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Tech

AI Summary

  • iRobot's struggles culminate in bankruptcy as its acquisition by Amazon is thwarted by European regulators, prompting a takeover by its supplier.
  • Meta faces pressure from the Indian government to comply with compliance demands for its popular messaging service, WhatsApp, within three months.
  • Misinformation issues arise with Elon Musk's xAI chatbot, Grok, as it incorrectly reports on a tragic mass shooting in Australia, highlighting ongoing challenges in AI reliability.
  • Microsoft's commitment to carbon removal faces scrutiny as the company buys significant credits from a bioenergy plant to meet its environmental goals amid its data center expansion.
  • Major media mergers, including Netflix's acquisition of Warner Bros. for $82.6 billion, signal a turbulent moment in Hollywood as technology companies increasingly dominate the entertainment landscape.

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TechCrunch

  • How iRobot lost its way home 36 minutes ago by Connie Loizos
    Robotics, TC, Carlyle Group, iRobot, rodney brooks, Roomba, Shenzhen PICEA Robotics

    iRobot survived three decades of competition, but couldn't survive European regulators killing its Amazon buyout. Now it's being taken over by its own supplier in bankruptcy court.

  • WhatsApp’s biggest market is becoming its toughest test 2 hours ago by Jagmeet Singh
    Apps, Government & Policy, WhatsApp, Meta, signal, Telegram, whatsapp business, WhatsApp Web

    Meta has three months to comply with Indian government directions that could affect how WhatsApp operates in the country.

  • Grok got crucial facts wrong about Bondi Beach shooting 4 hours ago by Anthony Ha
    AI, Social, Grok, X

    Grok, the chatbot built by Elon Musk’s xAI and popularized on his social media platform X, appears to have repeatedly spread misinformation about today’s mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Australia.

  • Mesa shuts down credit card that rewarded cardholders for paying their mortgages 5 hours ago by Anthony Ha
    Commerce, Fintech, Real estate, Startups, mesa

    Fintech startup Mesa has shut down its Homeowners Card, which awarded points to cardholders for paying their mortgages.

  • Making sense of the risky Netflix-Warner Bros. deal 10 hours ago by Anthony Ha
    Media & Entertainment, Netflix, Warner Bros, Equity

    Netflix's $82.6 billion acquisition of Warner Bros. encapsulates a fraught moment for Hollywood, as the entertainment business is increasingly overshadowed by tech giants.


Hacker News


Engadget

  • Google pulls AI-generated videos of Disney characters from YouTube in response to cease and desist 5 hours ago by Cheyenne MacDonald
    Media, Arts & Entertainment, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Cheyenne MacDonald

    Google seems to be cracking down on the use of Disney characters in AI-generated videos on YouTube after it was hit with a cease and desist letter. According to reports by Variety and Deadline, the company removed dozens of videos featuring Deadpool, Moana, Mickey Mouse, Star Wars characters and other Disney IP as of Friday, just days after Disney accused it of "infringing Disney’s copyrights on a massive scale." The letter, seen by both publications earlier this week, called out Google not just for hosting these videos on YouTube, but also for using copyrighted works to train models including Veo

  • Grok is spreading inaccurate info again, this time about the Bondi Beach shooting 6 hours ago by Jackson Chen
    Arts & Entertainment, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Jackson Chen

    In the same month that Grok opted for a second Holocaust over vaporizing Elon Musk's brain, the AI chatbot is on the fritz again. Following the Bondi Beach shooting in Australia during a festival to mark the start of Hanukkah, Grok is responding to user requests with inaccurate or completely unrelated info, as first spotted by Gizmodo. Grok's confusion seems to be most apparent with a viral video that shows a 43-year-old bystander, identified as Ahmed al Ahmed, wrestling a gun away from an attacker during the incident, which has left at least 16 dead, according to the latest news reports.

  • Kindle's in-book AI assistant can answer all your questions without spoilers 8 hours ago by Jackson Chen
    Books & Publishing, Technology & Electronics, Arts & Entertainment, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Jackson Chen

    If you're several chapters into a novel and forgot who a character was, Amazon is hoping its new Kindle feature will jog your memory without ever having to put the e-reader down. This feature, called Ask this Book, was announced during Amazon's hardware event in September, but is finally available for US users on the Kindle iOS app. According to Amazon, the feature can currently be found on thousands of English best-selling Kindle titles and "only reveals information up to your current reading position" for spoiler-free responses. To use it, you can highlight a passage in any book you've bought or

  • Ayaneo's first smartphone is a major callback to the Xperia Play 10 hours ago by Jackson Chen
    Technology & Electronics, Handheld & Connected Devices, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Jackson Chen

    Close enough, welcome back Xperia Play. After releasing a teaser video in early November, Ayaneo fully revealed its first smartphone called the Pocket Play. As suspected, the Ayaneo Pocket Play features a sliding mechanism that transforms it from a chunky smartphone into a gaming handheld. In its gaming configuration, the Pocket Play features a controller setup with a D-pad, ABXY buttons and four shoulder buttons. However, Ayaneo has modernized the Xperia Play design by incorporating two touchpads, which will also be seen in the handheld maker's next flagship device called the Next II. According to Ayaneo, you can map these touchpads

  • WWE Saturday Night's Main Event: How to watch John Cena's final match for free a day ago by Uncrowned Staff,Liz Kocan
    Celebrities, Sports & Recreation, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Uncrowned Staff

    John Cena began his WWE retirement tour back in January, and it's coming to an end this weekend when the wrestling legend headlines WWE Saturday Night's Main Event. For the last fight of his career, Cena has been matched up with "The Ring General" Gunther on the night's fight card, which also features matches between Cody Rhodes and Oba Femi, a tag team match featuring AJ Styles & Dragon Lee vs. Je'Von Evans & Leon Slater, and a women's matchup between Bayley and Sol Ruca. This show starts at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday and will stream with a subscription


The Verge

  • You need to listen to Sudan Archives’ violin opus for the club 3 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    Column, Entertainment, Music, Music Review

    My introduction to Sudan Archives was the song "Nont for Sale" from her first EP Sink in 2018. I've been a die-hard fan ever since. With each album, she finds new ways to sculpt the sound of her violin, contorting it in defiance of expectations. Athena found her in conversation with it, leaving its timbre largely recognizable and organic, veering from experimental pop to more ambient passages. Natural Brown Prom Queen embraced the aesthetics of sound collage, samples, and modern R&B, blending her violin with more expressly electronic elements. The BPM has identifiable violin passages, but it fully embraces the more

  • Grok is spreading misinformation about the Bondi Beach shooting 6 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    AI, News, Social Media, Tech, Twitter - X, xAI

    Grok's track record is spotty at best. But even by the very low standards of xAI, its failure in the aftermath of the tragic mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Australia is shocking. The AI chatbot has repeatedly misidentified 43-year-old Ahmed al Ahmed, the man who heroically disarmed one of the shooters, and claimed the verified video of his deed was something else entirely - including that it was an old viral video of a man climbing a tree. In the aftermath of the attack, Ahmed has been widely praised for his heroism, but some have tried to dismiss or even

  • Absynth is back and weirder than ever after 16 years 8 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    Entertainment, Music, News, Tech

    Abynth 6’s very pretty, but questionably useful preset explorer. Absynth is something of a cult classic in the soft synth world. It was originally released in 2000, and quickly found an audience among the growing cadre of people making music on computers. But its last major update, Absynth 5, was released in 2009, and Native Instruments officially discontinued the instrument in 2022, citing a lack of resources to continue supporting software in desperate need of modernization. But now the Absynth is making a grand return with version six, created in collaboration with the original designer Brian Clevinger, and featuring presets from

  • Inside the high drama of the iPhone 4 12 hours ago by David Pierce
    Apple, Gadgets, Podcasts, Tech, Version History

    By 2010, the iPhone era was in full swing. Smartphones were still a new and unfinished idea - the iPhone had only just gotten copy and paste! - but it was clear that these big slabs of glass were going to change the way we did pretty much everything. Apple was also already on an annual launch strategy, so we all knew there was another iPhone coming. Then an Apple employee left a prototype in a bar. Gizmodo bought it, took it apart, published all the sordid details, and pretty much broke the internet. And thus, the story of the iPhone

  • The end of OpenAI, and other 2026 predictions 13 hours ago by David Pierce
    AI, Podcasts, Tech, Vergecast

    Here's a thought: what if the next-generation Siri is awesome? Not just awesome for setting timers and dictating text messages (though that would be nice), but so awesome and fun to talk to that people actually start falling in love with their iPhones. We may not be prepared for what happens next. On this episode of The Vergecast, Sexy Siri is just one of the topics at hand. Nilay and David are joined by Joanna Stern, senior tech columnist at The Wall Street Journal, to talk through their most mild, medium, and spicy predictions for the year to come. Subscribe: Spotify |


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