VITAMIN B UPDATE: High doses of vitamin B3 could help in fight against deadly brain cancer, study finds.
Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, June 27, 2026 – Privacy and cybersecurity issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, finance, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weisshighlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly complex and wide ranging ways technology is used to compromise and diminish our privacy and online security, often without our situational awareness.
Four highlights from this week: Is the government listening to you through your phone? Here’s what a former CIA officer says; Latest Type of Mail Fraud Is Actually an Old-School Scam; Secret Service put protectees, employees at risk with mobile device security blunders; and White House App Uses Code From Tech Vendor Still Operating in Russia.
The New Republic: “The movies, books, paintings, and songs whose impact extended beyond culture to society as a whole.”
Anthropic’s best model ever was pulled from the internet — here’s what actually happened
MakeuseOf: “On June 9, 2026, Anthropic released Fable 5 to much fanfare. It was the first publicly available version of its Mythos-class model, the most capable AI model the company had ever shipped to the general public, and within hours, it was sitting at the top of just about every major benchmark. It beat both ChatGPT and Gemini, was labeled state of the art, and before developers could even finish wiring it into their workflows, it was gone. Claude’s Fable 5 was pulled by an export control directive, citing national security concerns over its capabilities, particularly in cybersecurity. I gave Claude’s new model real work, and it earned the hype fair and square. So what happened?…”
The Last Museum is the largest search engine for museum art. It uses semantic search, allowing you to search for artworks by theme, style, subject, vibes, or any description you can imagine.
We currently have around 5 million artworks indexed, and strive to eventually index all museum art in the world. This website is completely free to use. We are not affiliated with any museums or galleries, and we do not own any of the images. Much of the art we index is in the public domain. Where works are still under copyright, we show them in accordance with fair use:
- We operate as a search engine and reference tool, an informational purpose rather than a substitute for the original work.
- Works are shown for educational and non-commercial purposes.
- We index art that is already freely available to the public online.
- Copyrighted works appear only at browsing resolution, not as high-quality reproductions.
- Every artwork links back to its original source.