惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

The Cloudflare Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
L
LangChain Blog
W
WeLiveSecurity
P
Proofpoint News Feed
月光博客
月光博客
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
T
Threatpost
Y
Y Combinator Blog
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Vercel News
Vercel News
Jina AI
Jina AI
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
S
Schneier on Security
J
Java Code Geeks
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
小众软件
小众软件
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
S
Securelist
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
C
Cisco Blogs
雷峰网
雷峰网
量子位
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
I
Intezer
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
D
DataBreaches.Net
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
罗磊的独立博客

The Register - Special Features

Troops’ phones gave away location data to foreign adversaries Qualcomm picks bad time to pitch a $300 laptop platform AI agents get their own phone directory built atop DNS Carnival confirms ShinyHunters cruised off with 6M customer records after April breach Google engineer accused of turning Year in Search secrets into Polymarket payday Are we human? India's cyber agency sets clock at 12 hours to tackle exploited bugs as AI turns up the heat Broadcom gets early start on WiFi 8 with next-gen wireless routing kit Are we human? Microsoft Excel champ proves he still has the formula Anthropic co-founder hallucinates ghost in the machine Anthropic co-founder hallucinates ghost in the machine NASA plans Moon Base buildout with rovers, drones, cargo landers MyPillow must decide whether to be firm or soft as ransomware crims demand pay Starship shows it can deploy satellites, but Moon mission clock still ticks Huawei's chip law looks less like Moore and more like marketing Experts pour cold borscht on Farage's Russian hack claim Logitech unveils a cushioned mouse for all-day use AI eyes scanning for bugs create a worrisome Linux security trend A Russian speaker and jailbroken Gemini went on a hacking spree and emptied at least one MAGA victim's crypto wallets AI datacenter boom collides with US grid reality Media giant settles for $930k amid user-snooping allegations AT&T sues to ditch Cali copper phone lines to save billions FBI warns of Kali365 as device code phishing soars Techie claims Trump Mobile website was leaking thousands of people's data BOFH: Vibe-coded solutions arrive for problems nobody has Dems slam Trump for making cybersecurity hold out the tin cup while splurging on ballroom and Jan. 6 'slush fund' Google explains how it will infuse ads into AI answers AI is getting pricey, but relief is coming, but not for you Deus ex machina: Half of US Christians trust AI's spiritual advice Attackers spill plaintext passwords of 46k Myspace93 users after 2021 breach Apple adds AI smarts to Voice Control, VoiceOver and Magnifier ahead of Accessibility Day Microsoft open-sources agentic AI safety tools OpenAI wants upfront cash for guaranteed AI capacity Fedora: Microsoft is all aboard, but Deepin is dumped Bye-bye, Gemini CLI; Google nudges devs toward Antigravity Plex appeal fades as Lifetime Pass jumps to $750 AI sackings reach New Zealand, which will use it to eject 14 percent of government staff Anthropic’s Stainless steal tightens grip on AI dev tooling Are we human? Google touts tokenmaxxing, huge capex, and AI agents at I/O America's top cyber-defense agency left a GitHub repo open with with passwords, keys, tokens – and incredibly obvious filenames America's top cyber-defense agency left a GitHub repo open with passwords, keys, tokens – and incredibly obvious filenames Shadow AI invades the workplace, up 4x in the last year Microsoft refreshes Surface for Business lineup, starts AI PC upsell at $1,499 Broadcom finds a VMware customer willing to stick around: London Stock Exchange 468k records allegedly stolen from Portugal’s postal carrier Baidu says the quiet part out loud – you can’t build AI infrastructure, so clouds can cash in Shai-Hulud copycat worm infects yet another npm package Uncle Sam's next big super might not use GPUs Are we human? Datacenters slurping up so much juice they boosted prices 75% in largest US energy market MPs want social media treated more like unsafe toys than harmless apps Cerebras’ wafer-scale AI bet delivers blockbuster IPO Nobody believes the 'criminals and scumbags' who hacked Canvas really deleted stolen student data Anthropic tosses agents into the API billing pool Jen Easterly, cybersecurity's 'relentless optimist,' hopes feds come back to RSAC next year Jen Easterly, cybersecurity's 'relentless optimist' Smooth criminals talking their way into cloud environments, Google says Voice phishing skyrockets as smooth crims talk their way in RSAC 2026: Uncle Sam backs out, AI agents everywhere RSAC 2026: Uncle Sam backs out, AI agents everywhere Decoding Nvidia's Groq-powered LPX and the rest of its new rack systems A closer look at Nvidia's Groq-powered LPX rack systems Nvidia slaps $20B Groq tech into massive new LPX racks to speed AI response time Nvidia slaps Groq into new LPX racks for faster AI response AI Burning Man happens next week – what to expect at Nvidia GTC 2026 Nvidia GTC 2026: What to expect at AI Burning Man Unaccounted-for AI agents are being handed wide access Unaccounted-for AI agents are being handed wide access Google to foist Gemini pane on Chrome users Google to foist Gemini pane on Chrome users Yes, you can build an AI agent – here's how, using LangFlow How to build an AI agent using LangFlow Clawdbot becomes Moltbot, but can’t shed security concerns Clawdbot becomes Moltbot, but can’t shed security concerns Gartner questions if Salesforce AI will stay all-you-can-eat Gartner questions if Salesforce AI will stay all-you-can-eat Claude supports MCP Apps, presents UI within chat window Claude supports MCP Apps, presents UI within chat window Cursor is better at marketing than coding Cursor is better at marketing than coding Feds skipping infosec industry's biggest conference, RSAC AI is rewriting how power flows through the datacenter All aglow about DCs, investors launch $300M at microreactor startup Radiant bags $300M-plus to commercialize its microreactors Why do bit barns keep bumping up our bills, Senators ask DC operators Senate trio questions DC operators over rising energy costs Building the AI factory datacenter Delays? What delays? Oracle insists its $300B cloud contract with OpenAI is on track Oracle insists its $300B contract with OpenAI is on schedule Salesforce willing to lose money on AI to lock in customers Salesforce willing to lose money on AI to lock in customers Galactic Brain space datacenter coming in 2027, pledges startup Aetherflux Galactic Brain space datacenter promised in 2027 Activist groups urge Congress to pause datacenter buildouts Activist groups urge Congress to pause datacenter buildouts Bezos-backed Unconventional AI addresses datacenter power Bezos-backed Unconventional AI addresses datacenter power AWS re:Invent keynote: Matt Garman bores, then thrills
A modest proposal: Reformat everything to make documents more palatable to AI
Thomas Claburn · 2026-06-16 · via The Register - Special Features

Websites are being redesigned for consumption by AI models, and now a coalition wants to extend the trend to digital documents.

The LF AI & Data Foundation, under the Linux Foundation, has formed a working group to steer the development of DocLang, an AI-friendly document format that aims to help enterprises feed their files to AI systems.

The DocLang group, founded by IBM, NVIDIA, Red Hat, ABBYY, HumanSignal, and Forgis, contends that existing formats like PDF, Markdown, HTML, and LaTeX are ill-suited for AI document parsing.

In late 2024, IBM developed an open source toolkit called Docling to facilitate AI document parsing, not unlike Microsoft's MarkItDown or the Marker project. Docling provides a way to convert various file formats into structured AI-ready data. DocLang expands upon that foundation with a standard for exchanging structured output across different systems.

"DocLang is designed to solve one of the foundational problems in enterprise AI: documents were built for humans, not machines," said Maxime Vermeir, VP of AI Strategy at AI automation biz ABBYY in a statement. "By introducing a minimal, standardized, and AI-native representation of document structure, layout, meaning and governance, DocLang creates a far more deterministic foundation for modern AI systems."

The new DocLang format is necessary, the spec authors argue, because existing formats were designed for rendering and lose semantic information, structural relationships, or geometric context when AI models turn them into tokens. The specification explains that Markdown lacks sufficient scope, that HTML is excessively verbose, and that LaTeX allows too much ambiguity. 

Essentially, DocLang is optimized for LLM tokenizers through markup that maps between DocLang elements and LLM tokens on a 1-to-1 basis. The spec relies on a limited XML vocabulary that aligns with LLM tokenizers to produce optimized prompts. It is lossless, so the AI conversion doesn't do away with valuable info. It's designed to support common graphical elements like tables, formulas, charts, and multimodal content. And it's an open standard.

DocLang could also help keep costs under control. According to AI Cost Check, having an AI model conduct an OCR scan on a PDF requires about 1,200 input tokens and 150 output tokens as a baseline. 

That's inconsequential to corporate AI customers on a one-off basis but demands attention at scale. And because AI models have highly variable token costs, companies may find they are spending more than they anticipated to have their AI system ingest PDFs, particularly if the documents are long and complicated or an expensive frontier model is used.

"PDFs were designed for rendering, not understanding," said Jon Knisley, AI Value and Enablement Lead at ABBYY, in an email to The Register. "Every time a PDF enters an AI pipeline, structure, meaning and layout get lost, so the model's accuracy ends up bottlenecked by document quality rather than model quality. Teams compensate by building custom parsers at every integration point, which results in brittle, one-off work, and a new engineering sprint for every new document type."

According to Knisley, that has measurable cost.

"Ambiguous structure forces the model into guesswork, which drives up hallucination risk and burns tokens deciphering layout instead of extracting meaning," he explained. "With DocLang, customers can expect better accuracy, lower costs, fewer tokens consumed, faster performance and more consistent outputs. The exact savings depend on the use case and document complexity, but our initial benchmarks show 4x to more than 30x lower cost depending on the model evaluated."

Knisley also cited governance advantages, noting that document provenance data and metadata can get stripped when documents gets moved. DocLang, he said, keeps that information attached.

ABBYY, which offers AI document processing, has created the DocLang Interactive Benchmark to illustrate the potential token savings of feeding DocLang documents to AI models. A PDF of IBM's 2025 annual report, for example, results 8,421 input tokens and 512 output tokens while a DocLang version requires only 5,310 input tokens and 498 output tokens. What's more, the DocLang version results in lower latency (2.7s vs 4.2s) and delivers better quality (the AI missed one subsection and mangled a table merger in the PDF).

"It's still early, and we won't overstate adoption," said Knisley. "The standard is open and free to build on, and the group is actively inviting more technology providers and enterprises to join. The early response has been encouraging, and we're optimistic about where it goes from here." ®