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Simply the latest news, updated on the hour.

Tue, Feb 24, 2026, 6:19 AM EST

Tech

AI Summary

  • The AI arms race is full throttle, with new multimodal models like OpenAI's GPT-4o showing off crazy human-like interactions, and every company from startups to giants is trying to inject AI into everything they do. NVIDIA is still basically printing money with their chips.
  • Big Tech companies are seriously getting grilled by regulators worldwide; we’re seeing major antitrust lawsuits against Apple for its App Store and Google for search, signaling that governments are finally trying to rein in their dominance.
  • Enterprise software is undergoing a massive AI overhaul, as businesses move past just talking about AI to actually implementing it for real-world automation, data analysis, and boosting productivity across the board.
  • Spatial computing is slowly but surely making moves, with Apple's Vision Pro setting the high-end standard while Meta's Quest 3 keeps pushing for more mainstream VR adoption, though it still feels like we’re in the early innings.
  • The venture capital scene is still pretty wild; while overall funding is down from its peak, AI startups are absolutely crushing it, attracting huge investments and making it clear that AI is where all the smart money is heading right now.

TechCrunch


Hacker News


Engadget

  • The US military will reportedly use Elon Musk's Grok AI in its classified systems 35 minutes ago by Steve Dent
    Politics & Government, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Steve Dent

    The US Department of Defense has reportedly reached a deal to use Elon Musk's Grok in its classified systems, according to Axios. That follows news that the Pentagon is currently in a dispute with another AI company, Anthropic, over limits on its technology for things like mass surveillance. Last year, the White ordered Grok, along with ChatGPT, Gemini and Anthropic's Claude to be approved for government use. Up until now, though, only Anthropic's model has been allowed for the military's most sensitive tasks in intelligence, weapons development and battlefield operations. Claude was reportedly used in the Venezuelan raid in which the

  • Apple will start making Mac minis in the US an hour ago by Mariella Moon
    Smart Phones, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Mariella Moon

    Starting later this year, Apple will start manufacturing Mac minis meant for sale in the US within the country. The company took The Wall Street Journal on a tour of its Houston facility, where Foxconn is also building servers for Apple Intelligence, and was shown an empty warehouse. Apple says it will turn the space into a 220,000 square feet plant where it will produce the compact desktop computers. The decision to produce Mac minis for local sales within the US is part of the company’s efforts to make good on its pledge last year that it will spend $500

  • The best webcams for 2026 2 hours ago by Valentina Palladino
    Technology & Electronics, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Valentina Palladino

    Whether you’re on back-to-back video meetings, live streaming or just trying to look presentable on a family call, your webcam matters more than most might expect. The cameras built into laptops are fine in a pinch, but they rarely deliver consistent image quality, especially in less-than-ideal lighting. A dedicated webcam can noticeably improve sharpness, color accuracy and overall reliability. There’s no single “best” webcam for everyone, though. Some models are built around higher resolutions, while others focus on smoother video, better low-light performance or stronger onboard microphones. We’ve tested a wide range of options to see which ones are actually worth

  • Tesla sues California DMV after it banned the term 'Autopilot' 2 hours ago by Steve Dent
    Autos, Transportation, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Steve Dent

    Tesla is suing California's Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) to reverse a ruling that prevented the automaker from using the terms "Autopilot" and "Full Self-Driving" to sell cars, CNBC reported. That follows a December ruling by a California administrative law judge that forced Tesla to clean up its marketing language or risk a suspension of its sales license. Last week, the DMV determined that Tesla had made the necessary changes, including changing the name to "Full Self-Driving (Supervised)," and that no suspension would occur. However, if you had "Tesla is going to sue them back" in your office pool, you can

  • Anthropic accuses three Chinese AI labs of abusing Claude to improve their own models 15 hours ago by Jackson Chen
    Internet & Networking Technology, site|engadget, provider_name|Engadget, region|US, language|en-US, author_name|Jackson Chen

    Anthropic is issuing a call to action against AI "distillation attacks," after accusing three AI companies of misusing its Claude chatbot. On its website, Anthropic claimed that DeepSeek, Moonshot and MiniMax have been conducting "industrial-scale campaigns…to illicitly extract Claude’s capabilities to improve their own models." Distillation in the AI world refers to when less capable models lean on the responses of more powerful ones to train themselves. While distillation isn't a bad thing across the board, Anthropic said that these types of attacks can be used in a more nefarious way. According to Anthropic, these three Chinese AI firms were responsible


The Verge

  • Apple will soon make (some) Mac Minis in the US 20 minutes ago by Jess Weatherbed
    Apple, Business, News, Tech

    Apple will still be producing Mac Mini computers in Asia too. | Photo by Chris Welch / The Verge Apple is preparing to move some of its Mac Mini production to the US as part of the company's ongoing efforts to appease the Trump administration's push for domestic investment. Manufacturing is set to begin later this year in north Houston, Texas, at a Foxconn facility that currently assembles Apple's AI servers. "Apple is deeply committed to the future of American manufacturing, and we're proud to significantly expand our footprint in Houston with the production of Mac Mini starting later this year," Apple

  • Inside Anthropic’s existential negotiations with the Pentagon 35 minutes ago
    AI, Anthropic, Policy, Politics, Regulation, Tech

    Anthropic's weekslong battle with the Department of Defense has played out over social media posts, admonishing public statements, and direct quotes from unnamed Pentagon officials to the news media. But the future of the $380 billion AI startup comes down to just three words: "any lawful use." The new terms, which OpenAI and xAI have reportedly already agreed to, would give the US military carte blanche to use services for mass surveillance and lethal autonomous weapons, AI that has full power to track and kill targets with no humans involved in the decision-making process. The negotiations have turned ugly, with Pentagon

  • Will Trump’s DOJ actually take on Ticketmaster? 15 hours ago by Lauren Feiner
    Antitrust, Entertainment, Policy, Politics, Report

    In mid-February, the Department of Justice lost its head antitrust enforcer - just weeks before it was scheduled to argue one of the year's biggest anti-monopoly cases in court. Antitrust Division chief Gail Slater announced her departure suddenly, via a post on her personal X account. But to those who follow the agency closely, it was far from surprising. For months, leaks about the division described tensions between Slater and her team with DOJ leadership, and President Donald Trump's penchant for personal dealmaking raised questions about who would really call the antitrust shots. Over the summer, two of Slater's top deputies were

  • Billions of dollars later and still nobody knows what an Xbox is 15 hours ago by Andrew Webster
    Analysis, Entertainment, Gaming, Report, Xbox

    The last few years of Xbox have been expensive. Under Phil Spencer's leadership, Microsoft has spent billions of dollars in an attempt to build an ambitious future for gaming that looks a lot like Netflix. And while its subscription service Game Pass started out as a good deal for gamers (although now not so much), that spending spree has led to catastrophic layoffs, studio closures, and confused and inconsistent messaging about what Xbox actually stands for. And with Spencer set to retire as new leadership takes charge, the future of Microsoft's gaming efforts looks increasingly unclear. Spencer announced his retirement last

  • Anthropic accuses DeepSeek and other Chinese firms of using Claude to train their AI 15 hours ago by Emma Roth
    AI, Anthropic, News

    Anthropic claims DeepSeek and two other Chinese AI companies misused its Claude AI model in an attempt to improve their own products. In an announcement on Monday, Anthropic says the "industrial-scale campaigns" involved the creation of around 24,000 fraudulent accounts and more than 16 million exchanges with Claude, as reported earlier by The Wall Street Journal. The three companies - DeepSeek, MiniMax, and Moonshot - are accused of "distilling" Claude, or training a smaller AI model based on a more advanced one. Though Anthropic says that distillation is a "legitimate training method," it adds that it can "also be used for


Wired

  • The Righteous EV Owners Who Won’t Let Their Broken Cars Die 35 minutes ago by Aarian Marshall
    The Big Story, Transportation / Electric Cars, Things, Fall, Apart

    Fisker went out of business in 2024, but its biggest fans want to bring the “right to repair” to the masses.

  • AI Will Never Be Conscious 35 minutes ago by Michael Pollan
    The Big Story, Business, Business / Artificial Intelligence, Culture, Culture / Books, Book, Excerpt

    In his new book, A World Appears, Michael Pollan argues that artificial intelligence can do many things—it just can’t be a person.

  • College Campuses Are in Upheaval Over Faculty Ties to Epstein 35 minutes ago by Miles Klee
    Culture, Culture / Culture News

    From small art schools to large public universities, the new DOJ release of emails reveals just how deep the financier’s influence in academia went. Students are demanding accountability.

  • Start Your Surround Sound Journey With $50 off This Klipsch Soundbar 12 hours ago by Brad Bourque
    Gear, Gear / Deals, Gear / Products, Gear / Products / Speakers, Deal, of, the, Day

    This soundbar is just the beginning, with the option to add wireless bookshelf speakers or a subwoofer.

  • 6 Best Duffel Bags We Tested While Traveling (2026) 13 hours ago by Louryn Strampe
    Gear, Gear / Buying Guides, Gear / Products / Lifestyle, Buying, Guide

    Need to schlep some stuff? Consider these field-tested duffel bags. The Eastpak Duffel Pack S Tarp Black2 is our top pick.


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