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Thu, Mar 26, 2026, 10:22 PM EDT

Tech

AI Summary

  • Major AI developments continue as Google Gemini now allows chat imports from competitors, and OpenAI abandons its adult chatbot venture, while Wikipedia cracks down on AI-generated content.
  • The defense sector sees significant activity with Anthropic winning an injunction against a Pentagon supply chain risk label, and Shield AI achieving a $12.7B valuation after a US Air Force deal.
  • Apple faces scrutiny over security with leaked hacking tools impacting iPhones, even as iOS 26 security measures are noted; meanwhile, the Mac Pro has been discontinued with no immediate hardware successor planned.
  • The streaming landscape is shifting with Netflix confirming another price increase, and X (formerly Twitter) moving TweetDeck behind a premium subscription tier, alongside regulatory attention on Snapchat for child protection issues.
  • Industry players are grappling with AI's impact, from Cohere launching an open-source voice model for transcription to concerns over AI-generated content quality and a new Senate bill proposing a pause on US data center construction due to energy usage concerns.

TechCrunch


Hacker News


Engadget

  • Google Gemini now lets you import your chats and data from other AI apps 4 hours ago by Anna Washenko
    Business, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Anna Washenko

    Google is adding a pair of new features to Gemini aimed at making it easier to switch to the AI chatbot. Personal history and past context are big components to how a chatbot provides customized answers to each user. Gemini now supports importing history from other AI platforms. Both free and paid consumer accounts can use these options.  With the first option, Gemini can create a prompt asking a competitor's AI chatbot to summarize what it has learned about you. The result might include details such as your typical written communication style, your family members' names or your key preferences. The

  • Apple discontinues the Mac Pro 5 hours ago by Ian Carlos Campbell
    Computing, Technology & Electronics, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Ian Carlos Campbell

    Apple has confirmed to Engadget that the Mac Pro, the desktop tower-shaped computer that was last updated in 2023, has been discontinued. As 9to5Mac notes, the computer no longer appears in the lineup of Macs on Apple's website or in its storefront. That means at least for now, the Mac Studio is the Apple's top-of-the-line professional computer. The current version of the Mac Pro was introduced in 2019, with a distinct cheese-grater design, Intel chips and a bevy of easily-accessible expansion slots. Apple released the computer as a make-good for several years of inadequately meeting the performance needs of professional Mac

  • X moves the ashes of TweetDeck behind its $40 Premium+ subscription 6 hours ago by Anna Washenko
    Social & Online Media, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Anna Washenko

    X Pro, the feature most users would recognize as TweetDeck, has been removed as a benefit of the social network's Premium subscription. It is now only part of the Premium+ tier, which costs $40 a month.  TweetDeck was rebranded to X Pro in 2023 following Elon Musk's renaming of Twitter to X. It became a subscription feature shortly after. The tool offered a popular interface for showing multiple timelines, feeds and lists in a single interface. Engadget staffers using X Pro at the Premium level didn't find any advanced notice that the feature would be changing subscription tiers, so people may be

  • Ugh, Netflix is raising prices again 7 hours ago by Ian Carlos Campbell
    Media, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Ian Carlos Campbell

    Netflix is raising prices across all of its subscription tiers, according to an updated "Plans and Pricing" page spotted by Android Authority. The company last raised prices in January 2025, when the cost of all of its tiers were jacked up by $1 or more. As of this latest price hike, Netflix's ad-supported Standard plan is going from $8 per month to $9 per month, while the ad-free version is rising from $18 to $20 per month. The company's Premium plan, meanwhile, which supports things like 4K streams, spatial audio and the ability to watch content on four devices at the

  • Judge tosses out X's advertiser boycott lawsuit 8 hours ago by Ian Carlos Campbell
    Business, Company Legal & Law Matters, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Ian Carlos Campbell

    A US District Court Judge for the Northern District of Texas has dismissed X Corp.’s lawsuit against advertisers it claimed participated in an “illegal boycott” of X, Reuters reports. X originally filed its lawsuit in 2024 in response to advertisers pulling ads from the social media platform, a decision reportedly motivated by X's lax approach to moderating hate speech. Judge Jane J. Boyle was not swayed by X’s claims that advertisers like Twitch, Shell, Nestlé and Lego pulling advertising amounted to an “antitrust injury.” The companies named in X’s lawsuit are members of the World Federation of Advertisers’ Global Alliance for


The Verge

  • Judge sides with Anthropic to temporarily block the Pentagon’s ban 2 hours ago by Hayden Field
    AI, Analysis, Anthropic, Report

    After Anthropic's weeks-long standoff with the Pentagon, the company won one milestone: A judge granted Anthropic a preliminary injunction in its lawsuit, which sought to reverse its government blacklisting while the judicial process plays out. "The Department of War's records show that it designated Anthropic as a supply chain risk because of its 'hostile manner through the press,'" Judge Rita F. Lin, a district judge in the northern district of California, wrote in the order, which will go into effect in seven days. "Punishing Anthropic for bringing public scrutiny to the government's contracting position is classic illegal First Amendme … Read the

  • Brendan Carr says his broadcast license threat wasn’t really about Iran war coverage 3 hours ago by Lauren Feiner
    Policy, Politics, Regulation, Report, Speech

    Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr never meant to threaten broadcast licenses over their coverage of the war in Iran, he told reporters after an event hosted by FGS and Semafor. "My comments weren't actually on the Iran war," Carr said in response to a question from The Verge about his statement regarding coverage of the war. "I understand why people say that. I made a statement quoting a tweet." On March 14th, Carr quote-tweeted a screenshot of a Truth Social post from President Donald Trump, who had bemoaned "an intentionally misleading headline" related to the US military action in the Middle

  • David Sacks is no longer the White House AI and Crypto Czar 3 hours ago by Tina Nguyen
    AI, Crypto, Policy, Politics, Tech

    David Sacks, the venture capitalist and tech billionaire who'd become Silicon Valley's primary advocate inside the White House and a key architect of its aggressive AI policy initiatives, revealed on Thursday that he was no longer a special government employee - and therefore no longer President Donald Trump's Special Advisor on AI and Crypto. Sacks' official status as an SGE allowed him to work simultaneously in the private sector and for the government, but for no more than 130 days, raising questions about why he was still in the job more than a year after his appointment. But in an interview

  • Robot vacuums from Eufy and Roborock are over 50 percent for Amazon’s spring sale 5 hours ago by Sheena Vasani
    Deals, Gadgets, Smart Home, Tech, Verge Shopping

    A good robovac can save you a surprising amount of time. Luckily, Amazon’s Big Spring Sale is a great time to pick one up, as you can currently find deals on everything from basic, budget-friendly robovacs to high-end models that can mop or pick up objects. Whether you’re looking for a completely hands-free experience or just a little help keeping your floors clean, there are plenty of great options on sale right now, some of which have even dropped to their best price to date. To make finding the right vacuum a little easier, we’ve rounded up the best deals from

  • Apple’s Mac Pro is dead, apparently for good this time 5 hours ago by Richard Lawler
    Apple, macOS, News, Tech

    The most expensive Mac you could get is no longer available on Apple's website, as 9to5Mac reports that the "cheese grater" Mac Pro workstation has been discontinued. It had been a part of the lineup since replacing the Power Mac G5 in 2006 when Apple shifted from Arm to Intel processors, but it's had the feeling of a vestigial limb ever since Apple dropped Intel for its own M-series chips. The M2 Ultra edition of the Mac Pro launched three years ago, with Apple hardware exec and possible future CEO John Ternus saying that "for those users who need the versatility


Wired


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