The Morning After: Musk backs down from OpenAI lawsuit
Elon Musk has withdrawn his lawsuit against OpenAI, a day before a judge was set to hear a request for dismissal. Musk sued OpenAI, saying its founders had violated its nonprofit status, to become a de-facto part of Microsoft. OpenAI said there was no such violation, and the lawsuit was likely a way for Musk to gain access to its secrets. Despite ending the suit, Musk might be nursing this grudge, tweeting if Apple integrates OpenAI's tools into its software, he'll ban iPhones from his companies.
- Dan Cooper
The biggest stories you might have missedX is officially making likes (mostly) private for everyone
You can't mirror your iPhone while mirroring your Mac on Apple Vision Pro
Netflix drops a proper trailer for Arcane's second (and last) season
General Motors revives its robotaxi service, Cruise, in Houston, with human drivers
Apple refuses to call Apple Intelligence AI
Apple Intelligence: What devices and features will actually be supported?
Netgear is releasing more affordable versions of its Orbi and Nighthawk routers
You can get these reports delivered daily direct to your inbox. Subscribe right here!
Light unveils a new minimalist phone with a black-and-white OLED screenYou'll even have to stroke your own chin.LightLight, makers of a minimalist" handset that does most of what a dumbphone would do with an added layer of pretension, has launched its third-generation device. The Light Phone III gains a black-and-white OLED display, camera and a built-in NFC chip for mobile payments. But it'll cost you $800, which should be enough to send you scrambling for a $40 Nokia instead.
Spotify's HiFi plan could finally arrive this year, but you may need to pay extra$5 a month for better-sounding sound.We might know how much more Spotify's high-fidelity plan will cost, should the thing ever arrive. Rumors suggest the plan is coming by the end of the year and will cost $5 a month on top of an existing Premium subscription. Much as there are rumors of extra features thrown into that mix, it's a significant charge on top of what Apple Music charges for the same thing.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-morning-after-musk-backs-down-from-openai-lawsuit-111549227.html?src=rss