion in a market projected to grow 12% annually per Gartner data.
🎣 Beyond email inboxes: Phishing attacks in collaboration apps surged sharply from 9% to 30.5% in the first half of 2025, while advanced attacks increased from 9% to 24.5%.
Don't let popular productivity tools become the next security risk.
⬇️ Download the full Acronis Cyberthreats Report H1 2025 to uncover original threat research: https://t.co/OXXZ615yBI
Ransomware attacks continue to rise, with backups being their primary target. With over 2,200 daily strikes —one every 11 seconds —it is not a matter of if, but when organizations fall victim to cybercriminals.
22 days average downtime
$4.88 million is the average cost of an attack
317.59 million ransomware attacks annually
https://t.co/ig2AeiZABP
Sources: https://t.co/Tg2Ad30F6i, https://t.co/dUnGqmbfxC, https://t.co/22DkOD3eVz
How do the world’s biggest companies connect to the internet?
(It’s not Wi-Fi.)
We gave @NetworkChuck a tour inside one of the most connected buildings in the U.S. to show how private connections power the digital world.
🎥 Watch: https://t.co/PMQTl4O1cv
@lauriewired Even in the early 2000's most BIOS code was crazy spaghetti legacy crap.
Big reason that most of the dev work went to Asia is because it was impossible to hire for. All the original dudes got rich off stock options or moved to senior roles and nobody could replace them.
This radically changed the PC market. Suddenly Hewlett-Packard and others could create their own PC-compatible clones.
American Megatrends, watching the legal success of Phoenix, implemented the clean room technique for their own BIOS. They got huge.
75% of PCs shipped in 1994 used American Megatrends code!
Both companies still exist today, but the original Phoenix story is a masterclass of reverse engineering.
No matter how closely the two matched, none of code was directly copied.
Phoenix now had a defensible IBM compatible BIOS, that they sold to hardware companies for a cool $290k.
To build trust with customers, they offered a $2 million insurance policy against getting sued.
A lone Boston coder rewrote BIOS in 1984.
IBM wanted to sue. The programmer's clever loophole became the model for legally defensible reverse engineering.
You’ve probably been booting his descendants ever since. This is how Phoenix Technologies got away with it: