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YouTube's AI Is Ready to Customize Your Scrolling


AI is coming for your YouTube feed algorithm, if you want it.

The platform announced a new feature this week that can create a personalized feed based on a prompt describing your interests. In itsannouncement, YouTube suggests prompts like unwinding after work with 10-minute guided meditations or something different from your usual interests. And you can save your prompt as a pin at the top of your Home page to revisit it.

YouTube unveiled the new feature on Wednesday, along with a few new AI updates, including automatic AI detection and clear labels for AI-generated content. The AI customized feed feature is available now and rolling out to US viewers signed in on the YouTube mobile or desktop p. It’s unclear if or when the feature will be available internationally or on TV ps. A representative for YouTube did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Read more: Google I/O 2026 Rec: Everything Announced

How YouTube’s new AI feature works

Here’s how it works: You’ll t the “Your custom feed” chip on the Home page and enter a prompt that describes the video you’re looking for. You can also choose from YouTube’s suggested prompts for a custom feed. YouTube says you can edit the prompt at any time.

To enable the feature, you’ll need to turn your search and watch history on in your account settings. Google recommends using theHelp Centerif you have trouble using the feature. YouTube hasn’t shared what data will be used to generate the feed or if it will be saved.

YouTube is rolling out other AI features that could she your experience. Google’s‘Ask YouTube’is a search feature that will find the exact part of a video that answers your question.

The trouble with content creation and AI

The big question is what YouTube’s new AI feature will mean for content creators. We’re unsure how the tool will interpret prompts — whether it’s based on your watch history or keywords. Will it focus on videos that are already popular? And will it focus on newer creators or those with high view counts?

AI features are pearing more and more in search engine results, and publishers and creators of content are often seeing their traffic drop as a result. Will a similar outcome hpen on YouTube? We’ll have to wait and see.

Watch this: ‘Ask YouTube’ AI, the ple Watch Legal Win and Social Media Scams | Tech Today

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YouTube Premiums latest features include an auto-speed setting – Engadget

YouTube Premiums latest features include an auto-speed setting – Engadget


AI-powered recommendations and more background playback options are on the way to YouTube.

YouTube is adding some features for Premium members that it suggests will come in particularly useful for podcast fans. An auto-speed option is available on Android now and will arrive on iOS soon. YouTube said this “intelligently adjusts playback speed during relevant moments like slower speech or information-dense segments” in podcasts and other types of videos.

Some other podcast ps have long offered similar features. For instance, in Overcast (the podcast p I use), the smart speed setting aims to shorten silences, which is pretty handy.

Premium and YouTube Music Premium subscribers in select countries have access to an AI-powered podcast recommendation tool as well. The Ask Music feature in the YouTube Music p — which offers a way to generate a personalized radio station or playlist — now supports podcast recommendations that can be based on your mood, a certain genre or shows you already enjoy.

In addition, Premium users on Android have access to an on-the-go mode. According to YouTube, this offers users easier access to listening controls for videos that are playing in the background, such as being able to skip back and forward. This feature will hit iOS in the coming months.

For some folks, these updates might take some of the sting out of the YouTube Premium price rise that takes effect in the US in June.

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Tech

The World's Most Luxurious Foldable Phone Is Here for the 1%


If you thought Samsung’s $2,000 Galaxy Z Fold 7 is che, ugly and only fit for use by peasants with only four or five bedrooms in their house, then luxury-phone maker Vertu has the foldable phone for you. The Alphafold, as the company’s newest device is called, uses materials like calf skin, alligator skin, 24 karat gold and, sure, actual diamonds in its construction — and it starts at a mere $6,880.

Still too che and nasty for you? That’s fine, Vertu offers a complete customization service with pricing being “effectively uncped.” Some of the company’s bespoke projects for the ultrarich have had six figure price tags attached. It sure puts the $800 Motorola Razr to shame.

Alligator skin and real gold? No problem here!

Vertu

So what do you get for all that money? Well, much of it goes on whatever wild materials you want Vertu to use on your phone. Each unit is made mostly to order and built by hand according to the specifications you’ve requested.

The Alphafold is a book-style foldable, with an 8-inch “crease free” inner display, a 6,500-mAh silicon-carbon battery and a rear camera setup consisting of a 50-megixel main camera, 5-megixel telephoto and 50-megixel ultrawide. Vertu also says the device runs on Qualcomm’s Sndragon 8 Gen 4. It’s not clear at the time of writing exactly which model this is, but either way, it’s a step behind Qualcomm’s current flagship 8 Elite Gen 5.

Dispointed that the specs are kinda… meh? Yeah, me too, but Vertu’s probably rightly assuming that its hyper-wealthy clients will be too busy running their vast empires to want to spend much time taking artistic photos of whatever landsces they’re being chauffeured through or achieving the best frame rates when playing Genshin Impact.

The camera specs might not be the best around, but they’re likely more than enough for any jet-setting CEO.

Vertu

To help those underpreciated CEOs achieve their definitely-well-meaning goals, the Alphafold is packed with agentic AI tools. Vertu claims that these tools will not only do things like analyze your company’s data but can even make strategic recommendations.

Unsurprisingly, Vertu is keen to make it clear that the AI will not operate wholly on its own, stating that it “should function as a trusted execution partner for decision-makers, not as an unrestricted autonomous system.” So no need to worry that your phone will decide to sell your company when its stock hits a high or opt to ironically vote you off the executive board because you’ve trusted decision-making to your phone.

There’s a whole load of other business-focused stuff and AI trickery on board, but as someone whose income is somewhat below the threshold of literally any of Vertu’s customers, my interest started to wane once I was done looking at the pictures of the luxury device — just like when I used to read in school.

The big internal screen is the best place to look at your company spreadsheets or whatever it is that business folk do.

Vertu

Still, I’m genuinely keen to see this thing in the flesh and take an opportunity to see what using such an elite handset is actually like. Then I guess I’ll have to come back down to earth with a bump when I have to return to my disgustingly che iPhone 17 Pro like I’m in some kind of Dickensian slum. Gross.

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Tech

Google employee accused of making $1 million from insider trading on Polymarket – Engadget

Google employee accused of making $1 million from insider trading on Polymarket – Engadget


Who could have seen this coming?

To the surprise of nobody at all, people are continuing to abuse prediction markets to make a quick buck. Or according to accusations recently levied against a Google employee, a million quick bucks. Software engineer Michele Spagnuolo has been accused of using insider information from his employer to place bets on Polymarket about common Google search subjects. A federal criminal complaint has charged Spagnuolo with commodities fraud, wire fraud and money laundering. He allegedly earned $1.2 million after betting that the top-searched person on Google for 2025 would be singer d4vd, then tried to hide the source of his sudden windfall.

A Google spokesperson shared the following statement with ABC News regarding the case: “We’re working with law enforcement on their investigation. The employee accessed our marketing material using a tool available to all employees, but using such confidential information to place bets is a serious breach of our policies. We’ve placed the employee on leave and will take the propriate action.”

Insider trading has been making headlines with some regularity on prediction markets. Everyone from an employee of YouTuber MrBeast to political candidates to military personnel have tried to turn privileged information into money on these platforms. Some people have allegedly gotten up to even stranger hijinks to try and scam the bets. Polymarket adopted new rules in March specifically to cut down on insider trading, but only time will tell whether the policies are effective.

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Tech

Bootids Meteor Shower May Explode With Meteors or Fizzle Out: How to Watch

Bootids Meteor Shower May Explode With Meteors or Fizzle Out: How to Watch


There are still tons of mysteries in the universe, and the Bootids meteor shower is one of them. The upcoming meteor shower occurs during the last week of June and the first few days of July, and it has the potential to be one of the weakest or strongest meteor showers of the year. How’s that for noncommital?

The Bootids meteor shower officially runs from June 22 to July 2, with a peak on the evening of June 26 and the morning of June 27. Its 10-day run is among the shortest of any named meteor showers.

Bootids is also the single most unpredictable meteor shower of the year in terms of how many visible meteors it can produce. It’s not terribly active during most years and produces proximately one or two meteors per hour during its peak. However, Bootids is known for having random outbursts, during which it produces as many meteors as the bigger meteor showers.

The most recent such occurrence was in 2004, and other big years include 1998, 1927, 1921 and 1916. The 1998 Bootids meteor shower is legendary, with reports of 100 meteors per hour. That’s as many as Perseids, which is arguably the most famous meteor shower of the year, and right up there with other active showers like Geminids and Quadrantids.

Since science hasn’t yet figured out how to reliably predict these outbursts, any year could be the next big one.

The Boötes constellation will be high in the southern sky right after sunset June 26.

Stellarium

How to see Bootids

All meteor showers take their name from the constellation where they pear to originate, a point known as the radiant. For Bootids, that’s the Boötes constellation.

Boötes sits high in the southern sky and will be immediately visible after sunset on June 26. It’s visible all night, dipping into the western sky overnight before nestling against the western horizon before sunrise. If you’re having trouble finding it, a night sky m like Stellarium or Time and Date can help you find it.

Follow standard tips for seeing any meteor shower. You want to get away from the city and suburbs to reduce noise pollution. (June’s moon will be about 90% full on June 26, which means you can’t esce all of the light pollution.)

Everything is easy from there. Settle into a comfortable spot, don’t use bright lights, and avoid magnification aids like binoculars and telescopes, as they obstruct your view and may cause you to miss a meteor.

How many meteors will Bootids produce?

Your guess is as good as anyone’s. The Bootids meteor shower typically produces a scant one or two meteors per hour.

However, these meteors are known for being slow, bright and long-lasting, so what few are likely to show up should be pretty easy to spot, even with June’s nearly full moon.

But prior outbursts of up to 100 meteors an hour took astronomers completely by surprise. Anything could hpen.

Why is Bootids so difficult to predict?

Every meteor shower has a parent body, such as a comet or asteroid, that leaves behind a trail of dust and debris. Earth moves through those trails of dust and debris, which then enter the atmosphere and produce meteor showers.

Most comets and asteroids leave a pretty consistent trail, which leads to fairly consistent meteor showers. You can count on Perseids to put on a decent show just about every year.

The Bootids meteor shower is just like the rest. Its parent comet is called 7P/Pons-Winnecke, which orbits the sun every 6.3 years and is highly affected by Jupiter’s gravity.

The difference is that 7P/Pons-Winnecke leaves an erratic, uneven trail of debris. When the Earth moves through this trail, it might pass through a weaker segment, producing only a handful of meteors, or through a stronger segment, producing dozens or more per hour. There’s no way to know for sure, you’ll just have to stay up and see for yourself.

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Tech

Halide Mark III adds a built-in editor to the popular camera app – Engadget

Halide Mark III adds a built-in editor to the popular camera app – Engadget


The update also introduces the p’s take on film stock simulation.

Halide, one of the best alternatives to the iPhone’s built-in camera p, is getting another upgrade. Developer Lux Optics is rolling out Halide Mark III, a paid update that adds a photo editor and filters that simulate film stock. The features extend Halide’s proach to photogrhy after Lux Optics added a way to circumvent ple’s image processing pipeline with the release of Halide Mark II in 2024.

Looks, Halide’s new filtering system, is part of a larger “film simulation engine” that’s being introduced in Mark III. All the p’s photo features can be customized or disabled, but Halide will now add things like grain and halation to photos you cture depending on the look you chose. Halide Mark III includes five new looks alongside Process Zero, the p’s zero-processing option, and ple’s default image processing. Those include:

  • Valencia: A look designed for landsces and citysces, with “thick contrast, deep saturation and solid color separation.”

  • Rembrandt: A look for portraits that features “thick contrast in the mid-tones” and “abundant color in the low end” to highlight bone structure and cture uniform skin-tones.

  • Nova: Another look that works best with landsces, and is “exceptionally colorful, with tight contrast and smooth peachy highlights.”

  • Zephyr: The “most subtle and restrained” look, with “filmic contrast” and “the character of a traditional print.”

  • Chroma Noir: A black and white look with “medium contrast” and “a touch of extra grain.”

All these new looks include HDR support if you want more detail in highlights and shadows. They can also all be edited and tweaked with Halide’s new Photo Lab editor. The built-in editor is designed to be proachable. There’s a Quick Edit tab if you want to quickly switch film simulations or toggle HDR, along with dedicated sections for making in-depth changes to things like color balance and exposure. The whole thing is designed to show you as much or as little as you need, but the iPad version of Halide Mark III seems like the ideal place to edit thanks to its two-panel setup.

These new features are being paired with updates to Halide’s design and the placement of its virtual buttons. The new design adopts some of ple’s Liquid Glass tenets, while exposing the most important controls — things like focus, aspect ratio and a lens picker — so that you don’t have to go digging through menus.

As with previous updates, Halide Mark III is available for a monthly subscription of $10, a yearly subscription of $20 or a one-time purchase of $60. Existing subscribers and anyone who purchased Halide Mark II will get the update for free.

This is the first major Halide update Lux Optics has rolled out since its co-founder, Sebastiaan de With, left the company to join ple in January 2026. The split has reportedly been a bit more complicated than it initially peared. Not only did ple originally try to acquire the company, but de With was reportedly fired from Lux Optics after the company’s other co-founder Ben Sandofsky began investigating him for allegedly misusing funds.

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