Minimalist News

Simply the latest news, updated on the hour.

Wed, Jun 3, 2026, 2:06 PM EDT

Tech

AI Summary

  • Cybersecurity remains a critical concern as Ultrahuman reports data breaches and Instagram notifies users of AI chatbot attack targets, while a new VSCode bug enables 1-click GitHub token stealing.
  • The AI race continues with Meta expanding its AI agent globally for WhatsApp Business and launching new tools for AI behavior testing, alongside Amazon incorporating AI-generated product images into search results.
  • AI's integration into various sectors is expanding, from Coralogix raising $200M to monitor AI agents, to GitLab cutting staff to scale for AI workloads, and Publishers gaining the ability to opt out of AI Search.
  • Hardware and infrastructure for AI are seeing significant investment and development, evidenced by Suno raising $400M despite copyright issues, and the ongoing AI-driven shortage impacting DDR5 RAM prices.
  • The tech industry is grappling with regulatory and ethical questions, as Florida sues OpenAI, mathematicians warn of AI's rapid advancement, and discussions arise about public ownership of major AI companies.

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The Verge

  • The best Qi2 batteries for iPhone and Pixel an hour ago by Cameron Faulkner
    Apple, Buying Guides, Deals, Gadgets, Google, Google Pixel, iPhone, Tech, Verge Shopping

    Compact power banks have gotten a lot faster in the past year — and it’s not just their USB-C charging speeds that have received a boost. The newest Qi2.2-certified models can wirelessly charge an iPhone 16 or later at up to 25W. Combine that with their ability to magnetically snap on via MagSafe, and you’ve got yourself an essential add-on that’s easy to take on the go. Qi2 is a magnetic wireless charging standard that’s based on Apple’s MagSafe tech, so almost all modern iPhones support it. While the latest iPhones offer the fastest charging rates, older models (dating back

  • As AI gets better, it reveals an empty promise an hour ago by TC. Sottek
    AI

    This week we've got tandem hands-ons with Google's new Gemini AI agent - Spark - from my colleagues David Pierce and Jay Peters . Their takeaways are similar: It's so effective that it's scary. Spark knew that David's dog is named Frida and knew the first name of Jay's wife, even though neither of them explicitly provided this information to Google. But what's scary to me is how all of this stuff seems geared toward a future of "productivity" that completely misses what needs to be fixed in our world. "Productivity" is often pitched as a panacea for what befalls

  • Amazon’s search bar will invent AI-generated products you can’t buy 3 hours ago by Emma Roth
    AI, Amazon, Apps, News, Tech

    Amazon's updated search bar will now show you AI-generated images of products as you describe them. For now, the in-app feature only surfaces AI images of clothing and home goods, allowing you to tap on the image that best matches what you're looking for and search for similar-looking items. In a blog post, Amazon positions the feature as a way to help you search for items if you can't remember the name of a specific texture or style, like describing a "shirt with a draped collar" if you can't think of "cowl neck." The feature seems like it might come

  • PlayStation is getting back to what it’s good at 3 hours ago by Jay Peters
    Analysis, Entertainment, Gaming, PlayStation, Report

    PlayStation used its most recent State of Play showcase to make it clear where its focus is. After a series of costly live-service stumbles, it's getting back to focusing on premium, narrative-driven, single-player games. That statement was made clear with how it started and ended the hourlong show. The showcase began with an extended look at gameplay from Marvel's Wolverine , the new superhero title from Insomniac Games. Over seven minutes of bloody action, Logan sliced and diced his way through a bunch of baddies as he tried to rescue some captured mutants, briefly teaming up with Jean Grey for

  • Supernatural isn’t dead after all 4 hours ago by Victoria Song
    Fitness, Gadgets, News, Tech, Virtual Reality, Wearable

    DeeDee Henry works out using VR at her home in Ventura, California. | Photo by Maggie Shannon / The Verge A few months ago, Meta effectively handed Supernatural , a popular VR fitness game on the Meta Quest, a death sentence. As part of overarching VR layoffs , the company announced the game would no longer get any new content, enraging its tightly knit, devoted community . Now it looks like Supernatural is getting a second chance. Today, Meta announced in a community post that the game is being spun off into an independent company later this year. The new


Wired


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