Emma Roth | The Verge The Verge is about technology and how it makes us feel. Founded in 2011, we offer our audience everything from breaking news to reviews to award-winning features and investigations, on our site, in video, and in podcasts. 2025-07-31T23:38:47+00:00 https://www.theverge.com/authors/emma-roth/rss https://platform.theverge.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2025/01/verge-rss-large_80b47e.png?w=150&h=150&crop=1 Emma Roth <![CDATA[Apple says Trump’s tariffs are adding another $1 billion to its costs]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=717108 2025-07-31T17:53:42-04:00 2025-07-31T17:53:42-04:00

Apple is spending a lot on President Donald Trump’s tariffs. During an earnings call on Thursday, Apple CEO Tim Cook said the duties could add $1.1 billion to its costs during the September quarter.

Cook says Apple has already spent around $800 million during the June quarter, which is less than the $900 million that the company predicted in May. “The bulk of the tariffs that we paid were the IEEPA [International Emergency Economic Powers Act] tariffs that hit early in the year, related to China,” Cook said.

Trump’s sweeping tariffs have impacted all of Apple’s devices, which are mainly manufactured in China, India, and Vietnam. Cook said the “majority” of iPhones sold in the US are manufactured in India, while most Macs, iPads, and Apple Watches come from Vietnam. Trump has threatened to target Apple with even higher tariffs if the company doesn’t move some of its production to the US.

“There are many factors that could change, including tariff rates,” Cook notes. Despite concerns surrounding tariffs, the company’s quarterly revenue jumped 10 percent to $94 billion between April and June, while iPhone and Mac sales remain strong.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Tim Cook says Apple is ‘open to’ AI acquisitions]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=716790 2025-07-31T19:38:47-04:00 2025-07-31T17:16:02-04:00

Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company is “open” to mergers and acquisitions as it “significantly” increases its investment in AI, as reported by CNBC. Cook’s statements were made alongside the release of Apple’s third-quarter earnings results, which revealed that the iPhone maker raked in $94 billion between April and June, marking a 10 percent increase over the same period last year.

The remarks come as Apple continues to be seen as behind the AI race, with its efforts on Apple Intelligence lagging relative to its peers and Meta poaching some of its top engineers. The company is increasingly turning to AI startups for help — and reports have suggested that Apple is even open to making big acquisitions to catch up.

Last month, a report from Bloomberg said that Apple may enlist the help of AI giants, like OpenAI and Anthropic, to power its “LLM Siri.” Bloomberg also reported in June that Apple leaders discussed acquiring the AI search startup Perplexity. The discussions come after Apple swapped in Vision Pro head Mike Rockwell as the leader of AI and Siri in March.

When speaking about AI, Cook said the company is “embedding it across our devices, across our platforms and across the company,” according to CNBC. Though Apple has touted big plans for an AI-enhanced version of Siri, the timing of its release remains uncertain after the company delayed the revamp. Apple’s SVP of software, Craig Federighi, said it just wasn’t “reliable” enough to release broadly.

“We’re making good progress on a more personalized Siri,” Cook said during an earnings call on Thursday. “We are also reallocating a fair number of people to focus on AI features within the company.”

Despite the AI hiccups, Apple’s core businesses remain strong. Apple’s iPhone business grew 13 percent year over year to $44.6 billion. Mac revenue also saw a boost, reaching $8.1 billion in revenue, likely due to Apple releasing a new MacBook Air in March. Revenue from Apple’s services, which include subscriptions to things like Apple TV Plus, iCloud, and Apple Music, saw a 13 percent increase to $27.4 billion, which Apple says is an “all-time high.”

There may be other challenges coming for those businesses, though. In May, Apple said that President Donald Trump’s tariffs could cost the company at least $900 million during the June quarter. There’s a chance these costs could go even higher, as Trump has threatened Apple with a tariff of “at least” 25 percent if the company doesn’t bring production to the US. Apple has already shifted some of its production to India to decrease its reliance on China, a move Trump isn’t a fan of.

Apple is expected to launch its new iPhone 17 lineup sometime in September. iOS 26 should be released around the same time, delivering the “Liquid Glass” design language that has some users divided.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Tesla’s ‘robotaxi’ rides in San Francisco have a human at the wheel]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=716867 2025-07-31T14:58:30-04:00 2025-07-31T13:20:52-04:00 A photo showing a Tesla with a “robotaxi” logo on it.

Tesla’s newly launched ridehailing service in San Francisco isn’t quite ready for the “robotaxi” designation. After launching its robotaxi rides in Austin, Texas, with a “safety monitor” in the passenger seat last month, a video of Tesla’s service in San Francisco shows a vehicle arriving with a human at the wheel, as reported earlier by Business Insider.

California requires companies to obtain three permits to operate a commercial robotaxi service. So far, the state has granted Tesla just one of the permits, allowing it to run a ridehailing service with a human in the driver’s seat. The Alphabet-owned Waymo is currently the only company with all the permits to offer commercial driverless rides in San Francisco.

Even though the service in Texas and California hasn’t yet achieved Musk’s promise of operating with “no one in the car,” Musk told Tesla investors last week that he plans to expand robotaxi service to Florida, Nevada, and Arizona.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Ford’s planning a ‘Model T moment’ for EVs on August 11th]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=716799 2025-07-31T13:20:16-04:00 2025-07-31T11:42:17-04:00

Ford is preparing a major electric vehicle announcement that CEO Jim Farley calls a “Model T moment,” as reported earlier by InsideEVs. During an earnings call on Wednesday, Farley said the company will reveal plans to design and build a “breakthrough” EV, along with a new platform, at an August 11th event in Kentucky.

Even as Ford’s EV business took a $1.3 billion hit, the automaker’s “skunkworks” team, helmed by former Tesla engineer Alan Clarke, has been working in the background to develop a more affordable electric car. “This is a Model T moment for us at Ford, a chance to bring a new family of vehicles to the world that offer incredible technology, efficiency, space, and features,” Farley said.

Ford said last year that the new low-cost EV platform will underpin a pickup truck slated for release in 2027 and will also extend to other vehicles in the future. The automaker’s upcoming event comes at a pivotal moment for an industry that once felt like the future of cars. This month, Tesla revealed its largest revenue drop in years. The EV maker also announced a slew of deals in an attempt to reverse slumping sales, and even revealed plans to launch a stripped-down Model Y.

President Donald Trump’s recent actions haven’t helped the EV industry, either, as the administration plans to roll back EV tax credits this September. Trump’s tariffs have also hit automakers hard, with Ford saying it expects the duties to shave $2 billion off its annual earnings.

Farley says Ford is working to compete with the low-cost EVs made by Chinese automakers, like Geely and BYD. “We believe the only way to really compete effectively with the Chinese over the globe on EVs is to go and really push ourselves to radically reengineer and transform our engineering supply chain and manufacturing process,” Farley said. “That will come to life soon.”

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Prices leak for every Pixel 10 phone]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=716733 2025-07-31T12:55:12-04:00 2025-07-31T09:57:33-04:00
Leaked images of the base Pixel 10 lineup.

We’ve already seen what every Pixel 10 model looks like, and now we might know the pricing, too. A new leak from Android Headlines suggests the base Pixel 10 with 128GB of storage will have the same $799 starting price as its predecessor, while the rest of the lineup isn’t seeing any major changes, either.

The price of the Pixel 10’s 256GB model also appears to remain unchanged, as Android Headlines lists it as costing $899. Meanwhile, the Pro-level Pixel 10 could still start at $999, jumping to $1,099 for 256GB, $1,219 for 512GB, and $1,449 for 1TB.

The Pixel 10 Pro XL is the only model that may get a small price bump, but that’s only because Google is supposedly getting rid of the 128GB model. Instead of starting at $1,099, the Pixel 10 Pro XL may cost $1,199 for 256GB of storage, which is the same price as the 256GB Pixel 9 Pro XL. The Pixel 10 Pro XL is also rumored to come in a 512GB variant for $1,319, along with a 1TB version costing $1,549, according to Android Headlines.

As for the Pixel 10 Pro Fold, Android Headlines suggests the device will start at $1,799 for 256GB of storage. It may also have the same $1,919 price tag for 512GB of storage, while the rumored 1TB option could cost $2,149.

We’re still weeks away from Google’s Pixel launch event on August 20th, but there has already been a trove of leaks — including one from Google itself — that suggest that Google is making several updates to its Pixel lineup. That includes bringing magnetic Qi2 charging to the Pixel lineup, dust-proofing the Pixel 10 Pro Fold, and adding a third camera to the base Pixel 10.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Google is using AI age checks to lock down user accounts]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=716154 2025-07-30T13:20:43-04:00 2025-07-30T13:20:43-04:00

Google will soon cast an even wider net with its AI age estimation technology. After announcing plans to find and restrict underage users on YouTube, the company now says it will start detecting whether Google users based in the US are under 18.

Age estimation is rolling out over the next few weeks and will only impact a “small set” of users to start, though Google plans on expanding it more widely. The company says it will use the information a user has searched for or the types of YouTube videos they watch to determine their age. Google first announced this initiative in February.

If Google believes that a user is under 18, it will apply the same restrictions it places on users who proactively identify as underage. In addition to enabling bedtime reminders on YouTube and limiting content recommendations, Google will also turn off Timeline in Maps, disable personalized advertising, and block users from accessing apps for adults on the Play Store.

In case Google incorrectly identifies someone as under 18, users can submit a photo of their government ID or a selfie to verify their age. The move comes amid a global push for age verification, with politicians in the US pressuring tech companies to make their platforms safer for kids, and the UK widely rolling out an age verification requirement affecting platforms like Bluesky, Reddit, Discord, and even Spotify.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Ready or not, age verification is rolling out across the internet]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=715767 2025-07-30T12:20:32-04:00 2025-07-30T12:00:00-04:00

On July 25th, the UK became one of the first countries to widely implement age verification. Its Online Safety Act requires sites hosting porn and other content deemed “harmful” — including Reddit, Discord, Grindr, X, and Bluesky — to verify that users are over the age of 18. The early results have been chaotic. While many services have complied, some have pulled out of the country rather than face the risk and expense. Users have tricked the verification tools or bypassed them with VPNs. It’s just a taste of the issues that many other countries might face as they launch their own systems, and it’s a situation that privacy and security experts have long warned about — to little avail. 

Following a yearslong political push to make the internet safer for kids, age verification has started seeping into online spaces across the globe. Lawmakers in the US, Europe, Australia, and elsewhere have all passed age-gating rules, and platforms have begun to comply. The likely methods for verification are similar to those in the UK. Platforms typically ask users to either enter a payment card, upload a government-issued ID, take a selfie, or allow a platform to use their data (like account creation dates and user connections) to “estimate” their age. Most rely on third-party services: Bluesky uses the Epic Games-owned Kids Web Services; Reddit is working with Persona; and Discord has partnered with k-ID.

The outcome so far is an assortment of online services handling sensitive user information —  a “privacy nightmare,” says Cody Venzke, senior policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union. “There is no standardization of how age verification is supposed to take place.”

Some age verification platforms promise to erase your data after a certain period of time, like the seven days that Persona says it will keep the information used to verify your age on Reddit. But there’s no guarantee every service will do this, and there are still massive security risks given how common data breaches have become. Last year, a security researcher found that AU10TIX — an identity verification solution used by TikTok, Uber, and X — left user information and driver’s license photos exposed for months, 404 Media reported.

Governments are plowing toward the future of an age-gated internet

“When uploading your ID … you are handing it over to a third party,” Venzke says. “You’re going to take their word that they’re going to delete it or remove it after they’re done using it.”

Despite these potential pitfalls, governments are plowing toward the future of an age-gated internet anyway. In addition to a crackdown in the UK, the European Union is hurdling toward a broad rollout of digital IDs, Australia is age-gating search engines, and users in many US states need IDs to access porn sites. 

Age verification was long viewed as unconstitutional in the US, but the Supreme Court overturned that precedent earlier in 2025, concluding “adults have no First Amendment right to avoid age verification” if it’s meant to protect underage users from “obscene” content. Several states, including Alabama, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, North Carolina, and Texas, have implemented laws requiring verification measures on adult websites. Some have tried to extend this to social media or app stores as a whole, but so far, they’ve failed — lawsuits filed by NetChoice, a technology trade group backed by Google, Meta, X, Amazon, Discord, and other tech giants, have successfully blocked bills in California, Arkansas, Georgia, Ohio, and Florida.

As in the UK, there’s no guarantee against privacy and security breaches for states with age verification laws, and there’s little standardization in this bevy of rules. Efforts in the US also coincide with escalating government digital surveillance and attempts to declare expressions of LGBTQ sexuality, like drag shows, as obscene, raising the risks of handing over personal data even further.

Not all age verification efforts entrust users’ privacy to third-party services with a host of different methods. The EU is trialing not only age-gating requirements, but also government-managed digital IDs. It has started testing an age verification system prototype designed to “bridge the gap” before digital IDs arrive by the end of next year. The solution will allow users to upload their passport or government ID card to a government-built system, which then generates a “proof of age attestation” that is passed to sites. Sites can also use the customer identification methods employed by banks and mobile carriers. The goal is that users can upload sensitive information to a single system that can be held to a high privacy standard and is simple for sites to use.

Though having a centralized age verification solution may prevent users from having to pass their information through multiple verification services, plenty of questions remain regarding surveillance and accessibility. Aside from the ever-present possibility of data breaches, digital IDs may also restrict undocumented individuals from accessing content online. And, without the proper safeguards, digital identity systems may still “phone home” to the ID’s issuer when a user’s age is verified, potentially allowing providers to track online activity.

“If I pull up my ID at the liquor store, the DMV doesn’t know that, but with digital identification, there’s a potential for that,” says Alexis Hancock, the director of engineering at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).

Down the line, the EU says it plans to enhance the framework with technology called zero-knowledge proof (ZKP). This is a cryptographic verification method that allows a service to prove something is true or false without revealing any additional information, as outlined by the EFF. That means an app could verify that a user is over the age of 18 without disclosing their exact birthdate. Google has already built a ZKP system into Google Wallet and has since open-sourced the technology, which it’s encouraging EU members to adopt. 

Even with ZKP in place, Hancock says that there are still concerns about what sites and apps can ask for information about a user’s age. “I haven’t seen anything remotely promising at the moment that actually reels in verifiers in particular,” Hancock says. “There’s not a lot of scope restriction on who can actually ask for this and if it’s even needed in some cases.” 

Lawmakers and regulators have argued that there are overwhelming benefits to protecting children from harmful content or exploitative social media platforms. Melanie Dawes, the chief executive of Ofcom, the UK’s communications regulator, boasted that “prioritizing clicks and engagement over children’s online safety will no longer be tolerated in the UK,” and US lawmakers and regulators have declared porn and social media a public health crisis. “Putting in place commonsense guardrails that protect our kids from the dangers of social media is critical for their future and America’s future,” Sen. Katie Britt said in an announcement about the Kids Off Social Media Act.

While keeping kids safe online is important, this messaging downplays or ignores the ripple effects. Right now, there just isn’t any clear-cut way to verify someone’s age online without risking a leak of personal information or hampering access to the internet. Until lawmakers stop and think about the bigger picture, everyone’s privacy is going to be at risk.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Elon Musk’s Boring Company announces plan to tunnel under Nashville]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=716004 2025-07-30T12:03:53-04:00 2025-07-30T11:39:33-04:00

Elon Musk’s Boring Company has announced plans to dig tunnels under Nashville, creating a loop that will connect the city’s downtown with the Nashville International Airport. The Boring Company says it will begin construction “immediately” following approval and expects the first 10-mile phase to be operational as early as next year, as reported earlier by TechCrunch.

In 2021, The Boring Company opened its first “loop” in Las Vegas, where it uses a fleet of human-operated Tesla vehicles to transport people across the city’s convention center. It has since expanded the tunnel to connect the Las Vegas Convention Center (LVCC) route with nearby resorts.

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee says the Nashville tunnels will come at “zero cost” to taxpayers, and will instead be “entirely privately funded” by The Boring Company and its partners. Once completed, the “Tesla in tunnels” system will ferry people from the airport to downtown in around eight minutes.

Nashville Democratic Representative Justin Jones said he was “denied entry” to an event announcing The Boring Company’s new project, even though other Republicans were allowed to attend, according to local news outlet WKRN. “This project, which requires state approval, is yet another attempt by Bill Lee and his corporate donors to enrich themselves while neglecting public services and real infrastructure needs,” Rep. Jones said in a statement on Instagram.

Questions remain about whether this latest loop will actually come to fruition. As pointed out by TechCrunch, The Boring Company has floated and quietly dropped many of its tunnel-digging plans in the past, including in Los Angeles, Washington, DC, Chicago, and others. At the same time, workers at The Boring Company face many safety concerns, with one employee saying they have “consistently flirted with death,” according to a 2024 report by Fortune.

Update, July 30th: Added information about Rep. Justin Jones.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[TikTok videos are about to get crowdsourced fact checks on them]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=715798 2025-07-30T09:31:33-04:00 2025-07-30T09:31:33-04:00
TikTok will start giving contributors the option to write Footnotes.

TikTok is officially rolling out Footnotes, a community fact-checking program that’s supposed to add helpful context to videos. With this update, US-based users will start seeing Footnotes on videos in the coming weeks, and will also get the option to rate them.

After allowing people to join the Footnotes pilot in April, TikTok says almost 80,000 users in the US have qualified to become contributors, allowing them to write and rate notes on videos. When contributors agree that a footnote is helpful, it will appear on the video for the broader TikTok community in the US. TikTok says the Footnotes ranking system will get “smarter” over time as contributors write and rate notes on a range of different topics. It will also give users the ability to report Footnotes that may violate its community guidelines.

The feature uses a “bridging-based system” that aims to find a “consensus between people with different opinions.” It’s similar to how community notes work on X, which the platform says incorporates “diverse perspectives.” Meta has also launched community notes across Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, while YouTube is piloting a crowdsourced fact-checking feature, too.

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Emma Roth <![CDATA[Lovense was told its sex toy app leaked users’ emails and didn’t fix it]]> https://www.theverge.com/?p=715645 2025-07-31T09:42:40-04:00 2025-07-29T18:07:51-04:00

Lovense, the maker of internet-connected sex toys, left user emails exposed for months — even after it became aware of the vulnerability. In a blog post spotted by TechCrunch and Bleeping Computer, security researcher BobDaHacker found that they could “turn any username into their email address,” which they could then use to take over someone’s account.

BobDaHacker initially disclosed this vulnerability to Lovense in March, but the researcher claims Lovense waited months before fixing it. Lovense is behind a range of sex toys that users can connect to the internet and remotely control via its app, which came under fire for a “minor bug” in 2017 that recorded users’ sex sessions.

As outlined in BobDaHacker’s post, the security researcher noticed something strange in the app’s API response when muting someone: it presented their email address. BobDaHacker then figured out that they could take advantage of this vulnerability by sending a modified request to Lovense’s servers, tricking it into returning the target user’s email address. 

BobDaHacker even developed a script that they say can convert someone’s username into an email address in less than a second. “This is especially bad for cam models who share their usernames publicly but obviously don’t want their personal emails exposed,” BobDaHacker writes. To make matters worse, BobDaHacker later discovered that they could take over a user’s account with their email address and an authentication token generated by Lovense. 

Though BobDaHacker says Lovense has since fixed the email-leaking bug, and now blocks users from trying to hijack someone’s account with an authentication token, it took the company months — and a lot of public pressure — to issue the fix.

BobDaHacker initially reported these vulnerabilities in partnership with the Internet of Dongs, a group that aims to make internet-connected sex toys more secure. However, the security researcher says Lovense didn’t immediately fix the issue. Instead, Lovense claimed that the account takeover bug was fixed in April, even though BobDaHacker said it wasn’t, and that a fix for the email leak issue would take 14 months to roll out.

“We also evaluated a faster, one-month fix. However, it would require forcing all users to upgrade immediately, which would disrupt support for legacy versions,” Lovense said, according to BobDaHacker. As noted by BobDaHacker, other security researchers reported these issues in 2022 and 2023, but the company appears to have closed the bug without actually fixing it.

In a statement to The Verge, Lovense CEO Dan Liu confirms that the bugs are now fixed. “The originally scheduled long term 14-month system reconstruction plan was completed significantly ahead of schedule due to the team’s dedicated efforts and increased resource allocation,” Liu says, adding that “there is no evidence suggesting that any user data, including email addresses or account information, has been compromised or misused.”

Update, July 30th: Added that Lovense addressed the bugs.

Update, July 31st: Added a statement from Lovense.

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