

LinkedIn’s BrowserGate Problem Is About Trust, Not Privacy
BrowserGate raises a bigger question than whether LinkedIn crossed a legal line: how much invisible browser inspection should users be forced to accept as the price of professional participation?

TWR. Editorial
May 6


AI Over SaaS: The TWR. Analysis of YC's S26 Request for Startups
A deep analysis of Y Combinator’s Summer 2026 Requests for Startups and what they reveal about the shift from SaaS to AI-native systems, services, and outcome-driven business models.

TWR. Editorial
Apr 29


Don't Mention It: Ambient Tech and Tethral's CEO on "Lifestyle AI"
Ambient computing is entering a new phase as AI moves beyond screens into real-world environments. Smart homes are shifting from device control to coordinated systems that interpret context from sensors and behavior. Companies like Tethral are exploring intelligent response systems that adapt lighting, media, and more in real time, reducing cognitive load and reshaping how people interact with technology and daily life.

TWR. Editorial
Apr 27


What If AI Replaced Your CEO?
Explore the rise of AI CEOs and system-driven leadership in this deep dive on the future of corporate decision-making. Discover how artificial intelligence is reshaping executive roles, reducing costs, accelerating strategy, and transforming governance, risk, and control, with interactive tools like the AI CEO Simulator and AI vs Human Cost Engine that let you model how leadership and economics shift in real time.

Sam Leigh
Apr 21


Pilot Season's Back: TV’s New Math & the Return of the Testing Layer
U.S. television development is moving back toward a model it largely abandoned over the past decade: making pilots before committing to full series.
The shift is most visible at NBCUniversal, which has ordered multiple pilots for the 2026 cycle, including a reboot of The Rockford Files and several comedies tied to established creative teams. The volume marks one of the network’s most active pilot slates since before the pandemic.

TWR. Editorial
Apr 18


The Supreme Court Draws the Line: AI Cannot Be an Author. Period.
The Supreme Court of the United States declined to hear Thaler v. Perlmutter, leaving in place a federal appellate ruling that artificial intelligence systems cannot be listed as authors under U.S. copyright law.

TWR. Editorial
Mar 3




















