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The FCC is cracking down on DJI tech that dodged the foreign drone ban

The Xtra Muse and the DJI Osmo Pocket 3. | Photo by Sean Hollister / The Verge

Last year, we told you about Xtra, the company that lets DJI sneak its popular cameras into the US, and Skyrover, a brand seemingly selling DJI drones in disguise. They're just two of the many firms DJI is suspected of starting to skirt the United States' foreign drone ban.

But it appears the FCC is finally doing something about "DJI front companies," as watcher Konrad Iturbe dubbed them last year. Today, the FCC is fining eight of them $25,000 each - and giving them until Monday, July 20th, just 10 calendar days, to answer the FCC's questions before the agency takes further action.

Those companies include Cogito Tech, Fixaxo Technology, …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Apple sues OpenAI for allegedly stealing hardware secrets

An image of Tim Cook

Apple has sued OpenAI, alleging that engineers stole Apple secrets to advance the AI startup's hardware plans. In its complaint, Apple says it uncovered "a pattern of theft of Apple's trade secrets by OpenAI employees who were formerly at Apple." In addition to OpenAI, the lawsuit also names IO Products - Jony Ive's hardware startup, which OpenAI bought in 2025 - along with two specific employees, Tang Tan (OpenAI's chief hardware officer) and Chang Liu (who joined OpenAI from Apple in January).

An Apple spokesperson shared this statement with 9to5Mac:

At Apple, our teams are constantly developing breakthrough technologies to create the b …

Read the full story at The Verge.

A decade later, Pokémon Go finally made good on its original promise

A photo of a group of people clustered into Times Square playing Pokémon Go.

When Niantic dropped the first Pokémon Go trailer in 2015, it was hard to grasp how a bunch of players could work together to catch a pokémon like Mewtwo. But this week at the game's 10th anniversary event in New York City, Pokémon Go showed the world how it's done. Almost 2,000 players (many of them Pokémon Go influencers) packed into Times Square on Thursday evening to participate in a special battle. It was cool to see Times Square briefly go dark before the billboards began lighting up, revealing an escaped Mewtwo Mega Evolving, and it was even wilder to see people living the fantasy depicted in the game's first trailer.

Even though mo …

Read the full story at The Verge.

ICE is threatening to deport witnesses of its latest shooting

Department of Homeland Security seal on white background.
Department of Homeland Security. | Image: The Verge

Advocates are demanding that the Department of Homeland Security release bodycam footage of the fatal shooting of Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a Mexican immigrant who was killed by ICE officers in Houston during a traffic stop earlier this week. But DHS claims the agents involved in the shooting weren't wearing body cameras because of the lengthy government shutdown that prevented ICE and Customs and Border Protection from receiving additional federal funding for 76 days - a shutdown that was itself spurred by congressional bickering over reforms to DHS after federal agents killed two civilians earlier this year.

Two competing narratives have em …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Nvidia’s biggest RAM supplier just had a trillion-dollar debut on Wall Street

A photo of SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung.
SK Hynix CEO Kwak Noh-Jung. | Image: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images

As the AI boom boosts demand for RAM, SK Hynix - one of the world's biggest suppliers of memory chips - launched on Wall Street Friday. The South Korean chipmaker opened at $170 per share and raised $26.5 billion, surpassing Alibaba's record as the largest debut of a foreign company, according to reports from The Associated Press and CNN.

After reaching a $1 trillion valuation in May, SK Hynix briefly overtook Samsung as South Korea's most valuable company. SK Hynix is one of three major companies benefitting from a surge in demand for DRAM and high-bandwidth memory (HBM). These components have become essential for the widespread buildout o …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Spotify will let you fine-tune your weekly Release Radar playlist

The Spotify brand logo against a green musical background.

Spotify is giving listeners control to fine-tune what gets surfaced for them in Release Radar - one of its most popular weekly playlists. The new options allow you to narrow the playlist to a specific genre, focus on artists that are new to you, and more. Listeners can choose from up to five options like "Discover new artists," "Editors' picks," and "Pop." They're rolling out now across mobile and desktop apps and will appear at the top of your Release Radar playlist once they're available.

Spotify also says it's making tweaks to the algorithm to serve up "more personalized recommendations," along with a new look featuring updated cover and …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Netflix is turning into YouTube

Netflix has shows and movies. And video games. And live sports. And podcasts. And also, apparently, YouTube videos? For a company that used to seem like the next big thing in TV, it all feels a little frenetic, and maybe a tad desperate. For a company that sees sleep as its primary competitor, it might all make perfect sense.

On this episode of The Vergecast, David and Nilay try to figure out why Netflix continues to expand its content machine and whether the company's ongoing YouTube-ification makes any sense at all. Many have tried to compete with YouTube; none have succeeded. Does that mean Netflix might inch its way up the Go90 Scale of …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Disney Plus is reportedly looking into a free streaming tier

Disney Plus logo on a black and red background.

Disney Plus is considering making some of its content free to watch, according to a report from Business Insider. A source tells the outlet that Adam Smith, Disney's chief product and technology officer, mentioned a free streaming tier during the company's town hall on Thursday.

It's not clear which shows or movies the purported free streaming tier involves, or when Disney would consider rolling it out, but Business Insider reports that it's "part of an ongoing discussion about concepts to better serve fans." Disney didn't immediately respond to The Verge's request for comment.

With YouTube taking up a large portion of viewers' time in fro …

Read the full story at The Verge.

Anker’s 3-in-1 Qi2.2 charging station is $95 off

Anker Prime Wireless Charging Station
Anker’s Prime Wireless Charging Station can deliver up to 25W of power to compatible iPhones.

If you’re looking to declutter your nightstand and quickly charge up to three of your most-used gadgets, Anker’s Prime Wireless Charging Station is an easy way to do both. The station has spots for your MagSafe-ready iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods, and right now it’s down to a new all-time low of $134.99 ($95 off) in white at Amazon and directly from Anker with code WS7DV2LJ3JGU. You can also buy it in black from either retailer for $5 more.

Anker Prime Wireless Charging Station (3-in-1, MagGo, AirCool, Dock Stand)

Where to Buy:

The Qi2.2-compatible charger supports up to 25W wireless charging for compatible iPhones (the iPhone 16 and up, excluding the 16E and 17E). Anker claims this charging station can bring an iPhone 17 Pro from 0 to 50 percent in about 22 minutes. It also includes dedicated 5W charging pads for an Apple Watch and AirPods (or another pair that includes a wireless charging case), allowing you to power all three devices simultaneously. You can switch between three charging modes depending on your priorities, whether that’s fast top-ups, cooler charging, or quiet, slower charging overnight.

What makes this 3-in-1 charger stand out from the competition is its 1.65-inch touchscreen that displays each device’s charging status, power draw, or temperature. If you’d rather customize things, you can pair it with Anker’s app to adjust settings, switch charging modes, and tweak the display. The adjustable phone stand tilts up to 80 degrees, and Anker even includes a 65W USB-C power adapter and cable in the box, so you won’t need to buy those separately.


A few more worthwhile deals

  • You can buy the Fanttik A10 Pro digital tape measure for $49.99 ($40 off) with code AKJL8MH3 at Amazon, which marks a new low price. The tool functions as both a 165-foot laser distance meter and a 9.8-foot digital tape measure, making it useful for measuring rooms and hanging stuff on your wall. It also features a bright 1.47-inch color display, and supports measurements in six different units. The digital tape measure can calculate distance, area, and volume, too. It supports USB-C charging and stores up to 30 previous measurements. Sounds like a good upgrade to me if you’re always tinkering.
  • You can save up to $700 on LG’s C6 series of OLED TVs when you buy directly from LG, with free installation and up to $200 in Uber Eats or DoorDash credits that you won’t get from other retailers. The biggest savings are currently on the larger models, like the $1,999.99 ($700 off) 65-inch model. If you want a smaller size, the $1,699.99 ($300 off) 55-inch model is discounted but includes just $100 in Uber Eats or DoorDash credit compared to $200 with larger sizes. All of the TVs in this series sport excellent OLED panels with rich contrast and deep blacks, along with support for 165Hz refresh rate, Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync Premium variable refresh rate, Dolby Atmos support, and more.
  • Best Buy is throwing in a $30 gift card when you buy the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 for $249.99. The workout-focused earbuds feature secure ear hooks, excellent active noise cancellation, and built-in heart rate monitoring that integrates with apps like Nike Run Club, Peloton, and more. If you’re an Apple Fitness Plus user, you can also view metrics like your heart rate and calories burned. Read our review.

I spent a week using the Trump phone — it sucks

I used the Trump phone for a week so that you don’t have to.

The Trump phone was never a serious phone. Not when it was announced last June, in dodgy renders and with an incoherent spec sheet. Nor when Trump Mobile admitted - just two weeks later - that it wouldn't be made in the US. Not even when the company revealed the final phone, first to me over a video call in February and then to the world in April through a short commercial with the slick sheen of AI.

It's now on sale for $499, past the days of its tenuous, ever-shifting release dates. A few buyers even have the phone, The Verge among them, though more still seem not to.

It's clear now that the T1 is a real phone, but that doesn't mean it's …

Read the full story at The Verge.