v1.83.1-nightly
This release was from the LiteLLM team. We are testing out a new signing process and it is safe to use. This was a test release from us and co sign verify will not work for this release as we are testing a new cosign workflow from us.
This release was from the LiteLLM team. We are testing out a new signing process and it is safe to use.
This was a test release from us and co sign verify will not work for this release as we are testing a new cosign workflow from us.
Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

Conversation starters
Daily AI Digest
Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.
More about
release
I built an AI data extraction engine and E2E encrypted SMS router in Rust
I recently launched SendStackr. The original itch came from my time working at an agency that managed multiple Upwork accounts and a "phone farming" operation (around 50 physical devices). We needed to centralize inbound emails and forward SMS (mostly for 2FA/OTPs), but the existing tools were either prohibitively expensive, forced us to set up individual webhooks per device, or timed out when trying to pipe heavy unstructured data through standard no-code wrappers. To solve this, I built my own routing and extraction engine. Instead of relying on standard APIs, I wrote the backend entirely in Rust, building custom SMTP and IMAP servers to ingest the emails natively. It uses Graph RAG to read unstructured PDFs, raw HTML emails, and webhooks, extracting the exact variables needed and return

California cements its role as the national testing ground for AI rules
To see where tech policy is going in the U.S., look west: California is escalating its push to regulate AI across multiple fronts. Why it matters: California's multi-pronged approach makes it likely that AI companies in the U.S. will treat the state's rules as a de facto national standard, even as the White House moves to rein in state regulation. It follows a familiar pattern: California acts first, companies adapt to keep doing business there and Congress dithers, eventually ceding its role to states due to gridlock. Driving the news: Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an AI executive order this week as state legislators advance a number of AI bills and consider other regulatory avenues for AI. The big picture: California is moving ahead as the Trump administration pushes for a national AI standar
Knowledge Map
Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph
This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.



Discussion
Sign in to join the discussion
No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!