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Android Show 2026 / Catch up on all the biggest Android announcements ahead of Google I/O.

Google announces its Chromebook successor: the GooglebookGoogle announces its Chromebook successor: the Googlebook

Google has a new operating system and a new laptop platform, but no hardware just yet.

Antonio G. Di Benedetto
The 9 biggest new features in Android 17

New emoji, AI widgets, and AirDrop for (almost) everyone.

Dominic Preston
Gemini’s latest updates are all about controlling your phone

We’re one step closer to our phones just using themselves.

Allison Johnson
Android Auto is now one (screen) size fits all

The phone projection system will now completely fill unconventionally shaped screens, in addition to a variety of other improvements. It’s the biggest update in its 10-year history, says VP for Android Automotive Patrick Brady.

Andrew J. Hawkins

Healthcare hoax? / AI is taking over the healthcare space, but it’s filled with limitations and possible dangers.

What’s the role of a simple fitness band in the AI health era?What’s the role of a simple fitness band in the AI health era?

It’s the end of Fitbit as we knew it.

Victoria Song
Google’s healthcare AI made up a body part — what happens when doctors don’t notice?

Google dubbed an error from its Med-Gemini model a typo. Experts say it demonstrates the risks of AI in medicine.

Hayden Field
Chatbots are now prescribing psychiatric drugs

Some psychiatrists are asking what problem, exactly, this is solving.

Robert Hart
Giving your healthcare info to a chatbot is, unsurprisingly, a terrible idea

ChatGPT Health promises privacy. All you have is OpenAI’s word.

Robert Hart

Musk v. Altman: Week 3 / Drama and revelations from the biggest trial in the AI world.

Sam Altman was winning on the stand, but it might not be enoughSam Altman was winning on the stand, but it might not be enough

Elon Musk may have done more long-term reputational damage to the OpenAI CEO.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Microsoft doesn’t want any of this

At Musk v. Altman, the software giant is trying to stay above the fray and out of ‘amateur city.’

Elizabeth Lopatto
Mira Murati’s deposition pulled back the curtain on Sam Altman’s ouster

The former OpenAI CTO had receipts. But they mostly confuse her own story.

Hayden Field
All the evidence revealed so far in Musk v. Altman

Emails going as far back as 2015 give a glimpse into the foundations of OpenAI and the early tensions at the company.

Hayden Field and Adi Robertson

On the move / Developments are happening in how we travel — but what’s realistic, and how fast can we get there?

Inside the lab where Ford is trying to crack the code on cheap EVsInside the lab where Ford is trying to crack the code on cheap EVs

Unibodies, zonal architecture, shorter wiring harnesses. Ford is resorting to proven manufacturing techniques to get its EV costs down.

Peter Nelson
Electric air taxis are finally taking flight — just not with passengers

Do air taxis sound like ‘leaves in the wind’?

Andrew J. Hawkins
Dreame’s rocket-powered car can do 0–60 in 0.9 seconds because you can just say things now

The Chinese vacuum company has automotive aspirations, but its claims of rocket-boosted acceleration don’t add up.

Andrew J. Hawkins
Tesla is recalling its cheaper Cybertruck because the wheels might fall off

All 173 of the RWD Cybertrucks sold by Tesla are being recalled.

Emma Roth
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
AI cybersecurity updates for MDASH, Mythos, and GPT-5.5.

On Wednesday, the AISI, which evaluates AI models for the British government, said both Anthropic’s Claude Mythos Preview and OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 showed progress well above previous trends on cybersecurity testing. Separately, XBOW released data suggesting “frontier models have taken a major step forward in vulnerability discovery.”

Meanwhile, Microsoft said its multi-model agentic setup, MDASH, was used to discover 16 CVEs in this week’s Patch Tuesday updates and is the leader on the CyberGym security evaluation framework.

graph showing the average number of steps completed on a cybersecuirty benchmark comparing various models across how many tokens spent
Image: AISI
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
The live-action Zelda movie is now coming out a week earlier.

The new premiere date is April 30th, 2027. Per Nintendo’s X account:

This is Miyamoto. I would like to let you know that the worldwide theatrical release date for the live-action film of The Legend of Zelda has been moved up to April 30, 2027, from May 7. The team is working hard to deliver the film to everyone as soon as possible. There’s less than a year to go until release, so thank you for waiting.

It’s the second release date shift for the film.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
People are already making the new Steam Controller “sing.”

Back in 2015, somebody wrote a program to make the original Steam Controller “sing” Doom’s theme song and other music. Catch up to 2026, and people are already making music with the new Steam Controller. Here’s “Still Alive” from Portal, and I love this rendition of the Super Mario Bros. 2 theme.

Microsoft’s Edge Copilot update uses AI to pull information from across your tabsMicrosoft’s Edge Copilot update uses AI to pull information from across your tabs

The new features include AI podcasts, summaries, and quizzes based on what you’re browsing.

Emma Roth
Trump administration defends right to ban content moderation experts from USTrump administration defends right to ban content moderation experts from US

A group of independent tech researchers is seeking to block the State Department policy.

Lauren Feiner
Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Musk left the country with President Trump despite a judge’s orders.

U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, the judge presiding over Musk v. Altman, had told Musk when he left the stand that he was not excused from the trial and that he was still under “recall status,” meaning he should stay nearby and ready to testify. But he’s currently in Beijing

Elon Musk’s post

[X (formerly Twitter)]

YouTube is courting creators — and sponsors — with streaming showsYouTube is courting creators — and sponsors — with streaming shows

The platform announced a slew of new shows from popular creators in front of a room full of brands and advertisers.

Mia Sato
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
Qualcomm is getting in on the Googlebook action.

Intel chips won’t be the only CPUs powering Google’s new Android-based laptops. Qualcomm also confirmed on Wednesday that it’s working on Googlebooks, but, like Intel, hasn’t given any details about the specific chips the laptops will feature:

Something special is coming this fall. In partnership with @Google, we’ve created Googlebook, a category of premium, powerful laptops built for intelligent experiences.

AMD’s best CPU tech for gamers is coming to workstations tooAMD’s best CPU tech for gamers is coming to workstations too

AMD’s new Ryzen PRO 9000 CPUs include chips with 3D V-Cache, previously only seen in gaming CPUs.

Stevie Bonifield
Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Microsoft and OpenAI rest.

There is no rebuttal case from Musk’s team. We will get closing statements tomorrow.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Shutterstock is paying $35 million to settle illegal subscription and cancellation allegations.

Even with the FTC’s click-to-cancel rule vacated (but possibly coming back?), it has reached a settlement over Shutterstock’s subscriptions that allegedly required a phone, chat, or email conversation to get out of.

…Shutterstock advertised its on-demand packs as “Best for a one-time project,” with “no commitment,” but failed to adequately disclose that these packs automatically renewed when the last download in the pack was used and—until early 2024—that they automatically renewed after one year.

Victoria Song
Victoria Song
Do you also hate the new Gemini bar in Google Docs?

Turn it off by going to Gemini > Bottom Bar Preferences > Turn off.

Andrew Webster
Andrew Webster
If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.

The live-service field is a mess, Fortnite included, but maybe the solution is to mash every online shooter into one experience.

The crypto Clarity Act returns to the Senate this week. The banks are already trying to kill it.The crypto Clarity Act returns to the Senate this week. The banks are already trying to kill it.

Can the stablecoin bill get passed before the Republicans lose Congress?

Tina Nguyen
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Netflix will host the NFL’s first “Thanksgiving eve” game.
  • Season opener in Australia: 49ers vs. Rams
  • Thanksgiving eve: Packers vs. Rams
  • Two Christmas Day games
  • Week 18
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
This week in the big AI data center buildout.

AI data center projects are continuing to pop up across the US, with frequent opposition from locals concerned about their impact. Here are a few recent articles about the projects:

Netflix’s ad ambitions just keep growingNetflix’s ad ambitions just keep growing

The streaming service’s ad-supported tier now reaches 250 million viewers each month.

Emma Roth
Everything at The Criterion Collection is 30 percent off right nowEverything at The Criterion Collection is 30 percent off right now

Criterion is taking 30 percent off of every disc on the site, from Anora to Wes Anderson box sets.

Sheena Vasani
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
“Xbox or XBOX?”

Xbox boss Asha Sharma is running a poll on X where you can make your voice heard. Much to my dismay, as I write this, XBOX currently has about two thirds of the vote. I know the history, but I firmly believe we shouldn’t all-caps brand names.

What’s your vote?

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
We’re listening to an expert witness, David Hemel, a law professor at NYU.

He said that “for a large nonprofit organization, having for-profit affiliates is very much the norm.” When asked, he also said that oftentimes, the for-profit affiliate of a nonprofit is “quite large compared to the nonprofit,” and he gave the Mozilla Corporation (which owns the Firefox web browser) and the Mozilla Foundation as an example. Hemel also testified that he’s getting paid $1,750 an hour to be here.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Use Kalshi code VERGE for a $10 bonus.

Just kidding! But some news organizations are offering prediction market affiliate codes — and publishing thousands of stories pushing gambling deals. Popular Information reports that news orgs owned by Advance Local (including The Oregonian and The Cleveland Plain Dealer) are on track to run more than 14,000 pieces of “gambling slop” this year promoting deals for sportsbooks, casinos, and prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi.

Instagram hits the copy button again with new disappearing Instants photosInstagram hits the copy button again with new disappearing Instants photos

Instants are ephemeral photos that you can’t edit, and Instagram has found that people use them to share more casual photos.

Jay Peters
Hayden Field
Hayden Field
During Elon Musk’s all-hands Q&A before departing OpenAI, Achiam said he felt Musk wanted to “race towards AGI.”

He said Musk was concerned about Google DeepMind and CEO Demis Hassabis and “expressed a lot of concerns about what would happen if DeepMind got to AGI first.” Achiam said he shared his concern that trying to “race” towards the technology was a “fairly unsafe proposition … He was proposing to do something that seemed … obviously unsafe and reckless.”

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Achiam is running circles around this lawyer on cross, without doing the annoying things other witnesses have done.

She quotes a tweet of his saying that he believes Musk was doing his best for humanity. He asks when that was. She says, January 2025. He says, well he’s done some things that undermined my confidence since then.
There’s a brief redirect, and then Achiam steps down. No trophy for the jury. :(

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
During the all-hands, Musk expressed concerns about what would happen if DeepMind got to AGI first,

“It sounded like he wanted to race toward AGI.” That sounded unsafe to Achiam. “He was proposing to do something that seemed, based on our understanding at the time, obviously unsafe and reckless,” Achiam said. “We had a pretty tense exchange, and he snapped and called me a jackass.” There were 50 or 60 people at that meeting.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
“It was a bit like seeing Bigfoot through Plexiglass,” Achiam says of seeing Elon Musk in the office.

He had a notable interaction with Musk, though, during the all-hands when Musk was departing the organization in Feb. 2018. Musk explained that he was leaving because he had a new conflict of interest with Tesla, which would be hiring from the same pool of researchers — and indicated a general lack of confidence in OpenAI’s path

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Ilya Sutskever would get up on tables to give speeches in the early days of OpenAI.

That’s according to Josh Achiam, currently the company’s chief futurist, who joined in 2017. He said Sutskever’s impassioned speeches would typically be about the science-fiction-esque future that was approaching.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Achiam talked about the roles of Greg Brockman and Ilya Sutskever in OpenAI’s early days.

He said Brockman and Sutskever were the “main leaders,” and that Brockman was the “engineering workhorse that pushed to build scaled-up systems that would train the AI and make it work.” Achiam called Sutskever a “scientific visionary” who articulated what the future would be like, such as football fields of silicon chips making large-scale calculations.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Josh Achiam described what it was like to work at OpenAI in 2017.

He said when he joined, OpenAI was a team of about 50 people, and that it essentially felt like “an extension of a graduate student lab in a university” — a “collegiate, academic, super intellectual” environment — with most employees being either current PhD students or recent graduates. He said he appreciated that there wasn’t a “publish or perish” type of culture at the time.

Mark Zuckerberg announces ‘completely private’ encrypted Meta AI chatMark Zuckerberg announces ‘completely private’ encrypted Meta AI chat

Incognito Chat AI messages disappear after users leave their chat session, which Meta says makes it different from other bots.

Stevie Bonifield
Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Fairly stupid choice by Musk’s lawyers to go after Microsoft’s major decision rights.

Microsoft had an approval right on some transactions. It did not have the majority of the board. That’s even though they contributed more than 90 percent of OpenAI’s initial investments. Also, all LPs had major decision rights, Wetter testifies. So this is less control than Musk wanted for more money.

Tom Warren
Tom Warren
Microsoft starts layoffs at LinkedIn.

Microsoft is reportedly cutting around five percent of its LinkedIn headcount this week, approximately 875 roles. Reuters reports that Microsoft-owned LinkedIn will inform staff of the cuts today. Microsoft confirmed the layoffs in a statement to Seeking Alpha. “As part of our regular business planning, we’ve implemented organizational changes to best position ourselves for future success,” said an unnamed LinkedIn spokesperson.

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Free Spotify users can create kids accounts now, too.

Managed accounts, which offer a music-only experience with parental controls for the under-13 set, were previously reserved for Premium Family subscribers. Now, free users can also create kids accounts, with their own playlists, suggestions, and wrapped experiences. It’s coming to Argentina, Colombia, Denmark, Italy, New Zealand, and Sweden first.

Hayden Field
Hayden Field
Anthropic is launching Claude for Small Business.

It’s a package of “connectors,” installed via a toggle switch, that allows Claude to work inside tools like Intuit Quickbooks, PayPal, Docusign, HugSpot, Google Workspace, and Microsoft 365. “It can plan payroll, close the month, run a sales campaign, chase invoices, and more,” per Anthropic’s blog post.

Microsoft doesn’t want any of thisMicrosoft doesn’t want any of this

At Musk v. Altman, the software giant is trying to stay above the fray and out of ‘amateur city.’

Elizabeth Lopatto
Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

It now features a fully stacked sensor for faster shooting and 8K video, making it a more do-it-all high-resolution camera.

Antonio G. Di Benedetto
Live updates from Musk v. AltmanLive updates from Musk v. Altman

Week three of Musk v. Altman.

Elizabeth Lopatto and Hayden Field
Andrew Liszewski
Andrew Liszewski
The new Kindle Scribe without Front Light finally releases on June 10th.

The new black-and-white Kindle Scribe without a glowing display has been MIA since it was announced last September. But according to an updated listing on Amazon’s store, it will finally be available starting on June 10th at 10AM ET for $429.99, giving the recently-announced Remarkable Paper Pure some more competition.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

A person annotates a document on the Kindle Scribe.
Nearly 8 months after it was announced, the Kindle Scribe without Front Light will be released in June.
Image: Amazon
Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Incredible evidence dispute this morning.

There is a trophy that OpenAI has brought in, that’s half of a donkey — the back half — and says, “Never stop being a jackass.” It’s a commemoration OpenAI employees bought for another employee that Musk called a jackass on the way out on his last day. Musk’s team does not want the trophy in evidence.

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