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Spotify has announced an increase in premium subscription prices for users in multiple markets across the Middle East, Africa, Europe, Latin America, and the Asia-Pacific region.
Impacted subscribers will receive an email notification regarding the price increase, which will see monthly subscriptions rising from €10.99 to €11.99.
This decision follows a recent earnings report where Spotify missed revenue expectations, leading to an 11% drop in its stock price. Despite expressing dissatisfaction with the current state of the business, CEO Daniel Ek remains confident in the company's ambitions.
Following the price hike announcement, Spotify's shares experienced a 5% increase in pre-market trading.
Character.AI is introducing a social feed to its mobile apps, enabling users to share AI characters and chat with others.
The feed allows users to share images, videos, and chatbots, as well as snippets of chats and AI-generated images.
Users can create video clips with text prompts and images using the AvtarFX generative video model.
The new feed aims to blur the line between creator and consumer, offering both content consumption and creative opportunities.
This move follows a trend of AI-native apps incorporating social media features, similar to Video generation app Pika.
CrowdStrike reports a significant increase in North Koreans posing as remote IT workers to infiltrate Western companies, with over 320 incidents in the past year, a 220% increase from the previous year. These individuals use false identities and AI-generated resumes to gain employment, steal data, and generate funds for North Korea's nuclear weapons program.
The U.S. Department of Justice is actively working to disrupt these operations by targeting facilitators and "laptop farm" operations in the U.S. One North Korean operation stole the identities of 80 individuals to gain remote work at over 100 U.S. companies between 2021 and 2024. Identity verification processes are crucial to preventing the hiring of sanctioned workers.
OpenMind, a Silicon Valley startup, is developing OM1, an open-source software layer for humanoid robots, aiming to be the "Android" of robotics. Founded by Stanford professor Jan Liphardt, OpenMind is creating a new protocol called FABRIC that allows robots to verify identity and share context with each other, enabling them to learn and adapt more efficiently.
The company's first fleet of OM1-powered robotic dogs is set to ship in September, with plans to iterate based on user feedback. OpenMind recently secured $20 million in funding to further develop its technology and integrate it into people's homes, focusing on rapid iteration and identifying optimal applications for robots in human environments.
Joby Aviation is set to acquire Blade Air Mobility's helicopter ride-share business for up to $125 million. This acquisition includes the Blade brand and its passenger operations in the US and Europe.
Blade's CEO, Rob Wiesenthal, will continue to lead the business as a subsidiary of Joby. However, Blade's medical division will remain separate.
The deal provides Joby with a network of 12 terminals in key markets like New York City, including lounges and terminal bases at major airports.
Blade, founded in 2014, operates a digital network for booking private helicopter rides and flew over 50,000 passengers in 2024.
Joby Aviation, founded in 2009, aims to integrate its air taxi operations software into Blade's service, eventually transitioning to electric air taxis.
Apple is developing an 'answer engine,' similar to ChatGPT, through a new team focused on AI-driven search and information retrieval. This project aims to create a standalone app or enhance Siri, Safari, and other Apple products with improved search capabilities. The company is actively recruiting talent with experience in search algorithms and engine development to support this initiative. This move could potentially impact Apple's existing search agreement with Google.