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Meta’s $135bn AI spending plan: what it’s really buying (and the bubble risk)

Summary: Meta says it could spend up to $135bn this year—nearly double last year’s AI-related spend—mostly on infrastructure that powers artificial intelligence. This is not just a “bigger budget” story. It’s a strategic land grab for compute, talent, and distribution at a moment when leaders across tech and finance are openly debating whether the AI […]

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Amazon’s 16,000 job cuts: what ‘remove bureaucracy’ really means

Summary: Amazon has confirmed 16,000 job cuts, after an internal message about redundancies was reportedly distributed early by mistake and then cancelled. Management describes the move as part of a multi‑quarter effort to “remove bureaucracy,” reduce layers, and move faster—especially inside Amazon Web Services (AWS), where costs and organisational complexity have grown alongside the business.

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TikTok US: when outages look like censorship (and why trust breaks fast)

Summary: After TikTok’s US business was split from ByteDance, thousands of users reported strange behaviour—new posts stuck at “zero views,” missing search results, and messaging quirks. In that environment, people quickly concluded the platform was censoring political content. TikTok’s US operation says many problems were technical (a recovery process after infrastructure disruption) rather than policy-driven

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Cisco CEO on the AI ‘bubble’: why the crash can still leave winners

Summary: Cisco CEO Chuck Robbins says AI could be bigger than the internet, but he expects a painful shakeout first—“winners will emerge, and there’ll be carnage along the way.” That’s not a throwaway quote. Robbins lived through the dot‑com boom as Cisco became the most valuable company in the world in 2000, then lost roughly

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Iran’s internet returns in fragments: how ‘rationed connectivity’ actually works

Summary: After nearly three weeks of one of Iran’s most extreme internet shutdowns, some connectivity appears to be returning—but not as a normal “switch back on.” Monitoring groups and analysts describe something closer to controlled, intermittent, and selective access: some services work at some times, for some people, often only briefly. This is a technology

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TikTok settles before social media addiction trial — why ‘design liability’ matters

Summary: TikTok reached a confidential settlement just hours before jury selection in a US “social media addiction” case—avoiding becoming a defendant in what lawyers describe as a landmark trial. The bigger story is not one settlement. It’s a shift in how courts are being asked to view social platforms: not merely as neutral hosts of

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Google Assistant settlement: what accidental recording teaches about voice privacy

Summary: Google has agreed to pay $68m to settle a lawsuit that alleged Google Assistant recorded private conversations after being triggered unintentionally. Google denied wrongdoing in the settlement filing, saying it sought to avoid litigation. The story matters because voice assistants sit at the boundary between convenience and surveillance. They are designed to listen for

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Meta trials paid subscriptions: AI features, limits, and the future of ad-funded social

Summary: Meta is preparing to trial premium subscriptions for Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp—while keeping core services free. The pitch is not “pay to use social media.” It’s pay for extra features, including expanded AI capabilities, and potentially higher limits on certain actions. This matters because it’s another step in a wider platform shift: ad-funded social

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TikTok US expands location collection: why ‘precise’ is a big shift

Summary: TikTok’s new US joint venture has updated its privacy policy to allow the collection of precise location data (depending on user settings). That sounds like a minor wording change, but it’s strategically important because TikTok is simultaneously being reorganised under a US-focused structure designed to address national‑security concerns about data access and algorithm influence.

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