Technology

Blue Origin’s ‘TeraWave’ vs Starlink: the next battle for orbital internet infrastructure

Summary: Blue Origin says it will launch more than 5,400 satellites to build a new global communications network called TeraWave, positioned as a rival to Starlink. The company is framing it as an enterprise/government-grade network for moving huge amounts of data, rather than consumer broadband. The larger story is that low-Earth orbit is turning into […]

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Snap settles addiction lawsuit: why courts are shifting from ‘content’ to ‘product design’

Summary: Snap settled a social media addiction lawsuit just days before trial — a case that claims algorithmic product design contributed to addiction and mental health harms. Snap is out (in this case). Meta, TikTok and YouTube remain, with a trial still scheduled. The settlement matters because it shows these cases are moving from abstract

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UK under-16 social media ban: why the hard part is definitions and age checks

Summary: The UK government is consulting on a social media ban for under‑16s, alongside related measures aimed at making schools “phone-free by default” and forcing platforms to consider stronger age checks and limits on features that drive compulsive use. The policy pressure is real. But the evidence base is still developing, and the implementation details

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Google appeals search monopoly ruling: why remedy design matters more than the headline

Summary: Google has appealed a landmark US antitrust ruling that found it illegally held a monopoly in online search. On paper, appeals are routine. In practice, this one sits at the centre of two overlapping shifts: regulators trying to unwind “default” power in tech markets, and generative AI changing what “search” even is. The most

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Google’s antitrust appeal: if you don’t change defaults, do you change anything?

Summary: Google is appealing the US antitrust ruling that found it illegally held a monopoly in online search—and it’s asking the court to pause the remedies ordered so far. The debate is now less about whether Google is powerful (it is) and more about whether the proposed fixes change anything meaningful. A useful way to

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Ads come to ChatGPT: why this changes the incentives of consumer AI

Summary: OpenAI is starting to test adverts inside ChatGPT for some users, alongside a new lower-priced subscription tier (ChatGPT Go). That’s a major shift because it changes the “business logic” of consumer AI from a pure subscription product into the familiar internet model: attention + targeting + monetisation. OpenAI says ads won’t influence answers and

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How would a UK social media ban for under-16s work (and would it actually help)?

Summary: The UK government is consulting on the idea of a social media ban for under-16s, alongside measures intended to reduce phone use in schools and curb features that drive compulsive behaviour. The immediate political question is “should we ban?” The harder policy question is “what exactly would that mean, and would it work?” Bans

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Wikipedia’s name is trivia — but the real story is how the knowledge commons survives AI

Summary: Wikipedia’s co-founder Jimmy Wales explained where the name “Wikipedia” comes from in a BBC interview clip. It’s a small human-interest moment—but it points to a bigger topic that matters more in 2026 than it did in 2006: how an open, community-governed knowledge system survives in an era where AI tools can remix and repackage

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Tech Life: Humanoid robots for household chores — how close are we?

In brief: Meet the humanoid robots designed to help with household chores. What this is about This episode looks at the push toward humanoid robots for everyday tasks — a trend driven by better computer vision, cheaper sensors, and rapid progress in robotics control software. Why humanoid robots are hard A humanoid shape is flexible,

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