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Amazon to invest up to $25 billion in Anthropic

🏷️ Tech News🌍 United States🔥 Trending🔗 15 sources59Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Amazon to invest up to $25 billion in Anthropic

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Amazon on April 20-21 agreed to pump $5 billion into AI developer Anthropic and made contingent commitments that could raise its total new funding to $25 billion, part of an expanded multi-year infrastructure pact. Anthropic, which had previously taken about $8 billion from Amazon, has pledged to spend more than $100 billion on Amazon Web Services over the next decade and secured up to 5 gigawatts of capacity on Amazon’s Trainium custom AI chips (covering Trainium2 through future Trainium4 generations). The companies said Anthropic will bring nearly 1 GW of Trainium2/3 capacity online by year-end and will make the full Claude platform available directly inside AWS. Amazon’s investment is structured with an initial $5 billion and up to $20 billion tied to commercial milestones; the move follows Amazon’s large investment and cloud deal with OpenAI earlier this year. Anthropic said surging demand strained its infrastructure and that the AWS commitments are intended to expand training and inference capacity for its Claude models. Reports also cite Anthropic’s accelerated revenue growth and a recent valuation in the hundreds of billions of dollars.

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Apple names John Ternus as CEO

🏷️ Tech News🌍 United States🔥 Trending🔗 181 sources62Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Apple names John Ternus as CEO

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Apple announced on April 20-21, 2026 that long‑time hardware chief John Ternus will succeed Tim Cook as chief executive on Sept. 1, with Cook moving to executive chairman. Ternus, a 25‑year Apple veteran who has overseen hardware engineering across iPhone, iPad, Mac, AirPods and the Vision Pro, is charged with steering the $4 trillion company into an era dominated by artificial intelligence. Apple said Cook will remain through the summer to help with the transition and will continue engaging with policymakers globally. The company also reorganised senior hardware roles, naming Johny Srouji to a broader chief hardware officer remit. Investors showed only a muted reaction to the news, with shares slipping modestly in after‑hours trading. Analysts highlight Ternus’s strengths in product engineering and delivery but note Apple’s relative lag in foundational AI development, its recent deal to integrate Google’s Gemini into Siri, and pressure from rivals such as Nvidia, Google and Meta on AI and new form factors.

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Apple’s leadership change appears engineered for continuity: the company’s in‑house silicon and diversified supply chain provide stability, while elevating a hardware-focused executive suggests continued emphasis on product and engineering execution with Cook maintaining policy continuity.

Prego and StoryCorps launch dinner-table recorder

🏷️ Tech News🌍 United States🔗 3 sources31Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Prego and StoryCorps launch dinner-table recorder

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Prego, the US pasta-sauce brand, and nonprofit oral-history group StoryCorps have unveiled the Connection Keeper, a puck-shaped dinner-table audio recorder aimed at sparking conversation and reducing phone use at meals. Announced in late April 2026, the limited-run device sells for $20 with fewer than 100 units to be produced; sales were slated to open April 27 and recordings to become shareable via StoryCorps beginning May 4. The Connection Keeper records CD-quality audio to a 16GB microSD card (about eight hours), uses a simple button interface, two microphones and USB-C transfer — there is no Wi‑Fi, cloud streaming or AI transcription built in. Buyers receive prompt cards and a branded bundle that includes sauce and spaghetti. Users may upload recordings to a StoryCorps portal (StoryCorps says the portal is encrypted) and optionally contribute items to StoryCorps’ archive and the U.S. Library of Congress. Critics and reporters note the product’s limited availability and raise questions about privacy, consent and the specifics of data handling and long-term storage.

Merz and Siemens urge lighter EU rules on industrial AI

🏷️ Tech News🌍 Germany🔗 3 sources30Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Merz and Siemens urge lighter EU rules on industrial AI

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Siemens executives used the Hannover Messe industrial fair to press for looser European Union rules for industrial artificial intelligence, saying sector-specific freedom is needed to boost productivity and investment. Merz said on April 19 that industrial AI should, where possible, be exempted from the “regulatory straitjacket” of the EU AI Act to allow efficiency gains, resource optimisation and cost reductions. Siemens CEO Roland Busch warned the company could prioritise investments in the United States and China if the EU does not ease constraints, arguing machine and industrial data should not be treated the same as personal data. The interventions come ahead of the EU AI Act’s full entry into force on Aug. 2, 2026, and follow Germany’s pledge to expand AI data processing capacity at least fourfold by 2030. The calls underscore industry concern about compliance burdens and the risk of investment diversion as Europe seeks a balance between safety rules and competitiveness.

Meta begins testing WhatsApp Plus subscription

🏷️ Tech News🔥 Trending🔗 8 sources28Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Meta begins testing WhatsApp Plus subscription

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Meta has begun limited tests of a paid WhatsApp tier called “WhatsApp Plus,” rolling out to select Android beta users from April 20–21, 2026, with iOS support promised later. The optional subscription is largely cosmetic and organisational: premium stickers and animated packs, 18 chat themes and alternative app icons, custom ringtones, more granular chat-list controls, and an expanded pin limit (up to 20 chats versus the free tier’s three). Reported regional pricing varies (e.g., €2.49 in Europe, PKR 229 in Pakistan, MX$29 in Mexico; some outlets cite roughly $2.99/month), and Meta may offer a one-month free trial. WhatsApp’s core messaging, voice/video calls and end-to-end encryption remain free, and there is no indication paid plans remove Status ads. The test follows the recent Instagram Plus trial and forms part of Meta’s broader push to add consumer subscriptions across its apps as it seeks to diversify revenue while continuing heavy investment in AI infrastructure.

Google expands Gemini in Chrome to Asia-Pacific

🏷️ Tech News🔗 4 sources22Digest ScoreiThis score reflects the story's reliability, bias neutrality, and public momentum.
Google expands Gemini in Chrome to Asia-Pacific

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Google said on April 20 it is expanding its Gemini in Chrome assistant to seven additional markets — Australia, Indonesia, Japan, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea and Vietnam. The feature appears in Chrome’s sidebar and is available on desktop and iOS in all listed countries except Japan, where iOS support is not yet offered. Gemini in Chrome connects to Google services through Personal Intelligence, allowing users to draft and send emails via Gmail, add events to Calendar, check locations in Maps and surface photos from Google Photos. The sidebar also provides access to Google’s Nano Banana 2 image generator. The rollout follows earlier launches in the U.S. (January) and expansions to India, Canada and New Zealand in March. Google noted that its more agentic capability — which can act across the browser to complete tasks — remains in testing and is restricted to AI Pro and AI Ultra paid plans for U.S. users.
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