7 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Politics

Big tech companies tend to make a lot of enemies — but there are none more powerful than the US government. Apple, Google, Amazon, and Meta are regularly called in front of Congress to fend off monopoly accusations — and lawmakers bring up bills to rein in the companies just as often. The Federal Trade Commission has taken a particularly central role, leading a lawsuit to sever Facebook and Instagram while blocking new acquisitions for Oculus and the company’s virtual reality wing. Like it or not, these regulatory fights will play a huge role in deciding the future of tech — and neither side is playing nice.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Imgur fined by UK privacy watchdog over children’s data handling.

The fine, a measly £247,590 (about $335,000), is because Imgur owner MediaLab wasn’t checking users ages, and so handled young kids’ data without proper consent measures. After the ICO warned a fine was coming last September, Imgur started blocking UK users entirely — a ban which is still in effect.

This Town, 2.0

Tech surrenders to the daily chaos of Washington politicking.

Tina Nguyen
Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
The small issue.

There are many important safety reasons to support China’s move to ban hidden, electric door handles from EVs, but also a pettier one: they’re just bad, unintuitive, and inconvenient handles.

verge_user_m65nybmy:

Rejoice! Concealed handles are so dumb. What do you mean I have to press one side then pull the other? Just give me a handle ffs

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

A community organizer’s guide to Signal group chats

Key privacy settings and best practices.

Stevie Bonifield
Justine Calma
Justine Calma
Offshore wind projects are back on again.

The Trump administration ordered five major offshore wind projects to pause construction in December, suddenly citing national security risks even though developers had previously secured approvals to start building. After the companies filed suit, federal courts have now allowed all five projects to start construction again.

The Epstein filesThe Epstein files
Verge Staff
Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Re: Nancy Mace’s social media strategy.

The Republican congressperson is reportedly so preoccupied with how the internet talks about her that she instructed staff to go to Reddit discussions about the “hottest women in Congress” to upvote and comment in support of her, according to a New York Magazine profile. Previous reporting also indicated that Mace’s staffers were asked to make burner social accounts to defend her.

Nancy Mace Is Not Okay

[Intelligencer]

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Mamdani plans to kill off NYC’s chatbot that told businesses to break the law.

Under Eric Adams, NYC launched a chatbot to help businesses navigate government programs and regulations. Instead, reporting by The City and The Markup showed that it regularly encouraged illegal behavior, such as taking a portion of employees’ tips or refusing to accept cash payments. It apparently didn’t even know the minimum wage.

Justine Calma
Justine Calma
So much for nuclear safety rules.

The Trump administration is quietly weakening regulations meant to protect groundwater and limit radiation exposure to workers at new nuclear reactors, NPR reports. Trump has worked to speed up the deployment of new nuclear reactor designs to power AI data centers.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Tim Cook was pressed by CNBC on making a public statement about events like what has unfolded in Minneapolis.

See below for what he had to say. (You can read that memo Cook is referencing here.)

The lack of an official public response so far is a noted contrast to a public statement on racism Cook shared in 2020.

Tina Nguyen
Tina Nguyen
Senate GOP to Democrats: please don’t negotiate with us about ICE funding.

With less than two days before a partial government shutdown over funding for the Department of Homeland Security, Republican leadership is trying to dodge the hard work.

“I think right now the conversation should be between the White House and Democrats,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) said. “The White House obviously is open to negotiation.” Democratic leaders, meanwhile, repeatedly put the onus on Thune for getting a deal. “We have to pass the bill here,” Sen. Patty Murray (Wash.), the top Democratic appropriator, told reporters. “He’s the majority leader.”

What is Nick Shirley?

Nick Shirley and others like him are reminiscent of yellow journalism of the 19th century, updated and turbocharged by social media algorithms.

Mia Sato
Thomas Ricker
Thomas Ricker
Bill Gates on the climate of fear under Trump.

The leaders of US businesses are more scared than he thought:

I was at a conference where they said, how many of you are afraid to speak out? And only like four people raised their hands and I said, wow, this is even worse than I thought. People are afraid to speak out about being afraid to speak out. I mean, because everybody in the room should have raised their hand. Are you kidding?

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Google is “exploring” letting publishers opt out of AI in Search.

At least in the UK, where the walkback comes after the country’s CMA opened a consultation on forcing Google to do just that, having given the company “strategic market status” last year. Ron Eden, Google’s principal for product management, says:

“We’re now exploring updates to our controls to let sites specifically opt out of Search generative AI features. Our goal is to protect the helpfulness of Search for people who want information quickly, while also giving websites the right tools to manage their content.”

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Report claims Ubiquiti’s gear serves “a critical communications need of the Russian military, including in drone operations.”

Today’s reports from Hunterbrook Media and Pablo Torre Finds Out claim the company’s hardware is seemingly easily obtained and popularly used in Russia’s war effort through already-sanctioned distributors and other middlemen.

Ubiquiti, which was fined $500k in 2014 over “reckless disregard” for Iran sanctions, did not respond to a request for comment.

The crypto bill is falling apart in Congress

A political comms professional breaks down Trump’s meme media strategy.

Tina Nguyen
Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
FBI opens investigation into Minneapolis Signal groups tracking ICE.

As reported by NBC News, FBI director Kash Patel said the probe was inspired by conservative journalist Cam Higby, who claims to have “infiltrated” Signal groups from around Minneapolis that were allegedly obstructing law enforcement and tracking ICE agents’ movements.

“We immediately opened up that investigation, because that sort of Signal chat — being coordinated with individuals not just locally in Minnesota, but maybe even around the country — if that leads to a break in the federal statute or a violation of some law, then we are going to arrest people.”

Tina Nguyen
Tina Nguyen
Accountability, with Trumpian characteristics.

Gregory Bovino, the Border Patrol commander known for getting into social media fights with people criticizing ICE’s presence in Minnesota, has reportedly been removed from his job as “Commander at large” and will return to his former job in California, where he is expected to retire. A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson denied that Bovino had been “relieved of his duties”, but nothing rules out the possibility that he’s being Mike Waltz’ed.

Adi Robertson
Adi Robertson
Know your chemical irritants.
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
Tim Cook, Andy Jassy, and AMD CEO Lisa Su are at the White House for a VIP screening of the Melania doc.

If you’re wondering what kind of access a gold-and-Gorilla-Glass statue, a $1 million donation, and endless fawning buys you, well, it gets a special advanced screening of a state-sanctioned propaganda documentary film about the First Lady. Okay, it buys more than that, this is just a nice bonus.