In 2026, the lines between âconsoleâ and âPCâ have finally dissolved. Weâve moved past the era of clunky, loud gaming laptops and entered the age of the âAnywhere PC.â These handhelds have matured from enthusiast prototypes into polished daily drivers that let you play Cyberpunk 2077 on the train and then instantly dock to a […]
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After years of negotiations and false starts, Waymo is now allowed to operate a robotaxi service to and from the San Francisco International Airport (SFO). The Alphabet-owned company said in a blog post Thursday it will begin offering access to SFO to a select number of riders before offering it to all customers in the coming months.
Pickups and drop-offs will occur at the SFO Rental Car Center, which is accessible via AirTrain. Waymo said it plans to serve additional airport locations in the future.
Waymo’s SFO win comes as the company faces criticism and concerns about safety in some of the cities it operates. Waymo revealed Thursday that one of its robotaxis struck a child near an elementary school in Santa Monica. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is investigating the January 23 incident, in which the child sustained minor injuries. Waymo is also being investigated by the NHTSA and the National Transportation Safety Board over the illegal behavior of its robotaxis around school buses.
Access to airports, and particularly SFO, is critical to Waymo’s business model, which hinges on geographic scale and a high volume of riders.
“Serving rides to and from San Francisco International Airport delivers one of the most requested features for our riders and further deepens our relationship with the city,” Waymo co-CEO Tekedra Mawakana said in a statement.
The company has accelerated its plans over the past year, launching into new cities, increasing its fleet size, and adding freeways to where it operates. Waymo robotaxis now service most of the San Francisco Bay Area and down into Silicon Valley, where it has access to the San Jose Airport. It also operates in parts of Atlanta, Austin, Los Angeles, Miami, and most of Phoenix, including curbside service to the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport.
Waymo’s push to operate at SFO has taken years. It tried and failed to secure a permit in 2023 to map SFO, a first step to bringing its robotaxis there. Waymo then rebooted negotiations with the city and airport authority and was granted a permit in March 2025 that would allow it to map SFO with some data-sharing strings attached, according to language in the agreement viewed by TechCrunch at the time.
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By September, SFO and Waymo signed a testing and operations pilot permit, pushing the company closer to commercial operations at the airport.
DeepSeek is hiring for DeepSeek AI search, a multilingual, multimodal engine that could challenge Googleâs search habit. The listings also point to persistent AI agents, signaling a broader push beyond chatbots.
The post DeepSeek AI search is the clearest sign it wants Googleâs turf appeared first on Digital Trends.
Last year, Deezer introduced an AI detection tool that automatically tags fully AI-generated music for listeners and removes it from algorithmic and editorial recommendations.
The company announced on Thursday that it’s now making the tool available to other streaming platforms in an effort to help address the rise of AI and fraudulent streams, as well as promote transparency within the music industry and make sure human artists still get the recognition they deserve.
Alongside the move, Deezer reported that 85% of streams from fully AI-generated tracks are deemed fraudulent. Notably, the service now receives 60,000 AI tracks per day, totaling 13.4 million AI-detected songs. By contrast, in June of last year, fully AI-generated music made up 18% of daily uploads, surpassing 20,000 tracks.
Deezer claims its AI music detection tool can identify every AI-generated track from major generative models like Suno and Udio. In addition to excluding AI-generated tracks from recommendations, Deezer’s tool demonetizes them and excludes them from the royalty pool, as the company aims to fairly compensate musicians and songwriters.
The tool’s accuracy is 99.8%, a company spokesperson told TechCrunch.
Deezer CEO Alexis Lanternier says there has been “great interest” in the tool, and several companies have “already performed successful tests.” One such company is Sacem, the French management company that represents over 300,000 music creators and publishers, including David Guetta and DJ Snake.
The company didn’t provide pricing information or disclose which additional companies are interested in adopting the tool. A spokesperson told us that the cost varies based on the type of deal.
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Image Credits:Deezer
There is increasing concern about AI companies using copyrighted material to train their models, as well as about methods being used to manipulate streaming systems and commit fraud.
One instance of music streaming fraud occurred in 2024, when a North Carolina musician was charged by the Department of Justice (DOJ) with creating AI-generated songs and using bots to stream them billions of times, resulting in more than $10 million in stolen streaming royalties. Additionally, AI bands like The Velvet Sundown have gained millions of streams.
Bandcamp recently got fed up and banned AI-generated music altogether, while Spotify has updated its policy to address the rise of AI tracks, clarifying when AI is used in music production, reducing spam, and explicitly stating that unauthorized voice clones are prohibited on the platform.
By contrast, major record labels have resolved lawsuits with Suno and Udio, appearing to embrace AI-generated music. Last fall, Universal Music Group and Warner Music Group struck deals with these AI startups to license their music catalogs, ensuring artists and songwriters are compensated when their work is used to train AI models.
In recent years, Deezer has taken significant steps to address concerns about AI-generated music. In 2024, it became the first music streaming platform to sign the global statement on AI training, joining actors Kate McKinnon, Kevin Bacon, Kit Harington, Rosie O’Donnell, and other notable creatives.
Hopefully, Deezer’s latest decision to sell its detection tool will set a precedent for other music streaming platforms to take similar actions to defend human artists and fight fraud.
paceX is reportedly lining up four major Wall Street banks for a 2026 IPO that could provide the reset the market needs.
The company just completed a tender offer at an $800 billion valuation, and secondary market demand is through the roof. If SpaceX goes public anywhere near its rumored $1.5 trillion valuation, it could trigger an IPO cascade for other late-stage unicorns like OpenAI, Stripe, and Databricks.
Watch as Equity host Rebecca Bellan chats with Greg Martin, Managing Director at Rainmaker Securities, about why this IPO feels different, how tech employees are cashing out through secondary markets before companies go public, and what investors are actually looking for in pre-IPO shares.
Subscribe to Equity on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the casts. You also can follow Equity on X and Threads, at @EquityPod.
Google AI Plus just launched in the US as part of a 35-market expansion. The $7.99 plan adds paid Gemini access, Flow and NotebookLM tools, plus 200GB storage you can share with family.
The post Google AI Plus is live in the US, hereâs what you get appeared first on Digital Trends.
Many in the industry think the winners of the AI model market have already been decided: Big Tech will own it (Google, Meta, Microsoft, a bit of Amazon) along with their model makers of choice, largely OpenAI and Anthropic.
But tiny 30-person startup Arcee AI disagrees. The company just released a truly and permanently open (Apache license) general-purpose, foundation model called Trinity, and Arcee claims that at 400B parameters, it is among the largest open-source foundation models ever trained and released by a U.S. company.
Arcee says Trinity compares to Meta’s Llama 4 Maverick 400B, and Z.ai GLM-4.5, a high-performing open-source model from China’s Tsinghua University, according to benchmark tests conducted using base models (very little post training).
Arcee AI benchmarks for its Trinity large LLM (preview version, base model)Image Credits:Arcee
Like other state-of-the-art (SOTA) models, Trinity is geared for coding and multi-step processes like agents. Still, despite its size, it’s not a true SOTA competitor yet because it currently supports only text.
More modes are in the works — a vision model is currently in development, and a speech-to-text version is on the roadmap, CTO Lucas Atkins told TechCrunch (pictured above, on the left). In comparison, Meta’s Llama 4 Maverick is already multi-modal, supporting text and images.
But before adding more AI modes to its roster, Arcee says, it wanted a base LLM that would impress its main target customers: developers and academics. The team particularly wants to woo U.S. companies of all sizes away from choosing open models from China.
“Ultimately, the winners of this game, and the only way to really win over the usage, is to have the best open-weight model,” Atkins said. “To win the hearts and minds of developers, you have to give them the best.”
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The benchmarks show that the Trinity base model, currently in preview while more post-training takes place, is largely holding its own and, in some cases, slightly besting Llama on tests of coding and math, common sense, knowledge and reasoning.
The progress Arcee has made so far to become a competitive AI Lab is impressive. The large Trinity model follows two previous small models released in in December: the 26B-parameter Trinity Mini, a fully post-trained reasoning model for tasks ranging from web apps to agents, and the 6B-parameter Trinity Nano, an experimental model designed to push the boundaries of models that are tiny yet chatty.
The kicker is, Arcee trained them all in six months for $20 million total, using 2,048 Nvidia Blackwell B300 GPUs. This out of the roughly $50 million the company has raised so far, said founder and CEO Mark McQuade (pictured above, on the right).
That kind of cash was “a lot for us,” said Atkins, who led the model building effort. Still, he acknowledged that it pales in comparison to how much bigger labs are spending right now.
The six-month timeline “was very calculated,” said Atkins, whose career before LLMs involved building voice agents for cars. “We are a younger startup that’s extremely hungry. We have a tremendous amount of talent and bright young researchers who, when given the opportunity to spend this amount of money and train a model of this size, we trusted that they’d rise to the occasion. And they certainly did, with many sleepless nights, many long hours.”
McQuade, previously an early employee at open-source model marketplace HuggingFace, says Arcee didn’t start out wanting to become a new U.S. AI Lab: The company was originally doing model customization for large enterprise clients like SK Telecom.
“We were only doing post-training. So we would take the great work of others: We would take a Llama model, we would take a Mistral model, we would take a Qwen model that was open source, and we would post-train it to make it better” for a company’s intended use, he said, including doing the reinforcement learning.
But as their client list grew, Atkins said, the need for their own model was becoming a necessity, and McQuade was worried about relying on other companies. At the same time, many of the best open models were coming from China, which U.S. enterprises were leery of, or were barred from using.
It was a nerve-wracking decision. “I think there’s less than 20 companies in the world that have ever pre-trained and released their own model” at the size and level that Arcee was gunning for, McQuade said.
The company started small at first, trying its hand at a tiny, 4.5B model created in partnership with training company DatologyAI. The project’s success then encouraged bigger endeavors.
But if the U.S. already has Llama, why does it need another open weight model? Atkins says by choosing the open source Apache license, the startup is committed to always keeping its models open. This comes after Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg last year indicated his company might not always make all of its most advanced models open source.
“Llama can be looked at as not truly open source as it uses a Meta-controlled license with commercial and usage caveats,” he says. This has caused some open source organizations to claim that Llama isn’t open source compliant at all.
“Arcee exists because the U.S. needs a permanently open, Apache-licensed, frontier-grade alternative that can actually compete at today’s frontier,” McQuade said.
All Trinity models, large and small, can be downloaded for free. The largest version will be released in three flavors. Trinity Large Preview is a lightly post-trained instruct model, meaning it’s been trained to follow human instructions, not just predict the next word, which gears it for general chat usage. Trinity Large Base is the base model without post-training.
Then we have TrueBase, a model with any instruct data or post training so enterprises or researchers that want to customize it won’t have to unroll any data, rules or assumptions.
Acree AI will eventually offer a hosted version of its general release model for, it says, competitive API pricing. That release is up to six weeks away as the startup continues to improve the model’s reasoning training.
API pricing for Trinity-Mini is $0.045 / $0.15, and there is a rate-limited free tier available, too. Meanwhile, the company still sells post-training and customization options.
Androidâs new anti-theft update adds stronger biometric checks, enhanced lockout rules, and expanded remote security tools to protect user data and make stolen devices far less usable.
The post Android’s new safety tools make it harder for thieves to break into your phone appeared first on Digital Trends.
The plus-one passes at 50% off are almost sold out. Now the clock is really ticking.
In just 3 days, the best deal at the lowest ticket prices for TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 disappear. With demand already surging and early inventory moving fast, this is the final window to lock in record-low pricing and secure a plus-one for half the price while limited passes remain.
If Disrupt has been on your must-attend list, now is the time to save up to $680 on your pass and bring a plus-one at 50% off.
This pricing ends January 30, 11:59 p.m. PT, or the moment the remaining plus-one passes sell out. No extensions. No exceptions. Register now to save.
Why founders, VCs, and operators keep coming back to Disrupt
From October 13–15, Moscone West in San Francisco will become the global epicenter of tech. TechCrunch Disrupt is a curated, three-day experience built to maximize signal over noise, bringing together 10,000 founders, investors, operators, and tech leaders for 200+ expert-led sessions featuring 250+ influential voices.
Image Credits:Eric Slomonson, The Photo Group
Across the ecosystem, past attendees consistently point to the same value:
Real access to founders, investors, and operators who are actively building.
Conversations that turn into partnerships, funding, and hires.
Practical insights you can apply immediately, not just inspiration.
A clearer picture of where tech is headed before it hits the mainstream.
At Disrupt, you’ll explore what’s next as 300+ startups debut new breakthroughs, feel the high-stakes energy of the intense startup pitch-off in Startup Battlefield 200, and engage in curated, high-impact networking with the people shaping the future of tech.
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Past Disrupt speakers
Keep an eye on the Disrupt 2026 event page for when the agenda goes live.
Image Credits:Kimberly White/Getty Images for TechCrunch / Getty Images
A more curated way to experience a tech event
Disrupt isn’t about wandering between sessions. It’s about intentional connections and curated experiences designed for how people actually grow in the tech industry.
Founders meet investors actively backing breakthrough ideas. VCs cut through the noise to discover startups aligned with their investment focus. Operators exchange real-world lessons on building, scaling, and shipping what’s next. Aspiring innovators get inspired with a front-row seat to tomorrow’s tech and invaluable insights from those shaping it.
If you’re hands-on in tech, Disrupt was built for you. Find your ticket match now to secure the lowest rate.
Image Credits:Slava Blazer Photography
Unique passes designed for founders and investors
Founders and investors can unlock specialized passes designed to support your goals:
Founder Pass: Built to help you accelerate growth with the right insights, tools, and connections.
Investor Pass:Designed for discovering standout startups and expanding your portfolio through curated access.
Final call: plus-one passes are almost gone
The 50% off plus-one passes are nearly sold out, and this deal ends in just 3 days. Lock yours in before Friday, January 30 at 11:59 p.m. PT. Register now to save up to $680 on your TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 pass and bring a plus-one at 50% off while discounted passes remain.
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