Stanford and Harvard proved AI can outpick your fund manager
Three studies. Some very uncomfortable numbers for the guy in the Patagonia vest.
He trained an AI to sound like his wife. Now they talk every day.
A category of AI built for grief and caregiving is quietly growing. Here’s what it is, who it’s for and why it might matter more than any productivity app ever will.
Your internet provider can see every show you watch. And they’re using it against you.
You’re paying $80 a month for internet. Your provider is watching exactly what you do with it and quietly punishing you for it. Here’s what’s happening inside your connection.
5 weirdly popular YouTube channels you’ve never heard of (but won’t be able to stop watching)
Millions of people have leaped down these rabbit holes. This Friday, you will, too.
Every movie you bought on Apple TV, Amazon and Google Play can vanish overnight
When you buy a digital movie, you’re not buying anything. You’re renting it. Until you’re not. Here’s how to protect what you’ve already paid for.
She lost everything in a wildfire. Then her adjuster paid 38 cents on the dollar. Here’s the 20-minute fix.
Carol couldn’t remember what she owned. Her adjuster took full advantage. Here’s how you can protect yourself with one Sunday afternoon and your phone camera.
Big Tech’s best April Fools’ jokes weren’t jokes. They changed your life.
Gmail. Google Maps. The App Store. Every one was dismissed like an absurd April Fools’ prank. Every one became unavoidable. And every one came with a price tag nobody saw coming.
ChatGPT has been taking notes on you. Here’s how to see them.
ChatGPT’s memory feature is on by default, and it’s been building a personal profile from every conversation you’ve ever had. Here’s what it knows and how to take control in under two minutes.
Your router has an expiration date, and you probably already missed it
Most Americans are running routers that stopped getting security updates years ago. The FCC just made it a national security issue. Here’s what to do.
Google Maps accidentally photographed the world’s strangest secrets
From a village with 400 dolls to a desert landing pad for space travelers, here’s what Google’s cameras found when nobody was watching.
Isn’t my browser’s built-in password saver good enough?
Joe in Phoenix uses Google to save his passwords and wants to know why he’d need anything else. Fair question. Here’s the honest answer.
There’s a new kind of camera spreading across America. It doesn’t care how fast you’re going. It’s listening.
No radar gun. No officer. Just a very patient microphone running 24 hours a day. And the tickets are already in the mail.
I mentioned Google Calendar scams on the show. The response was enormous. Here’s everything you wanted to know.
A fake meeting invite shows up on your calendar. Looks completely real. One tap on the link inside and your Google account is gone.
My grandfather had 7 letters on his Ellis Island form. That’s how we got Komando.
My grandparents came from Ukraine with a name nobody could spell. An immigration officer wrote down seven letters, and our family was changed forever. I finally went looking for what came before.
She chats with him every day. He’s stolen her heart and possibly her savings.
A 78-year-old mom has a “boyfriend” in Nigeria. He’s almost 30 years younger. He’s promised to visit four times. Something always comes up.
The AI chatbot you use every day has a point of view. Researchers proved it.
Multiple universities tested the biggest AI chatbots on political questions. The results were surprising. And one finding should stop you cold.
Medical identity theft is the one type that doesn’t just wreck your finances. It can wreck your health.
Someone uses your insurance to get surgery. Now their blood type, their allergies, their diagnoses are in your medical file. Your doctor thinks that’s your history. It isn’t.
Your email inbox is the skeleton key to your entire life
If someone gets into your email, they own every account you have. Here are the three moves that lock them out for good.
Pull up your childhood home and go back in time. Here’s how.
Google Maps has a hidden clock that lets you drag time backward to 2007. Your old fence might be there. The car in the driveway. People have found photos of loved ones taken before they passed. Kim shows you five free ways to walk back through your own history, and one AI trick to make something unforgettable out of it.

