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“Anthropic notches win in DoD fight, Apple plans to open up Siri.”

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Accessed on 27 March 2026, 2132 UTC.

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top news
A US judge grants Anthropic’s request for a preliminary injunction in its suit against the Trump administration over the DOD’s decision to blacklist the company (Ashley Capoot / CNBC)
Sources: Apple plans to open up Siri to run any AI service via App Store apps in iOS 27, dropping ChatGPT as exclusive partner in Apple Intelligence and Siri (Mark Gurman / Bloomberg)
Netflix raises US prices following a January 2025 hike; standard with ads rises $1 to $8.99/month; standard with no ads and premium rise $2 to $19.99 and $26.99 (Todd Spangler / Variety)
Google launches Gemini 3.1 Flash Live, an audio model with improved tonal understanding and lower latency for real-time dialogue, watermarked with SynthID (Valeria Wu / The Keyword)
Sources: OpenAI has shelved its erotic chatbot “indefinitely” as it refocuses on its core products after technical issues and concerns from staff and investors (Financial Times)
Fannie Mae will accept crypto-backed mortgages for the first time; Coinbase launches a mortgage product allowing buyers to pledge bitcoin or USDC as collateral (Wall Street Journal)
The $6M LA social media verdict is a win for the plaintiffs bar, not kids or society; parenting helps mitigate the harms and most kids don’t face severe issues (Wall Street Journal)
Defense tech startup Shield AI raised $2B at a $12.7B valuation, up from $5.3B after raising $240M in March 2025; half of its business is autonomous software (Michael J. de la Merced / New York Times)
Sources: Anthropic executives have discussed an IPO as soon as Q4, and bankers vying to take the company public expect it to raise more than $60B (The Information)
Apple expands its American Manufacturing Program, adding Bosch, Cirrus Logic, TDK, and Qnity Electronics to make components in the US for products sold globally (MacKenzie Sigalos / CNBC)
The US DOJ charges a Chinese national and two Americans for allegedly trying to smuggle nearly $62M worth of export-controlled Nvidia A100s and H100s into China (Michael Kan / PCMag)
The European Commission opens a DSA investigation into Snap for failing to protect kids on Snapchat, including whether it does enough to assess its users’ ages (Eliza Gkritsi / Politico)
Apple discontinues the Mac Pro and says it has no plans to offer future Mac Pro hardware (Chance Miller / 9to5Mac)
In an interview, David Sacks says he has relinquished his role as AI and crypto czar after using up his time as a special government employee (Bloomberg)
A US federal judge dismisses X’s antitrust lawsuit that accused the World Federation of Advertisers and a group of major companies of illegally boycotting X (Mike Scarcella / Reuters)
Uber partners with China-based Pony AI and Croatia-based, Rimac-spinoff Verne to launch Europe’s first commercial robotaxi service, initially debuting in Zagreb (Andrew J. Hawkins / The Verge)
X limits X Pro access to subscribers of the $40/month Premium+ plan without notifying users in advance; it was previously available in the $8/month Premium plan (Juli Clover / MacRumors)
artificial intelligence
Wikipedia bans using AI for writing or rewriting articles on its English-language site, citing AI-written articles’ tendency to violate “core content policies” (Emma Roth / The Verge)
Google releases new tools for its Gemini AI assistant that let users upload chat history and context from other AI apps, making it easier to switch from them (Natalie Lung / Bloomberg)
Cohere launches Transcribe, its first voice model; the 2B-parameter, open-source speech recognition model handles tasks like notetaking and speech analysis (Ivan Mehta / TechCrunch)
Mistral launches Voxtral TTS, an open-source enterprise text-to-speech model that supports nine languages, including Hindi and Arabic, based on Ministral 3B (Ivan Mehta / TechCrunch)
ByteDance launches its Dreamina Seedance 2.0 audio and video model in its CapCut editing platform, supporting clips up to 15 seconds across six aspect ratios (Sarah Perez / TechCrunch)
The European Parliament votes to ban nudify apps and delay EU AI Act deadlines, including pushing compliance for high-risk AI systems back to December 2027 (Robert Hart / The Verge)
The China Computer Federation calls for a boycott of AI conference NeurIPS after organizers barred submissions from US-sanctioned companies like Huawei (Vincent Chow / South China Morning Post)
OpenRouter data: lower-cost Chinese AI models made by companies such as DeepSeek and MiniMax have overtaken their US rivals in token consumption since February (Zijing Wu / Financial Times)
OpenAI has surpassed $100M in annualized revenue from ChatGPT ads, has expanded to 600+ advertisers, and plans to launch self-serve advertiser access in April (Stephanie Palazzolo / The Information)
Leaked memo: Meta’s Reality Labs is reorganizing employees into AI-native “pods” focused on specific outcomes, as part of a shift toward a flatter organization (Charles Rollet / Business Insider)
Book excerpt: how Google acquired DeepMind for $650M in 2014, beating Facebook to the deal; Mustafa Suleyman used poker-style bluffing to secure a safety board (Sebastian Mallaby / Wall Street Journal)
more news
WhatsApp rolls out features and updates: an AI tool that suggests replies based on a user’s conversations, the ability to touch up photos with Meta AI, and more (Aisha Malik / TechCrunch)
Melania Trump appeared alongside Figure AI’s Figure 3 humanoid robot at the White House to push integrating tech into US children’s educational and social lives (Katie Rogers / New York Times)
Sources: Apple granted out-of-cycle bonuses worth several hundred thousand dollars to iPhone hardware designers, as OpenAI and others poach its engineers (Mark Gurman / Bloomberg)
Sources: Chinese chipmaker CXMT hit ~$8B in 2025 revenue, up 130% YoY, and projects ~$435M in adjusted net income, excluding one-time items, ahead of an IPO (Bloomberg)
Interviews with 37 Anduril sources detail safety concerns and project challenges at Anduril’s manufacturing operations; Anduril calls the claims “inaccurate” (Paresh Dave / Wired)
How Theia, a satellite imaging startup that raised $250M+ by 2020, collapsed after the US DOJ indicted its founder and four other execs on federal fraud charges (Brent Crane / Bloomberg)
An oral history of Apple’s earliest days told by people who lived it, including Steve Wozniak, Ronald Wayne, Mike Markkula, and Liza Loop, as Apple turns 50 (Harry McCracken / Fast Company)
Filing: Apple settled its June 2025 lawsuit against former Vision Pro designer Di Liu, who agreed to return confidential docs to Apple and pay monetary damages (Chance Miller / 9to5Mac)
San Francisco became a lab for police surveillance after initially fighting it; the SFPD had a record 700 drone flights in February, up from 93 in February 2025 (Cyrus Farivar / The San Francisco Standard)
The US FCC opens a comment period for a proposal to help return outsourced call center jobs to the US; critics say the plan could drive companies to automation (Patience Haggin / Wall Street Journal)

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