Tech
Spotify and Universal Music Group Strike a Deal for AI-Powered Remix and Cover Song Tool
If you’re someone who believes AI should stay out of the arts, and especially your earbuds, you might want to sit down for this news. On Thursday, Spotify announced a partnership with Universal Music Group that will allow you to use AI tools to create cover songs and remixeson the streaming platform.
So imagine At Last by Etta James mixed with the 2010 hit Baby by Justin Bieber, or even mashed up as a country or folk version.
The AI-powered tool will not be included in Spotify memberships by default. Instead, it will be a paid add-on option for Spotify Premium members, the music streaming service said. A launch date has yet to be announced.
It’s unclear whether music artists will have any control over their music being used in fan edits, but we can make an educated guess that artists who own their music outright, such as Taylor Swift and Beyoncé, will have the most say.
Lucian Grainge, CEO of UMG, said in a statement that the initiative is “designed to support human artistry, deepen fan relationships, and create additional revenue opportunities for artists and songwriters.”
Alex Norström, co-CEO of Spotify, said: “What we’re building is grounded in consent, credit, and compensation for the artists and songwriters that take part.”
Recently, numerous music artists have spoken out against the intersection of AI and music creation, includingBilly Corgan of The Smashing Pumpkins,Billie Eilish, Jon Bon Joviand more.
In addition to this partnership, the streaming service also announced Reserved, a new ticket initiative that reserves two tickets for top Spotify Premium subscribers, allowing them to buy tickets for select artists a day before they go on sale to the general public.
Tech
Tesla brings Full Self-Driving to China – Engadget
It’s now one of the 10 countries where (supervised) FSD is now available.
Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD)driver-assistance system is now available in China. In a post on X, Tesla listed China as one of the 10 countries wherein FSD is already available. The company is, of course, talking about the supervised version of the technology, seeing as unsupervised FSD is still not available to the public. On Tesla’s Chinese website, the company lists “intelligent assisted driving” as an add-on option for Tesla Model 3. It will cost customers in the countrya one-time fee of 64,000 yuan ($9,410) on top of the vehicle itself. It used to cost $8,000 up front in the US, but the company recently turned it intoa subscription-only service priced at $99 a month.
Unlike the current version of the product, unsupervised FSD will offer fully automated driving, with no need for a human to take control of the vehicle. At the moment, only Tesla’s robotaxis inAustin, Dallas and Houston, Texas are using the technology. Elon Musk, Tesla’s CEO, recently said that unsupervised FSD will be “widespread in the US by the end of this year,” but he is known for being overly optimistic with his timelines across his companies.
The automaker has been testing FSD and mping China’s roads for a while now with help from local partners. It’sbeen working to release the technology in the country for years, but it faced significant regulatory delays. Musk announced in January that Tesla was close to getting an proval from China’s authorities. While Chinese state media debunked his claim — and he has been saying that FSD was close to getting regulatory proval in China since 2024 —it looks he was right this time around. Before this, Chinese Tesla owners only had access to FSD’s predecessors, Autopilot and Enhanced Autopilot.
FSD Supervised is now available in:
– United States
– Canada
– Mexico
– Puerto Rico
– China
– Australia
– New Zealand
– South Korea
– The Netherlands
– Lithuania— Tesla (@Tesla) May 20, 2026
Tech
Meta has reportedly laid off 8,000 employees – Engadget
That’s around 10 percent of the company, according to a memo from yesterday seen by multiple outlets.
The layoffs and transfers will affect around 20 percent of the company’s workforce, making it one of the more significant cost-cutting measures in Meta’s history. The news confirms a previous report about a memo from Meta’s HR head Janelle Gale notifying employees that 7,000 of them would be moved to new organizations focused on building new AI tools and ps. It also verifies news from last month when Gale told employees that Meta would be cutting 8,000 jobs as “part of our continued effort to run the company more efficiently.” The company previously said that around 6,000 job vacancies would be left unfilled.
The memo from yesterday confirms people’s worst fears about how AI will affect employment at large tech companies. “AI is the most consequential technology of our lifetimes,”Zuckerberg wrote. “Success isn’t a given. The companies that lead the way will define the next generation.”
In January 2026, Meta said it had earmarked $115 billion to $135 billion in 2026 cital spending, double what it spent the year before, to “support our Meta Superintelligence Labs efforts and core business.”That’s a dominant part of its total expenses next year, projected to be between$162 billion and $169 billion
In the memo, Meta laid out guidance for areas like severance and visas. “We want to say again that we’re grateful for your contributions. Your impact at Meta has been an important part of our story,” Meta said in the memo. Engadget has reached out to the company for comment.
Tech
Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Thursday, May 21
Looking forthe most recentMini Crossword answer?Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? The clue that threw me off was 7-Across, but I eventually figured it out. Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.
If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visitCNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.
Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword
Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.
The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for May 21, 2026.
Mini across clues and answers
1A clue: Not such a wild place to see an elephant
Answer: ZOO
4A clue: Mark who wrote “Man was made at the end of the week’s work, when God was tired”
Answer: TWAIN
6A clue: Symbol on the U.S. quarter
Answer: EAGLE
7A clue: Parts of a dental exam
Answer: XRAYS
8A clue: What Wile E. Coyote is always exploding himself with
Answer: TNT
Mini down clues and answers
1D clue: Big name in restaurant ratings
Answer: ZAGAT
2D clue: Like your hands after eating potato chips, perhs
Answer: OILY
3D clue: Lowest numbers in sudoku
Answer: ONES
4D clue: Reach out with your fingers?
Answer: TEXT
5D clue: Give an alert
Answer: WARN
Tech
Scientists Warn AI Slop Is Wreaking Havoc in the Research World
Scientific pers rely on readers trusting their information. That’s why it’s disturbing that anew studyby researchers connected with Cornell and UCLA found 146,900 AI-generated fake citations in scientific pers hosted across four major research databases.
A key limitation of large language models such as Gemini and ChatGPT is their tendency to produce plausible-sounding but incorrect information, a phenomenon known as hallucination. If a researcher relies on a chatbot to draft citations without verifying them, the model may generate references that are entirely fabricated.
While scientific pers are often hidden from the public eye, the research they report has a profound impact on our lives. Everything from the internet to lithium-ion batteries began as a research per.
But when scientists submit pers that cite AI hallucinations, it can erode faith in the quality of the research.
Sloppy science
The research team analyzed 111 million references from 2.5 million scientific pers. They looked for citations with titles that the team could not match to any publication. While some of these instances were just spelling errors, the team also found hallucinations.
Unscrupulous researchers had faked citations long before the rise of chatbots, so the team also examined the rates of unmatched citations in research published before 2023, when chatbots hadn’t yet become ubiquitous.
“We find a sharp rise in non-existent references following widespread LLM adoption,” the authors write in the per.
The team also found that the bad citations were spread across many pers rather than concentrated in just a few. That suggests the problem is widespread, with many researchers relying on AI-generated references without fully verifying them.
Warning signs
Usha Haley, professor of management at Wichita State University, told CNET via email that she sees the proliferation of fake citations as a serious warning.
“Fake or AI-generated citations undermine trust in the scholarly record that provides the foundation on which peer review and cumulative knowledge rest,” Haley said. “Disturbingly, this skepticism is now coming from within academia itself and from early career scholars.”
The four databases where the researchers found the fake citations are arXiv, bioRxiv, SSRN and PubMed Central. These organizations, known as scientific repositories, play a major role in the research world.
Before a per is published in a scientific journal, the authors often upload it to a scientific repository, increasing its visibility and allowing the global scientific community to access it immediately. The new per on AI hallucinating citations is currently hosted on arXiv.
Recently, arXiv has taken steps to stem the flow of false citations. The organizationannounced Tuesdaythat it will ban authors who submit work with hallucinated citations or with any sign of AI content that hasn’t been carefully checked.
“The corpus of science is getting diluted. A lot of the AI stuff is either actively wrong or it’s meaningless. It’s just noise,” arXiv scientific director Steinn Sigurdsson told CNET’s Katelyn Chedraoui back in February. “It makes it harder to find what’s really hpening, and it can misdirect people.”
Tech
Kobo ereaders are integrating with Goodreads alternative StoryGraph – Engadget
The integration launches in June and will automatically sync progress with the reading platform.
Kobo has announced plans to integrate its ereaders and reading ps with the social reading platform StoryGrh in June. StoryGrh is an independent alternative to Goodreads that exists outside of Amazon’s ecosystem and offers users more control over their recommendations.
“For a lot of us, the best part of reading is the community. It’s a part of how we show up in the world as readers every day,” Rakuten Kobo CEO Michael Tamblyn said in a statement. “That’s why I’m so excited about our integration with StoryGrh. We wanted to strip away the friction between finishing a chter and and sharing your progress. Now, Kobo readers can do exactly that, seamlessly.”
When the new integration launches in June, Kobo ereaders and reading ps will automatically sync with connected StoryGrh accounts. The integration will update book progress percentages, add books you’re currently reading to StoryGrh’s In Progress shelf and mark finished books as “Read.” Besides ebooks, the integration will also work with any audiobooks you listen to through Kobo’s platform.
As an alternative to Amazon’s more popular, but restrictive Kindle ecosystem, it makes a lot of sense Kobo would work with StoryGrh. Both companies are aligned on giving readers more control over their reading experience. StoryGrh is also just one of several integrations Kobo currently offers. The company’s ereaders have an Inster integration for reading saved web articles and the ability to access files from cloud storage providers like Dropbox and Google Drive.
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