Minimalist News

Simply the latest news, updated on the hour.

Fri, Jul 10, 2026, 6:26 PM EDT

Tech

AI Summary

  • Apple has initiated legal proceedings against OpenAI, alleging the latter unlawfully utilized company trade secrets, particularly concerning hardware development, in the creation of its AI models.
  • SK Hynix is making significant inroads into the U.S. market, securing $26.5 billion in its IPO and prompting discussions about expanding semiconductor fabrication facilities domestically.
  • The streaming landscape continues to evolve, with reports suggesting Disney+ is exploring the introduction of a free, ad-supported tier to broaden its subscriber base.
  • Regulatory bodies, like the EU, are taking a firmer stance on Big Tech's impact on user behavior, with Meta facing potential fines for the 'addictive' design elements present in Facebook and Instagram.
  • The burgeoning field of AI continues to advance, with companies like Oratomic raising substantial funding for quantum computing endeavors and Hugging Face re-evaluating the economics of AI model deployment.

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The Verge

  • Apple sues OpenAI for allegedly stealing hardware secrets an hour ago by Jay Peters
    AI, Apple, News, OpenAI, Tech

    Apple has sued OpenAI, alleging that engineers stole Apple secrets to advance the AI startup's hardware plans. In its complaint , Apple says it uncovered "a pattern of theft of Apple's trade secrets by OpenAI employees who were formerly at Apple." In addition to OpenAI, the lawsuit also names IO Products - Jony Ive's hardware startup, which OpenAI bought in 2025 - along with two specific employees, Tang Tan (OpenAI's chief hardware officer) and Chang Liu (who joined OpenAI from Apple in January). An Apple spokesperson shared this statement with 9to5Mac : At Apple, our teams are constantly developing breakthrough

  • A decade later, Pokémon Go finally made good on its original promise 3 hours ago by Charles Pulliam-Moore
    Entertainment, Gaming, News, Nintendo, Pokemon

    When Niantic dropped the first Pokémon Go trailer in 2015, it was hard to grasp how a bunch of players could work together to catch a pokémon like Mewtwo. But this week at the game's 10th anniversary event in New York City, Pokémon Go showed the world how it's done. Almost 2,000 players (many of them Pokémon Go influencers) packed into Times Square on Thursday evening to participate in a special battle. It was cool to see Times Square briefly go dark before the billboards began lighting up, revealing an escaped Mewtwo Mega Evolving, and it was even wilder to

  • ICE is threatening to deport witnesses of its latest shooting 3 hours ago by Gaby Del Valle
    Analysis, Policy, Report

    Department of Homeland Security. | Image: The Verge Advocates are demanding that the Department of Homeland Security release bodycam footage of the fatal shooting of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a Mexican immigrant who was killed by ICE officers in Houston during a traffic stop earlier this week. But DHS claims the agents involved in the shooting weren't wearing body cameras because of the lengthy government shutdown that prevented ICE and Customs and Border Protection from receiving additional federal funding for 76 days - a shutdown that was itself spurred by congressional bickering over reforms to DHS after federal agents killed two

  • Nvidia’s biggest RAM supplier just had a trillion-dollar debut on Wall Street 5 hours ago by Emma Roth
    Business, News, Tech

    SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung. | Image: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images As the AI boom boosts demand for RAM, SK Hynix - one of the world's biggest suppliers of memory chips - launched on Wall Street Friday. The South Korean chipmaker opened at $170 per share and raised $26.5 billion, surpassing Alibaba's record as the largest debut of a foreign company, according to reports from The Associated Press and CNN . After reaching a $1 trillion valuation in May, SK Hynix briefly overtook Samsung as South Korea's most valuable company. SK Hynix is one of three major companies benefitting

  • Spotify will let you fine-tune your weekly Release Radar playlist 6 hours ago by Terrence O’Brien
    Entertainment, Music, News, Spotify, Tech

    Spotify is giving listeners control to fine-tune what gets surfaced for them in Release Radar - one of its most popular weekly playlists. The new options allow you to narrow the playlist to a specific genre, focus on artists that are new to you, and more. Listeners can choose from up to five options like "Discover new artists," "Editors' picks," and "Pop." They're rolling out now across mobile and desktop apps and will appear at the top of your Release Radar playlist once they're available. Spotify also says it's making tweaks to the algorithm to serve up "more personalized recommendations,"


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