Sinopse
Em Rise, os jogadores assumem a responsabilidade pelo desenvolvimento económico e social de uma cidade, procurando influenciar o bem-estar dos seus cidadãos através de diversos setores. O objetivo principal é progredir em diferentes trilhos — como cultura, ciência ou política — para acumular o máximo de pontos de vitória ao longo de 12 rondas, garantindo que esse progresso seja feito com…
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Managing the Latency and Safety Trade-offs of Enterprise AI-DLP Systems
As enterprises move from banning AI to governed adoption, tools like Seclore ARMOR AI-DLP aim to balance data protection with model performance. We analyze the operational impact of integrating real-time security layers into AI workflows.
The Browser Is Breaking Your DLP — Why Sensitive Data Slips Past Modern Controls
Overview Traditional Data Loss Prevention (DLP) solutions were designed for endpoints, networks, and sanctioned cloud environments. But today, the majority of sensitive data movement happens inside the browser, where legacy controls lack visibility. Recent analysis shows that 46% of sensitive file uploads to web apps go to unsanctioned accounts, exposing a blind spot that attackers and careless…
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Standard DLP is blind to visual data. FALCONS.AI integrates a crucial layer of visual awareness into your data loss prevention strategy. Locally identify and categorize sensitive information—from schematics and IDs to PII and NSFW content—across all media files before they are shared.
So in the early 1970s, Texas Instruments figured out how to make a "chip" that was thousands of spinning micromirrors that you could beam light through, to make one of the earliest digital pictures. It otherwise relied on existing film projector-grade technology to make it work.
This sounds fake and insane, and I can't understand how any of this worked, but it was apparently the standard for early digital video projection in the late 1990s. Like, Episode 1 was first shown through this technology, where a rack of screaming servers "uploaded" the digital movie file to the chip during showings? I think?
There was a color wheel to make the image in color?
There is shockingly little information about this madness, because it was quickly replaced by less-goofy methods of showing digital video in the early 2000s.