Foxit
Built on the belief that documents should accelerate work, not slow it down, Foxit empower
05/27/2026
The Fox attended Foxit’s Michael Folek’s TechEx session and has spent the last 48 hours pretending he’s preparing a follow-up LinkedIn post about it. 🦊
05/21/2026
Featured in TechRadar Pro: Foxit SVP of Marketing & Innovation Evan Reiss on why AI may be creating a new productivity challenge across enterprise workflows.
Because while AI can generate content faster than ever, review, validation, oversight, and governance are becoming a growing operational burden for organizations trying to scale AI effectively.
The next phase of AI adoption will not just be about speed. It will be about trust.
Read more: https://bit.ly/3PWibtr
05/20/2026
Yesterday was a big day at AI Week Milan. 🇮🇹
Evan Reiss, SVP of Marketing & Innovation at Foxit, took the stage to discuss what happens after the AI demo, when organizations move from experimentation into the reality of implementation, governance, workflows, and measurable business impact.
The real challenge is no longer access to AI. It is making AI useful in everyday work.
Most workflow problems look small at first.
🆘 A file shared in the wrong place.
🆘 An outdated version sent by mistake.
🆘 An approval process spread across too many tools.
🆘 A team relying on manual steps no one has revisited in years.
But at scale, those small gaps become trust problems.
That is why document security is no longer just about locking files down. Teams are now thinking about workflow visibility, compliance, governance, and how information moves across systems without everything turning into “final_FINAL_v8_USETHISONE.pdf.”
Especially now, as AI and automation become part of everyday work.
More than 700 million users and 640,000 organizations rely on Foxit because trust in document workflows is not something teams can afford to improvise.
05/07/2026
In 2025, a security researcher named Thomas Rinsma released something nobody asked for and everybody loved: a fully playable Tetris game that runs inside a PDF file.
No browser extensions. No plugins. No special software. You open the PDF, and you play Tetris.
Here's how he pulled it off. Modern PDF viewers can run JavaScript and display interactive form fields. Rinsma realized that if you lay out a grid of 200 tiny checkbox buttons and write a script that toggles them on and off fast enough, you've got yourself a screen.
Each "pixel" on the game board is just a form field switching between shaded and empty. The game logic, piece rotation, gravity, line clearing, all runs in standard JavaScript embedded in the file. The whole thing is 60 kilobytes.
The one catch? PDF viewers block keyboard listeners for security reasons. So to control the pieces, you type WASD into an invisible text box. It's a hack on top of a hack.
A file format designed in 1993 to make documents look the same on every printer is now running real-time video games in your browser tab.
PDFs. They contain multitudes.
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