Tech earthquakes on April 11, 2026: Google unleashed Chrome 146 with Device Bound Session Credentials (DBSC), a historic technology that forces hardware-level security to lock session cookies, aiming to end session hijacking. Simultaneously, hackers exploited a 'Time-Lock' bug in a Bitcoin protocol, stealing $3.66 million. Plus, leaked data on Anthropic's 'Claude Mythos', the most dangerous locked AI model. We also perform an autopsy on Meta Muse Spark, Perplexity finance, and CMF Phone 3 Pro.
🌙 Good Evening, Tekin Legion! Friday Evening, April 11, 2026 (US East Coast) | 6 Critical Tech Stories for Your Weekend Friday evening (US East Coast time) closes with a technology storm. Google brings
a security revolution to Chrome that makes cookie theft impossible. Bitcoin Depot loses millions in a sophisticated hack. China responds to Nvidia with 10,000 domestic chips. Anthropic builds an AI so
dangerous it can't be publicly released. Amazon bets $200 billion on AI. And xAI enters a legal war with Colorado. Grab your evening drink and let's dive deep into tonight's most important developments.
🌃💻 📋 Tonight's Stories Chrome 146 with DBSC: The End of Cookie Theft Era Bitcoin Depot: $3.66M Stolen in Cyberattack Alibaba 10,000-Chip Datacenter: China Responds to Nvidia Claude Mythos: AI Too Dangerous
for Public Release Amazon $200B on AI: Andy Jassy Defends the Bet xAI vs Colorado: AI Legal War Begins [VIDEO_PLACEHOLDER_1] 🔒 1. Chrome 146 with DBSC: The End of Cookie Theft Era [IMAGE_PLACEHOLDER_1]
Google today released one of the most significant security updates in browser history: Chrome 146 with Device Bound Session Credentials (DBSC) that hardware-locks session cookies to your device. This means
even if malware steals your cookies, it can't use them on another device. This is the end of an era for info-stealer hackers who've spent years stealing cookies to bypass even 2FA. The cookie theft business
model just got destroyed. How does it work? DBSC uses hardware security modules - TPM (Trusted Platform Module) on Windows and Secure Enclave on macOS - to create a unique public/private key pair that
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