Tech
Why I Stopped Believing Every Child Belongs in Every Classroom
This story was published by a Voices of Change fellow. Learn more about the fellowship here.
One of my students has ADHD. In a traditional classroom, his restless energy might be seen as a constant disruption. But in my microschool in Atlanta, where short, active lessons and recess are built into the curriculum for grades four through 12, he thrives. He can barely sit still for 10 minutes, but he doesn’t need to. We’re always doing something that allows movement, and he belongs here.
Another student needs something different. He longs for a soft, nurturing presence, the kind that soothes with warmth. I’ll be honest: I was raised by my father, so my version of love is structure, humor and high expectations, not hugs and gentle tones. For him, I come across as harsh. While one child tells everyone how much he loves me, this child quietly believes I don’t like him. Same teacher. Two very different fits.
That’s when I began to see what I hadn’t been allowed to say in a public school: one child belonged here — the other did not. Those of us who teach and believe in education for all would like to believe that every classroom can meet the needs of every child. It sounds noble, even fair. But schools were never truly built that way.
Maybe real equity begins when we accept that belonging looks different for each child, and that true fairness means giving every student the chance to find the place where they actually fit.
A Shift in Perspective
When I worked in public schools, I had no choice in who entered my classroom. I was expected to reach every child, regardless of fit, and I carried guilt when my approach didn’t work for someone.
Later, when I started my own school, I thought I would serve everyone equally well. But reality set in quickly. For the first three years, I was the only teacher who attempted to teach every subject, planning every lesson and holding everything together. Soon, my capacity became clear: I could not teach science. I hated it, and every science teacher I hired struggled in the same way. My school was not built for the science enthusiast. Then came students with exceptionalities I wanted to support but couldn’t. Deep in debt, I couldn’t afford more training or certifications. Through trial and error, I learned that creating a thriving space sometimes means being selective — not in the discriminatory way I once criticized, but in a way that honors who we are as educators and who our school is built to serve.
I think about one student in particular, a bright boy with an exceptionality whose attendance was inconsistent. Though he was capable, his parent often excused him from the very work that would have helped him grow. I tried every strategy I knew, but his progress stalled. Eventually, I realized that without a parent’s commitment to time and a belief in their child’s ability, even the best intentions can’t create change.
Saying no to continuing his enrollment was one of the hardest choices I’ve ever made, but it wasn’t rooted in rejection; it was rooted in honesty. That moment taught me that being selective isn’t about exclusion; it’s about capacity, alignment and care.
My school is wonderful for the right family and for the children who need short lessons, movement, flexibility and structure wrapped in humor. For others, another school might be the better fit. That doesn’t make my school less. It makes it intentional.
What This Means for Schools
What if schools admitted this truth out loud? Not every child belongs in every school, and not every teacher’s style works for every child. What if we stopped shaming teachers for not reaching every child in the same way, and instead built ecosystems where families and educators could find the right match?
“School choice” is not just about privilege. It’s about belonging. It’s about giving children spaces where their needs and personalities are met, and giving teachers the freedom to serve in the ways they serve best.
Because at the end of the day, my realization always returns to the two students who first taught me this lesson: the one who thrived and the one who didn’t. One blossomed because my school was built for him. The other needed something I could not give. Both deserved to be in spaces that fit. That is the heart of school choice — not separation, not exclusion, but the belief that every child and every teacher should be able to say: This place was made for me.
Tech
Sony leak hypes improved noise cancellation in the upcoming WF-1000XM6 earbuds
Ahead of the official launch on February 12, 2026, a French publication has leaked the key features of Sony’s WF-1000XM6 TWS earbuds. Per Dealabs, the device will feature a new QN3e chipset that is three times faster than the one on the XM5s.
Along with eight adaptive microphones (beamforming + bone conduction), up from six on the outgoing model, the chipset should offer smarter, more responsive, and effective active noise cancellation (ANC).
A faster brain for better silence
Further, the model could get an “Adaptive NC Optimizer” feature that adjusts the noise-cancellation intensity based on the user’s environment, optimizing the performance in real time.
Like the XM5s, the XM6 will offer three core listening modes: Noise Cancelling, Ambient Sound Mode, and regular (with no cancellation or passthrough). Moreover, expect the earbuds to offer noticeably better noise cancellation, perhaps enough to be on par with the AirPods Pro 3.
The report also mentions a “new speaker” or audio driver that should deliver richer audio than the 8.4mm Dynamic Driver X on the XM5s. Sony could also equip the device with an upgraded Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) and an enhanced amplifier.
Sound upgrades beyond ANC
On the software side, the flagship earbuds could get DSEE Ultimate support, a more advanced upscaling technology than DSEE Extreme on the XM5s. It can improve both the sample rate frequency and the bit depth of compressed audio files.
Additional features may include adaptive sound control, Quick Attention mode, background music effect, and Speak to Chat. The device should also support LE Audio and Auracast.
You could also get Spatial Audio with Head Tracking, new audio modes, Bluetooth v5.3 (with multi-point connectivity), support for Hi-Res Wireless (LDAC) codec, and a 10-band equalizer within the Headphones Connect app to customize the sound.

Sony WF-1000XM6 to demand $80 over the AirPods Pro 3
Regarding battery life, the Sony WF-1000XM6 should last up to eight hours on a single charge (likely with ANC) and up to 24 hours with the charging case (which supports fast and wireless charging).
Post their launch on February 12, 2026, the Sony WF-1000XM6 are expected to be available in the United States for $329.99, in Black and Silver finishes (commanding a more premium price tag than the AirPods Pro 3).
Tech
Today’s NYT Connections Hints, Answers for Feb. 10 #975
Looking for the most recent Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands puzzles.
Today’s NYT Connections puzzle was pretty difficult, I thought. I did get a kick out of the green group, though. Read on for clues and today’s Connections answers.
The Times has a Connections Bot, like the one for Wordle. Go there after you play to receive a numeric score and to have the program analyze your answers. Players who are registered with the Times Games section can now nerd out by following their progress, including the number of puzzles completed, win rate, number of times they nabbed a perfect score and their win streak.
Read more: Hints, Tips and Strategies to Help You Win at NYT Connections Every Time.
Hints for today’s Connections groups
Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.
Yellow group hint: A large public event.
Green group hint: Teevee is another one.
Blue group hint: Want to watch a movie?
Purple group hint: Re-invent the …
Answers for today’s Connections groups
Yellow group: Exhibition.
Green group: Words spelling out initialisms.
Blue group: DVD bonus features.
Purple group: Starting with parts of a wheel.
Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words.
What are today’s Connections answers?
The completed NYT Connections puzzle for Feb. 10, 2026.
The yellow words in today’s Connections
The theme is exhibition. The four answers are convention, exposition, fair and show.
The green words in today’s Connections
The theme is words spelling out initialisms. The four answers are deejay, emcee, kayo and okay.
The blue words in today’s Connections
The theme is DVD bonus features. The four answers are commentary, interview, outtakes and trailer.
The purple words in today’s Connections
The theme is starting with parts of a wheel. The four answers are hubbub, rimshot, spokesperson and tiresome.
Tech
OPPO Reno 15C Now Available in India: Price, Offers, and Key Specs
OPPO has just expanded it’s Reno 15-series lineup with the all-new Reno 15C. With it, the Chinese smartphone maker is targeting users looking for a compact smartphone with strong camera capabilities and long battery life. To mark the start of sales, OPPO is offering multiple launch benefits, including bank discounts of up to ₹3,500, exchange offers, cashback, no-cost EMI options, and zero down payment schemes across online and offline channels.
Display and Software
The OPPO Reno 15C features a 6.57-inch flat AMOLED display with Full HD+ resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. The panel offers up to 1,400 nits of peak brightness. Powering the device is the Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 processor.
On the software front, the Reno 15C runs Android 16 with ColorOS 16 on top. The smartphone also carries IP66, IP68, and IP69 certifications, offering resistance against dust and water.
Camera

The Reno 15C comes with a triple rear camera setup consisting of a 50MP primary sensor, an 8MP ultra-wide camera, and a 2MP macro lens. On the front, the phone features a 50MP selfie camera that supports 4K HDR video recording at up to 60fps.
OPPO has also included AI-powered camera features such as AI Pop Out, AI Flash Photography 2.0, and AI Motion Photo slow-motion to enhance photography and video recording.
Battery and Charging
Battery life is one of the highlights of the Reno 15C. The smartphone packs a 7,000mAh battery, aimed at delivering extended usage with fewer charging breaks. It supports 80W SUPERVOOC fast charging, allowing the device to be topped up quickly when needed.
Positioned as the most affordable model in the Reno 15 lineup, the Reno 15C sits below the Reno 15, Reno 15 Pro, and Reno 15 Pro Mini, offering a more balanced feature set at a lower price point.
Price and Availability
The OPPO Reno 15C is available in two storage variants in India. OPPO has priced the 8GB RAM with 256GB storage model at Rs 34,999, while the 12GB RAM with 256GB storage variant costs Rs 37,999. The smartphone comes in Afterglow Pink and Twilight Blue colour options. Furthermore, users can pre-order the phone through Amazon, Flipkart, and the OPPO online store. The device will also be available at selected offline retail stores.
Tech
Hackers exploit SolarWinds WHD flaws to deploy DFIR tool in attacks
Hackers are exploiting SolarWinds Web Help Desk (WHD) vulnerabilities to deploy legitimate tools for malicious purposes, such as the Zoho ManageEngine remote monitoring and management tool.
The attacker targeted at least three organizations and also leveraged Cloudflare tunnels for persistence, and the Velociraptor cyber incident response tool for command and control (C2).
The malicious activity was spotted over the weekend by researchers at Huntress Security, who believe that it is part of a campaign that started on January 16 and leveraged recently disclosed SolarWinds WHD flaws.
“On February 7, 2026, Huntress SOC analyst Dipo Rodipe investigated a case of SolarWinds Web Help Desk exploitation, in which the threat actor rapidly deployed Zoho Meetings and Cloudflare tunnels for persistence, as well as Velociraptor for means of command and control,” Huntress says.
According to the cybersecurity company, the threat actor exploited the CVE-2025-40551 vulnerability, which CISA flagged last week as being used in attacks, and CVE-2025-26399.
Both security problems received a critical severity rating and can be used to achieve remote code execution on the host machine without authentication.
It’s worth noting that Microsoft security researchers also “observed a multi‑stage intrusion where threat actors exploited internet‑exposed SolarWinds Web Help Desk (WHD) instances,” but they did not confirm exploitation of the two vulnerabilities.
Attack chain and tool deployment
After gaining initial access, the attacker installed the Zoho ManageEngine Assist agent via an MSI file fetched from the Catbox file-hosting platform. They configured the tool for unattended access and registered the compromised host to a Zoho Assist account tied to an anonymous Proton Mail address.
The tool is used for direct hands-on keyboard activity and Active Directory (AD) reconnaissance. It was also used to deploy Velociraptor, fetched as an MSI file from a Supabase bucket.
Velociraptor is a legitimate digital forensics and incident response (DFIR) tool that Cisco Talos recently warned was being abused in ransomware attacks.
In the attacks observed by Huntress, the DFIR platform is used as a command-and-control (C2) framework that communicates with attackers via Cloudflare Workers.
The researchers note that the attacker used an outdated version of the Velociraptor, 0.73.4, which is vulnerable to a privilege escalation flaw that allows increasing permissions on the host.
The threat actor also installed Cloudflared from Cloudflare’s official GitHub repository, using it as a secondary tunnel-based access channel for C2 redundancy.
In some cases, persistence was also achieved via a scheduled task (TPMProfiler) that opens an SSH backdoor via QEMU.
The attackers also disabled Windows Defender and Firewall via registry modifications to make sure that fetching additional payloads would not be blocked.
“Approximately a second after disabling Defender, the threat actor downloaded a fresh copy of the VS Code binary,” the researchers say.

Source: Huntress
Security updates and mitigation
System administrators are recommended to upgrade SolarWinds Web Help Desk to version 2026.1 or later, remove public internet access to SolarWinds WHD admin interfaces, and reset all credentials associated with the product.
Huntress also shared Sigma rules and indicators of compromise to help detect Zoho Assist, Velociraptor, Cloudflared, and VS Code tunnel activity, silent MSI installations, and encoded PowerShell execution.
Neither Microsoft nor Huntress attributed the observed attacks to any specific threat groups, and nothing about the targets was disclosed beyond Microsoft characterizing the breached environments as “high-value assets.”
Tech
VPI Turntable Featured in Lexus RZ EV Ad Costs Twice as Much as the Car Itself
As fans of the vinyl revival, we’re excited when record players of any kind get their moment in the sun. So when watching the Olympics over the weekend, I was quite surprised and pleased to see a very distinctive looking turntable featured in a car commercial. The turntable was VPI’s flagship Titan Direct and the car is the first all-electric vehicle from Lexus, the RZ SUV.
While I’m happy to see this well-regarded luxury auto-maker take the plunge into fully electric vehicles — and delighted to see them highlighting a high-end Hi-Fi system in the ad — I was struck by the irony that the turntable featured in the ad, the VPI Titan Direct ($95,000), sells for approximately twice the cost of the Lexus EV ($47,295). Even if you load up the premium trim of the Lexus RZ with its top of the line “Mark Levinson” (powered by Harman) 13-speaker 1,800-Watt sound system, you’re still out the door for under $60,000. Though sadly, you won’t get Dolby Atmos with that.
Meanwhile, for $95,000, the VPI Titan Direct doesn’t even come with a cartridge. It does, however, come with the company’s 12-inch 3D-printed Fatboy Gimbal tonearm, known for its rigidity and its unique triangular-to-circular taper, which is said to reduce resonance and improve tracking. The tonearm features precision gimbal bearings, upgraded Nordost Reference wiring, and a micrometer-style counterweight for simple and accurate tracking force adjustment.

The Titan Direct turntable itself features a high mass magnetic direct drive design, pneumatic air-suspension isolation, and a gorgeous triple-stack chassis designed for maximum resonance control. While the version shown in the ad only had a single tonearm installed, the ‘table supports up to three tonearms of virtually any length or manufacturer. This gives audiophiles the option to switch among different tonearm/cartridge combinations instantly, without lengthy set-up for the swaps.

Lexus RZ: Is It a Souped Up Toyota?
As for the car, if it looks a bit familiar, that’s because it shares the chassis, wheelbase, e-TNGA platform and basic silhouette of its Toyota sibling, the BZ4x. But the Lexus version features more distinctive styling including a more aggressive “spindle body” front end, a rear spoiler, more refined interior and higher overall performance. With up to 402 total system horsepower and 0–60 MPH times as quick as 4.1 seconds (on the 550e F SPORT trim), the RZ offers a sporty feel for a little fun after dropping off the little tykes at soccer practice.
The RZ’s built-in 71.4 kWh battery offers 228 to 302 miles of range, depending on configuration, and its integrated DC fast-charging system can recharge from roughly 10% to 80% capacity in around 30 minutes at a high speed DC charger. U.S. versions of the RZ feature the NACS charging port, making it compatible with a wide range of DC fast chargers (including most chargers in the Tesla supercharger network).

Unlike Ford and GM (and, of course, Tesla), Lexus is very late to the EV game, thanks to its parent company Toyota dragging its feet on full electric vehicles and betting the farm on hybrid vehicles instead. While popular hybrid cars like the Toyota Prius can get higher fuel efficiency than their ICE (Internal Combustion Engine) counterparts, their combustion engines still require regular maintenance like oil changes, tune-ups, belt changes and more, leading to overall higher cost of ownership, compared to EVs.
A modern EV drive train includes only a few dozen moving parts, from battery to motor to linkage to wheels. Meanwhile modern ICE engines can include over 2,000 moving parts, each of which is a potential point of failure over time. Also, even a highly efficient hybrid vehicle’s on-board combustion engine produces local emissions at the tailpipe, which contribute toward local air pollution (particularly in cities) while an ICE contributes zero local emissions and can be powered by green energy sources such as solar, wind and hydro-electric power.
While modern EVs still rarely exceed 300 miles of range, the build-out of DC fast charging stations is making long distance road trips more feasible, and the lower NVH (Noise, Vibration and Harshness) of an EV leads to less driver fatigue over long distances.
The Bottom Line
We’re happy to see distinctive high-end audio gear used to promote EV technology. And while you could buy two of the cars for the cost of one of the turntables, there’s nothing to say you can’t buy one of each if you’ve got the means. Just don’t try installing the turntable in the car. That would not end well. You might scratch a record.
Related Reading:
VPI, Tannoy and Upscale Audio Team Up for Great Sounds at T.H.E. Show 2023
Pioneer Sphera Head Unit adds Dolby Atmos Surround to Virtually Any Car
Tech
Hackers breach SmarterTools network using flaw in its own software
SmarterTools confirmed last week that the Warlock ransomware gang breached its network after compromising an email system, but it did not impact business applications or account data.
The company’s Chief Commercial Officer, Derek Curtis, says that the intrusion occurred on January 29, via a single SmarterMail virtual machine (VM) set up by an employee.
“Prior to the breach, we had approximately 30 servers/VMs with SmarterMail installed throughout our network,” Curtis explained.
“Unfortunately, we were unaware of one VM, set up by an employee, that was not being updated. As a result, that mail server was compromised, which led to the breach.”
Although SmarterTools assures that customer data wasn’t directly impacted by this breach, 12 Windows servers on the company’s office network, as well as a secondary data center used for laboratory tests, quality control, and hosting, were confirmed to have been compromised.
The attackers moved laterally from that one vulnerable VM via Active Directory, using Windows-centric tooling and persistence methods. Linux servers, which constitute the majority of the company’s infrastructure, were not compromised by this attack.
The vulnerability exploited in the attack to gain access is CVE-2026-23760, an authentication bypass flaw in SmarterMail before Build 9518, which allows resetting administrator passwords and obtaining full privileges.
SmarterTools reports that the attacks were conducted by the Warlock ransomware group, which has also impacted customer machines using a similar activity.
The ransomware operators waited roughly a week after gaining initial access, the final stage being encryption of all reachable machines.
However, in this case, Sentinel One security products reportedly stopped the final payload from performing encryption, the impacted systems were isolated, and data was restored from fresh backups.
Tools used in the attacks include Velociraptor, SimpleHelp, and vulnerable versions of WinRAR, while startup items and scheduled tasks were also used for persistence, according to the company.
Cisco Talos reported in the past that the threat actors were abusing the open-source DFIR tool Velociraptor.
In October 2025, Halcyon cybersecurity company linked the Warlcok ransomware gang to a Chinese nation-state actor tracked as Storm-2603.
ReliaQuest published a report earlier today confirming that the activity is linked to Storm-2603, with moderate-to-high confidence.
“While this vulnerability allows attackers to bypass authentication and reset administrator passwords, Storm-2603 chains this access with the software’s built-in ‘Volume Mount’ feature to gain full system control,” ReliaQuest said.
“Upon entry, the group installs Velociraptor, a legitimate digital forensics tool it has used in previous campaigns, to maintain access and set the stage for ransomware.”
ReliaQuest also saw probes for CVE-2026-24423, another SmarterMail flaw flagged by CISA as actively exploited by ransomware actors last week, although the primary vector was CVE-2026-23760.
The researchers note that CVE-2026-24423 provides a more direct API path to achieve remote code execution, but CVE-2026-23760 can be less noisy, blending into legitimate administrative activity, which is why Storm-2603 might have opted for that one instead.
To address all recent flaws in the SmarterMail product, administrators are recommended to upgrade to Build 9511 or later as soon as possible.
Tech
What AI builders can learn from fraud models that run in 300 milliseconds
Fraud protection is a race against scale.
For instance, Mastercard’s network processes roughly 160 billion transactions a year, and experiences surges of 70,000 transactions a second during peak periods (like the December holiday rush). Finding the fraudulent purchases among those — without chasing false alarms — is an incredible task, which is why fraudsters have been able to game the system.
But now, sophisticated AI models can probe down to individual transactions, pinpointing the ones that seem suspicious — in milliseconds’ time. This is the heart of Mastercard’s flagship fraud platform, Decision Intelligence Pro (DI Pro).
“DI Pro is specifically looking at each transaction and the risk associated with it,” Johan Gerber, Mastercard’s EVP of security solutions, said in a recent VB Beyond the Pilot podcast. “The fundamental problem we’re trying to solve here is assessing in real time.”
How DI Pro works
Mastercard’s DI Pro was built for latency and speed. From the moment a consumer taps a card or clicks “buy,” that transaction flows through Mastercard’s orchestration layer, back onto the network, and then on to the issuing bank. Typically, this occurs in less than 300 milliseconds.
Ultimately, the bank makes the approve-or-decline decision, but the quality of that decision depends on Mastercard’s ability to deliver a precise, contextualized risk score based on whether the transaction could be fraudulent. Complicating this whole process is the fact that they’re not looking for anomalies, per se; they’re looking for transactions that, by design, are similar to consumer behavior.
At the core of DI Pro is a recurrent neural network (RNN) that Mastercard refers to as an “inverse recommender” architecture. This treats fraud detection as a recommendation problem; the RNN performs a pattern completion exercise to identify how merchants relate to one another.
As Gerber explained: “Here’s where they’ve been before, here’s where they are right now. Does this make sense for them? Would we have recommended this merchant to them?”
Chris Merz, SVP of data science at MasterCard, explained that the fraud problem can be broken down into two sub components: A user’s pattern behavior and a fraudster’s pattern behavior. “And we’re trying to tease those two things out,” he said.
Another “neat technique,” he said, is how Mastercard approaches data sovereignty, or when data is subject to the laws and governance structures in the region where it is collected, processed, or stored. To keep data “on soil,” the company’s fraud team relies on aggregated, “completely anonymized” data that is not sensitive to any privacy concerns and thus can be shared with models globally.
“So you still can have the global patterns influencing every local decision,” said Gerber. “We take a year’s worth of knowledge and squeeze it into a single transaction in 50 milliseconds to say yes or no, this is good or this is bad.”
Scamming the scammers
While AI is helping financial companies like Mastercard, it’s helping fraudsters, too; now, they’re able to rapidly develop new techniques and identify new avenues to exploit.
Mastercard is fighting back by engaging cyber criminals on their turf. One way they’re doing so is by using “honeypots,” or artificial environments meant to essentially “trap” cyber criminals. When threat actors think they’ve got a legitimate mark, AI agents engage with them in the hopes of accessing mule accounts used to funnel money. That becomes “extremely powerful,” Gerber said, because defenders can apply graph techniques to determine how and where mule accounts are connected to legitimate accounts.
Because in the end, to get their payout, scammers need a legitimate account somewhere, linked to mule accounts, even if it’s cloaked 10 layers down. When defenders can identify these, they can map global fraud networks.
“It’s a wonderful thing when we take the fight to them, because they cause us enough pain as it is,” Gerber said.
Listen to the podcast to learn more about:
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How Mastercard created a “malware sandbox” with Recorded Future;
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Why a data science engineering requirements document (DSERD) was essential to align four separate engineering teams;
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The importance of “relentless prioritization” and tough decision-making to move beyond “a thousand flowers blooming” to projects that actually have a strong business impact;
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Why successful AI deployment should incorporate three phases: ideation, activation, and implementation — but many enterprises skip the second step.
Listen and subscribe to Beyond the Pilot on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Tech
Want full Discord perks? Prepare to prove you’re an adult
If you’re used to hopping between gaming servers, sharing memes, or catching up with friends on Discord, be ready for a small twist in how the platform works. Starting March 2026, Discord will introduce a global age verification system that automatically places every user into a “teen-appropriate experience” until they prove they’re an adult. To fully unlock age-restricted content and certain features, users will need to verify their age via face-based AI estimation or a government-issued ID.

According to Discord’s official announcement, this change is part of a broader safety push to control access to adult or graphic material and comply with international safety expectations. But before you panic that Discord is turning into a DMV, it’s worth noting what changes and what stays the same, if you don’t verify right away.
What works and what doesn’t without age verification
Under Discord’s upcoming teen-by-default setup, everyday features won’t suddenly vanish. Users can still send messages, chat in most regular servers and DMs, hop into voice calls with friends, and hang out in their usual gaming communities just like before.

However, anything marked as adult or age-restricted will stay locked behind a verification wall. That includes access to certain servers and channels, speaking privileges in Stage channels, and viewing unfiltered or sensitive content, which will remain blurred by default. Some message request controls and notification customizations may also stay limited until age verification is completed, meaning full access only unlocks once you confirm you’re old enough.
Discord knows this move isn’t going to earn universal applause. Any time an app asks for a face scan or ID, a few users are bound to hit the exit button instead. Still, the company says the bigger picture is safety first, aiming to set a more secure, teen-friendly default for everyone rather than letting the wild west stay wild.

The good news is your everyday Discord life isn’t getting kicked from the party. DMs, regular servers, and voice chats with the squad will keep humming along. But if you want the full, no-filters version of Discord, complete with adult servers, spicy memes, and every corner of your late-night gaming hangouts, you’ll have to show you’re old enough to enter. Think of it less like a ban and more like a digital bouncer asking for ID at the door.
Tech
Sony’s best wireless buds are getting a refresh imminently
Sony has all but confirmed what the leaks have been hinting at for months: a new pair of flagship earbuds is on the way.
The company has released a short teaser video for the WF-1000XM6, confirming that its next-generation wireless buds are “coming soon”. In addition, a full reveal is set for February 12 at 8am PT.
While the teaser doesn’t give much away on paper, it does make it clear that Sony is getting ready to refresh one of the most respected noise-cancelling earbud lines around. The WF-1000X series has long sat at the top of Sony’s audio lineup. Now, the XM6 looks set to continue that run.
The video itself only briefly shows the earbuds in shadow, but by this point the design isn’t exactly a mystery. Full renders have already leaked, suggesting a refined look rather than a dramatic redesign. Expect a similar premium feel, with subtle tweaks aimed at comfort and wearability rather than a radical change in direction.
As ever, active noise cancellation is expected to be the headline feature. Sony’s ANC performance has consistently ranked among the best in the business, and there’s little reason to think the WF-1000XM6 will be any different. While Sony hasn’t confirmed specific specs yet, improved processing and smarter noise handling feel like safe bets for a generational update.
Colour options are also starting to come into focus. Alongside the usual Black and Platinum Silver, leaks suggest Sony may introduce a new Sandpink finish. This would add a softer, more lifestyle-friendly option to the lineup.
Sony hasn’t said whether February 12 will be a straight reveal or a full launch, but either way, the wait won’t be long. With the WF-1000XM5 already regarded as one of the best pairs of wireless earbuds you can buy, expectations for the XM6 are understandably high.
If Sony sticks the landing, this could be one of the more important audio upgrades of the year. Additionally, it would be a clear signal that the premium earbud arms race isn’t slowing down anytime soon.
Tech
YouTube TV’s new bundles are here to help you lower your streaming bill
YouTube TV announced plans to introduce new genre-specific bundles last year to give users the flexibility to pick and pay for the content they actually want to watch. Four of these bundles are now live in the US, with the platform planning to roll out over ten bundles across Sports, News, Entertainment, and Family content in the coming weeks.
YouTube TV announced the rollout in a recent blog post, highlighting the content included in the introductory bundles and their pricing. The base Sports plan, priced at $64.99/month, will give subscribers access to all major broadcasters, alongside sports networks like FS1, NBC Sports Network, and all of ESPN networks. Subscribers ill also gain access to ESPN Unlimited this fall.
The Sports + News plan includes everything from the Sports plan, along with national news networks such as CNBC, Fox News, MSNBC, CNN, CSPAN, Bloomberg, and Fox Business. It’s priced at $71.99/month. The Entertainment plan, which is the most affordable of the four, costs $54.99/month and includes all major broadcasters and content, “ranging from FX dramas to Hallmark classics, with channels such as Comedy Central, Bravo, Paramount, Food Network, HGTV, and many more.”
Finally, the News + Entertainment + Family plan, priced at $69.99/month, combines news and entertainment channels with family content like Disney Channel, Nickelodeon, National Geographic, Cartoon Network, PBS Kids and more.
YouTube TV bundles offer big savings, especially for new subscribers
All four bundles is priced lower than the main YouTube TV plan, the platform’s most comprehensive offering with over 100 networks across genres. For those who haven’t previously subscribed to YouTube TV, the bundles are available at a discount.
The Sports plan is available for $54.99 per month for the first year, while the Sports + News, Entertainment, and News + Entertainment + Family plans are priced at $56.99, $44.99, and $59.99/month, respectively, for the first three months.
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