Minimalist News

Simply the latest news, updated on the hour.

Wed, May 27, 2026, 9:44 AM EDT

Tech

AI Summary

  • The tech industry is grappling with the pervasive influence and potential dangers of Artificial Intelligence, with major platforms like YouTube and Spotify implementing AI labeling and exploring AI-driven features, while also facing user skepticism and ethical debates surrounding AI's role in content creation and job displacement.
  • Data security and privacy remain critical concerns, as evidenced by the UK Visa Portal leak and breaches affecting transit systems, underscoring the ongoing challenges in protecting sensitive personal information in an increasingly connected world.
  • Companies like ClickHouse and OpenRouter are demonstrating significant financial growth and increased valuations, signaling strong market performance and investor confidence in specialized tech sectors, including data management and AI infrastructure.
  • The push for sustainable and advanced technology continues with initiatives like nuclear startup reactor development and plans for lunar bases, alongside innovations in electric vehicles and AR/VR hardware from major players like Ferrari and Xreal.
  • Geopolitical factors and regulatory oversight are increasingly impacting the tech landscape, with the Dutch government blocking acquisitions and Spain restricting prediction markets, highlighting a growing trend of national interests influencing global tech commerce.

TechCrunch

  • ClickHouse triples anualized revenue to $250M, charting a path toward an IPO an hour ago by Marina Temkin
    AI, Enterprise, Venture, AI infranstructure, ClickHouse, database services, IPO

    The database provider is eyeing a public debut within the next few years.

  • YouTube will now automatically label AI videos an hour ago by Sarah Perez
    TC, Media & Entertainment, AI, YouTube, media, Creators, AI content

    YouTube will now automatically label videos that use significant photorealistic AI, instead of relying solely on creators to disclose AI-generated content themselves. It's also making AI labels more prominent.

  • Tech CEOs are apparently suffering from AI psychosis an hour ago by Julie Bort
    Startups, Venture, AI, Box, Layoffs, tech layoffs, ai psychosis

    "CEOs are uniquely prone to AI psychosis," Box CEO Aaron Levie opines. Maybe that explains the almost religious belief in AI productivity gains.

  • Robinhood now lets your AI agents trade stocks an hour ago by Ivan Mehta
    Fintech, AI, payments, Robinhood, AI agents, AI stock trading

    Robinhood will let users create a separate account with pre-loaded balance that an agent use to trade

  • Airbnb-backed WeRoad raises $58M to take its group travel platform to the US 6 hours ago by Lauren Forristal
    Apps, Social, Startups, Airbnb, Funding, Series C funding

    WeRoad, the Milan-based group travel startup, has raised a $58 million Series C round led by Airbnb as it prepares for its first major expansion outside Europe. The funding brings the company’s total capital raised to roughly $100 million and will finance WeRoad’s push into the U.S., beginning with Austin. The new investment reflects a […]


Hacker News


Engadget


The Verge

  • 007 First Light is like a James Bond movie in the best way possible 20 minutes ago by Tauriq Moosa
    Entertainment, Games Review, Gaming

    The James Bond franchise is nothing if not a spectacle: Aside from the explosions and gun fights, even its calmer moments are dripping in the pomp and glamour of elite ostentation and luxury locales. Bond, however, has always been an odd mascot for the espionage profession, which ordinarily operates under silence and shadows. With 007 First Light , an origin story from Hitman developer IO Interactive, that spectacle rivals any of Bond's cinematic adventures. Across 20 some hours with the game, that breathtaking spectacle punctuated one of my favorite action games in years, one filled with exhilarating combat and an

  • Win cool gadgets we can’t keep because The Verge has ethics an hour ago by Sean Hollister
    Deals, Gadgets, Giveaway, Verge Shopping

    When people learn I work for The Verge , they inevitably ask: “Do you get to keep the gadgets?” Now that I film Today I’m Toying With , a video series where I share the joy of tech, I get that question more than ever. The answer is no , we don’t keep them ! Our ethics policy is clear: “We don’t accept things of value from companies or from their PR firms, period.” We don’t keep them, we don’t sell them, we don’t pass them to family or friends. We try to return them, and if a company doesn’t

  • The best part of Mina the Hollower is how it randomizes the Zelda formula an hour ago by Jay Peters
    Entertainment, Gaming

    After rolling credits on Mina the Hollower , I did something unusual for me and immediately started a new file. I'm not typically one to replay games right after I beat them. But Mina , a new action-adventure title from Shovel Knight creators Yacht Club Games, offers something that got me to jump right back into a brand-new adventure: a built-in randomizer. Randomizers shuffle things like items and enemies so that players can experience games they might be very familiar with in a whole new way. Imagine tackling The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time , but not finding the

  • YouTube is putting AI labels where you’ll actually see them an hour ago by Jess Weatherbed
    AI, Google, News, Streaming, Tech, YouTube

    The labels are more prominent, and they actually say “AI” now. | Image: YouTube / The Verge In the wake of Google expanding its AI verification efforts at I/O, YouTube is now finally going to start taking AI labeling seriously. YouTube has announced that it's relocating AI disclosures on Shorts and long-form videos to make them easier to spot and will start automatically identifying and labeling AI-generated content on the platform. For regular YouTube videos, the label - which says "AI" next to a recognizable information symbol - will now appear directly below the video player, above the description. Currently,

  • The Witcher 3 is getting another expansion, more than a decade after launch an hour ago by Andrew Webster
    Entertainment, Gaming, News

    The fourth Witcher game may be a ways off, but fans won't be without Geralt of Rivia for long. CD Projekt Red just announced Songs of the Past , the third expansion for The Witcher 3 , which will be launching in 2027. Aside from the title, there aren't many details about the expansion just yet. It's being co-developed by CDPR and fellow Polish studio Fool's Theory. What's most notable about Songs of the Past , though, is the timing: The Witcher 3 first launched in 2015 , meaning the latest expansion is coming more than a decade after the


Wired


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