TL;DR
ChatGPT’s new Lockdown Mode disables live browsing, agent mode, and deep research to block data exfiltration via prompt injection. Available on all plans.
After years of forcing Bing into nearly every corner of Windows Search, Microsoft may finally be giving users a way out. The company is reportedly testing changes in Windows 11 that would allow people to completely disable Bing-powered web results from the operating system’s built-in Search experience.
For many PC users, this is a long-overdue change. Windows Search has spent years blending local file searches with Bing suggestions, online results, news links, and Microsoft services – often frustrating users who simply wanted to find an app, document, or system setting on their computer.
According to a report by PCMag, Microsoft is now introducing options that separate local Windows search functionality from Bing’s web integration. That means users could eventually type into the Start menu or taskbar and receive only local PC results instead of being pushed toward online Bing content.
The shift appears connected to the European Union’s Digital Markets Act (DMA), which is forcing major technology companies to provide users with greater control over bundled services and platform defaults. Microsoft has already begun making several Europe-specific Windows changes, including easier browser switching and fewer prompts pushing Edge and Bing.
For years, Windows users criticized Microsoft for aggressively integrating Bing into Windows Search, even when it reduced usability. Searching for local files could surface unrelated web links, online recommendations, or Bing-powered suggestions that many users never wanted in the first place.
The frustration became even more noticeable after Microsoft began integrating AI-powered Bing and Copilot features directly into Windows 11. While the company positioned those additions as productivity enhancements, many users felt Windows Search became increasingly cluttered and less focused on core desktop functionality.

The reported update could significantly improve the experience for people who mainly use Search to launch apps, locate files, or navigate Windows settings. Removing Bing integration may also improve responsiveness and reduce unnecessary online queries happening in the background.
For Microsoft, however, the move represents something larger than just a settings toggle. Bing has long been a strategic part of the company’s ecosystem push, helping drive users toward Microsoft services, search advertising, Edge, and now AI-powered Copilot experiences.
Allowing users to disable Bing more freely suggests regulators are having a measurable impact on how Microsoft designs Windows.
Even with the potential Bing removal option, Microsoft is not stepping away from AI or online integrations inside Windows 11. The company continues investing heavily in Copilot and AI-powered productivity tools, which remain central to its long-term strategy for Windows.
That means the upcoming changes are less about abandoning Bing entirely and more about giving users additional control over how deeply Microsoft services are integrated into the desktop experience.

The bigger question now is whether these Bing-removal features remain limited to Europe due to DMA compliance or eventually expand worldwide. If Microsoft rolls the option out globally, it could become one of the most user-friendly Windows Search changes in years.
For longtime Windows users, though, the update already feels symbolic. After years of Microsoft insisting Bing belonged inside Windows Search, users may finally get the choice they have been requesting all along: the ability to search their PC without Microsoft’s search engine constantly getting in the way.
ChatGPT’s new Lockdown Mode disables live browsing, agent mode, and deep research to block data exfiltration via prompt injection. Available on all plans.
OpenAI has begun rolling out Lockdown Mode to ChatGPT, a new security setting designed to block attackers from stealing data through prompt injection attacks. The feature disables live web browsing, agent mode, deep research, image retrieval, Canvas networking, and file downloads. It is available to logged-in users across Free, Go, Plus, Pro, and self-serve ChatGPT Business plans.
Prompt injection remains what OpenAI calls a “frontier” problem affecting all large language models. The attack works by hiding malicious instructions in content the model processes, such as a webpage or uploaded file. If the model follows those instructions, it can be tricked into sending sensitive data to an attacker-controlled server.
Lockdown Mode does not stop injections from happening. A malicious payload embedded in a cached webpage or uploaded PDF can still influence the model’s behaviour. What it does is shut down the outbound pathways an attacker would use to exfiltrate the data. No live browsing means no network requests to external servers. No image retrieval means no pixel-based data channels.
“Lockdown Mode is designed to substantially reduce the risk of prompt injection-based data exfiltration, but it does not guarantee that data exfiltration cannot happen,” OpenAI said. “Risk may remain through enabled Apps, unforeseen combinations of capabilities, or newly discovered techniques.”
The trade-off is significant. With Lockdown Mode on, ChatGPT loses most of what makes its agent and research features useful. Live browsing drops to cached content only. Agent mode is gone entirely. Deep research is disabled. It is, as OpenAI acknowledges, “not intended for everyone.”
The feature arrives as prompt injection attacks on AI agents have become a growing concern. Security researchers have demonstrated hijacks against agents from Anthropic, Google, and Microsoft via their GitHub Actions integrations. All three paid bug bounties but published no public advisories. The underlying weakness is fundamental: LLMs cannot reliably separate data from instructions.
Lockdown Mode and Developer Mode cannot be used simultaneously. Turning one on disables the other. OpenAI also launched a separate session management feature that lets users review active ChatGPT sessions and log out of individual devices if they spot unauthorised activity.
The feature is a pragmatic concession. OpenAI is not claiming to have solved prompt injection. It is accepting that the problem persists and offering users a way to reduce their exposure by giving up functionality. For anyone handling sensitive data in ChatGPT, that trade-off is worth making. For everyone else, the expanding agent ecosystem and its growing attack surface mean the risk is only increasing.
A data breach at the dental benefits administrator DentaQuest has reportedly exposed the sensitive data of 2.6 million accounts.
The security incident came to light last month, when the infamous extortion group ShinyHunters listed the company on its data leak site and claimed to have stolen more than 234 GB of data.
Following what the threat actor describes as a failure to reach an agreement with the company, the data was publicly leaked.

DentaQuest, part of Sun Life, is one of the largest dental benefits administrators in the United States. It manages dental insurance plans and provider networks for Medicaid programs, Medicare Advantage plans, employers, health plans, and individual customers.
The company says it serves 35 million customers, operates programs in 50 states, and has a network of 140,000 dentists and dental specialists.
On June 2, DentaQuest confirmed on its website that its networks had been breached and the incident caused “limited disruption” in customer service.
“DentaQuest is actively managing a cybersecurity incident involving unauthorized access to a limited portion of our network,” reads the statement.
“Upon discovery of the initial incident, we took immediate action to secure our environment, contain the attack, and mitigate the threat.”
“Our systems remain fully operational, and we continue to serve our clients with limited disruption.”
The firm also stated that it engaged external experts to help with the investigation and determine the data that was compromised.
Yesterday, data breach alerting service Have I Been Pwned (HIBP) analyzed the leaked information and found that it contained records for 2.6 million accounts. Specifically, the following was exposed in the leaked dataset:
Although DentaQuest’s statement did not confirm that the data breach affected its clients, HIBP is known to validate leaked datasets using multiple verification methods.
HIBP also stated that roughly 66% of the exposed records were present in its database from past incidents affecting other organizations and services.
People who may have had their information exposed in this incident should be cautious about all incoming communications, as the leaked data increases the risk of social engineering and phishing attacks.
Security teams log 54% of successful attacks and alert on just 14%. The rest move through your environment unseen.
The Picus whitepaper shows how breach and attack simulation tests your SIEM and EDR rules so threats stop slipping by detection.
This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is an anonymous comment offering a theory about ICE’s addiction to masks:
Let me suggest a different reason…
Let’s say that all of those J6 dumbfucks who livestreamed their crimes, and who now have received pardons for acting like trailer trash are looking to start rebuilding their pathetic lives.
Let’s also say that they feel burned by the Trump administration for letting them hang out to dry for 4 years instead of pardoning them in 2020. I’m assuming he thought of them as ‘contractors.’
I’m suggesting that ICE has a hardon for masks because that’s the reward for the J6’ers who got fucked for 4 years – ICE just let them apply, and blam! You have an ICE agency chock full of the garbage of America who have a boner for revenge, but if anyone compares them to J6 footage, they’d be fucked 6 ways to Sunday.
It’s not like security clearances make any difference to this clown car of fuckups.
Unmask those pieces of shit and let’s start comparing faces. I’ll bet once you dig a little, you’ll start to smell the white trash like the Proud Boys, OathKeepers, and all those other MAGAs with ‘small dick syndrome.’
In second place, it’s Stephen T. Stone hammering home the most important point about the Bricks and Minifigs saga:
Dear everyone involved with this story:
This could have been a few emails between lawyers.
For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a reply from dfbomb to the first place winning comment above:
This lines up with my observations that ICE’s behaviors with license plates, car stealing and general fuckery matches the patterns of the Boogaloo and Proud Boys that came to Minneapolis during George Floyd to start a race war.
They even target the same neighborhoods.
Next, it’s Nathan F with a comment about the Supreme Court’s transparently racist double standard on voting rights:
And Roberts still wonders why no one likes the SCOTUS or believes they make good, resonable, well thought out decisions?
Over on the funny side, our first place winner is j with a reaction to our piece on the LEGO dispute:
Wowsers…. There needs to be a length of story warning at the beginning.
I’m used to the normal two to five paragraphs on here. But eighteen page down presses later… just a heads up would be nice.
In second place, it’s Thad raising an eyebrow about one word in a line we wrote about Lindsey Halligan:
Lindsey Halligan — managed to set fire to pretty much everything she touched before deciding to exit to the DOJ.
“deciding”
For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with an anonymous reply to a commenter who spotted a “Luigi” bumper sticker:
Glad that Mario’s brother is finally getting some recognition for helping to take down the evil boss in the mushroom kingdom.
Finally, it’s an anonymous comment about Greg Bovino’s not-so-subtle Nazi salute:
I think there is an innocent explanation for that gesture: Bovino was trying to make himself look taller.
That’s all for this week, folks!

Smartphone and laptop speakers often leave music sounding thin and uninspiring, especially when you want to share a track or enjoy it outdoors. The JBL Go 3, priced at $29.95 (was $40), offers a straightforward fix that fits easily into daily routines or weekend escapes. Compact enough to slip into a jacket pocket or clip onto a backpack strap, the speaker measures about 3.4 inches long, 2.7 inches tall, and 1.6 inches deep. It weighs just 0.46 pounds. A sturdy fabric loop on one end turns carrying into a simple clip-on task.
Build quality is all about real-world dependability, or how well it can endure the stresses of daily life. With an IP67 water and dust resistance rating, you can spend the day at the beach without having to worry about sand or pool splashes. Owners routinely travel with these speakers from the city streets to the beach without regard for durability.
Sale
Inside, a single 1.5-inch driver generates 4.2 watts of power, which is more than you’d think from such a little speaker. The vocals and lead instruments are crisp and clear, and the overall sound is just intense enough to get the party started. This thing has it all, whether you prefer rock, pop, electronics, or any other style. The volume can be loud enough to fill a picnic area or a small gathering; however, pushing it too far may cause strain, although at moderate volumes, the ride is relatively smooth.
The battery life is rated at five hours, but in reality, at normal volumes, you can get 8 to 10 hours without having to recharge. In a nutshell, this is what many tests and owner reports have revealed. USB-C charging is quick and efficient, taking about 2 hours and 30 minutes, and you also get a handy little cable for topping up your battery on the go. Bluetooth 5.1 manages the connection nicely, with simple pairing and a reasonable range. Up top, there are buttons for basic playback, volume, power, and other functions.
Here’s Tim Cook from the WWDC 2025 keynote video.
Ever since Tim Cook announced in April that he’d be stepping down as CEO, the countdown to his planned exit in September began, ahead of the expected iPhone 18 launch. What became Cook’s last year coincided with Apple’s 50th anniversary (which, in hindsight, doesn’t seem like a coincidence), complete with celebrations like a private concert with Paul McCartney.
Given those revelries, we can expect some send-offs at WWDC lauding Cook’s 15 years steering the ship. Apple’s mid-year developer show is always about looking ahead to the next big software updates, but we’d expect some looks back at Cook’s legacy. It’s easy to forget the uncertainty surrounding Cook’s ascension, which coincided with Apple co-founder Steve Jobs’ passing, but the logistics master leaves the company a multi-trillion-dollar success, with a limited but steady embrace of AI in its software and new products like the iPhone Fold on the horizon.
With that legacy of stability, we don’t expect much to change at Cook’s last WWDC: more software focused on incremental, continued refinement of the company’s operating systems. For the modest Cook, one last wave as the Apple juggernaut steams ahead seems fitting.
There have been a huge number of new products announced at the High-End audio show, with the world’s largest audio event now coming to end of its first stay in Vienna.
But it remains the same old High-End, showcasing the latest in extravagant hi-fi as well as more affordable kit looking to attract attention.
With plenty of brands launching new kit at the show, we’ve rounded up all the biggest and most important news from the event. Keeping reading for all the latest news from High-End Vienna 2026.


Korean audio brand Astell&Kern debuted two new products at High-End Vienna, and as per usual, they’re both expensive and high-specc’d.
The SP4000T continues where the SP3000T left off and goes even further. It’s an industry-first by being the first digital audio player to have Raytheon Jan6418 MIL-Spec vintage vacuum tubes in a Quad configuration. We’re not sure what that means but it does sound fancy.
It also marks A&K’s first dual Wi-Fi antenna design, delivering faster and more stable wireless performance. That is something we can definitely get behind.


Bowers & Wilkins took the wraps off its flagship 800 Series loudspeakers, which it says are its most “advanced” loudspeakers yet.
The new D5 range marks the fifth generation of Bowers’ 800 series, describing the new 800 Series Diamond as fusing “acoustic and mechanical excellence with elegant and meaningful design”. The design has been optimised with a new top plate, spine,and plinth, as well as revised drive unit, pods, tweeter body, trim rings and grilles.
The new 800 Series loudspeakers are due to go on sale in September of this year.


Yamaha has returned to the wireless speaker market for the first time in over a decade with the NX-70A.
It’s active wireless speaker full to the brim with Yamaha’s proprietary tech that includes YPAO that adjusts the sound based on the acoustics of the room the speakers are in, the Synergistic Drive that minimises distortion in the audio signal, and drive units made from ZYLON and spruce wood to help reproduce vocals and instruments naturally.
Wirelessly, there’s Spotify Connect, Google Cast, AirPlay 2 and Roon functionality to count on, and there’s HDMI eARC port to connect to a TV.


FiiO has launched three new products, but who knows, considering their track record, there could be more.
At the forefront is the JT9 planar magnetic headphones with an open-backed design for desktop listening. The Level 1 is a a desktop amplifier with 300W of power at its disposal, as well as LDAC Bluetooth for streaming; while lastly, there’s the Class A headphone amplifier that’s designed for high-end headphones in mind.


Announced back in April after it made its debut at AXPONA, Kanto is previewing its new Tuk Grand speakers at High-End Vienna.
The Tuk Grand sits at the top of Kanto’s latest range and features a larger cabinet than the previous model, with a 6-inch aluminium concave woofer to handle the lows and an Air Motion Transformer tweeter for treble. Peak power output is rated at 320W, and the Tuk Grand comes with Bluetooth connectivity with aptX HD and aptX Adaptive streaming.
Also on show will be redesigned, active speaker versions of Tuk, Yu6, and Yu4, alongside passive versions of the same speakers.


JBL took the wraps off its most ambitious loudspeakers yet with the unveiling of its next-generation Summit Everest and Summit K2.
The Summit Everest sits at the top of the stack, carrying forward the legacy of four previous Everest generations. It uses a redesigned mid and high-frequency system built around JBL compression drivers and a large-format HDI horn.
Slightly lower in the range, the Summit K2 follows a similar design philosophy, useing JBL’s compression driver system and HDI horn design, paired with a 15-inch woofer and 10-inch mid-bass driver. This approach aims to deliver the same sense of scale and clarity as the Summit Everest, but in a smaller footprint.


The Model 4 joins the Model 3 and Model 5 speakers from the American heritage loudspeaker brand, and makes its debut at High-End.
It’s a loudspeaker that combines attributes of the Model 3 and 5 into one speaker enclosure, utilising the smaller footprint of the Model 3 and sonic architecture of the Model 5 to create a speaker for rooms where there’s not as much space but high fidelity is still paramount when it comes to listening sessions.


Another company marking an anniversary this year is Arcam, and its celebrating the occasion with two new high-end audio launches in the A50 Signature integrated amplifier and the CD25 CD player.
Arcam has positioned both devices as a continuation of its current Radia Series, with a clear focus on modern system flexibility, refined engineering, and high-end performance.
The A50 Signature is the new flagship integrated amplifier, and the most advanced Class G model Arcam has released to date. The CD25 is the first Arcam CD player since the FMJ D33 DAC to use a dual-mono DAC architecture, with ESS Hyperstream 4 technology onboard to improve channel separation and deliver more controlled dynamics in standard CD playback.


It wouldn’t be an High-End event without iFi Audio launching yet another product, and in Vienna it’ll be previewing the iDSD GR2, which replaces the five-star xDSD Gryphon.
The iDSD GR2 has been rebuilt from the ground up from the Gryphon, with iFi describing it as its most capable true-portable DAC/amp so far.
Upgrades include new DAC architecture, a fully balanced amplification stage, support for lossless Bluetooth audio, and a new colour OLED touchscreen interface for making adjustments to settings.
Also announced at the show was the Go Link 2 Max, a USB-C dongle that can transform “your phone, laptop, or PC into a powerful high-resolution audio source”.


Topping is a brand you may not have heard of but it’s having an impact with hi-fi kit that offers more value than the price point suggests. The E50 II brings higher-end features to a more affordable price.
It’s a DAC rather than a headphone amplifier, supports hi-res audio up to 32-bit/768kHz and native DSD512, and Bluetooth support with LDAC and aptX Adaptive onboard. All that for just £199.


Marking 80 years since founder Takeshi Godai established the company in 1946, Onkyo has introduced two anniversary product lines.
The anniversary edition of the Muse Y-50(G) Network Integrated Amplifier takes its visual cues from the Integra M-588, carrying Bordeaux walnut side panels, a Champagne gold aluminium front panel, and a ventilated top plate patterned on the Japanese San Kuzushi motif.
The Muse delivers 250 watts into 4-ohm speakers through an Axign Class D amplifier with MOS FET output. A 5.46-inch colour LCD displaying track information and analogue-style VU meters alongside support for AirPlay 2, Google Cast, Qobuz Connect, Spotify Connect, and TIDAL Connect.
The Creator Series features the GX-30ARC and GX-10DB powered monitors. Each uses Class D amplification with bi-amplification technology that powers the tweeter and woofer independently, with the GX-30ARC featuring Bluetooth 5.3, HDMI ARC, optical, RCA/Phono, Subwoofer Pre-Out, and USB-C connectivity for integration with desktop, gaming, and home theatre setups.


WiiM has launched its first ever soundbar and it’s got Sonos in its sights with the WiiM Bar.
We had a sneak peak of this in its prototype form at Bristol Hi-Fi Show, and the finished product is functionally the same as we saw it earlier in the year. It transfers the porthole display from the WiiM Sound speaker with a 2.1-inch effort that is also a touch screen for adjust settings.
It’s a 3.0.2 configuration, and when partnered with the Sound/Sound Lite speakers and the WiiM Sub, can be used in a full 5.1.2 immersive home cinema set-up. Audio support includes both Dolby Atmos and DTS:X.


Majority Audio aims to make modern streaming audio more accessible with its new Link Series.
The entry point is the Link Mini, a small streamer designed to plug into existing speakers, radios, or hi-fi systems. The step up is the Link View, which introduces a 2.1-inch circular touchscreen paired with a rotary control dial.
Above the Link View is the Link Pro, with streaming support, DAB/DAB+ radio, internet radio and HDMI ARC. At the top of the range is the Link Pro Amp that can deliver up to 300W of Class-D power, combining streaming, amplification and radio features in a single unit.


Audio-Technica has expanded its flagship cartridge line with the AT-MCD1. It’s a moving-coil design built around a one-piece CVD diamond cantilever and stylus construction.
The AT-MCD1 is priced at £9,999 and is available on to buy now.


The Jamo name has lain dormant for several years but it’s back and it’s launching several new products in Vienna.
For now, we’re concentrating on its two new speaker series in the Concert Legacy and Concert Element, an evolution of its Concert models from the 1990s.
Developed in Denmark, with the drivers co-designed with Scan-Speak and SEAS; the Concert Legacy zeroes in on performance, while the Concert Element focuses on design. Both series launch in August but you can preview them at High-End.


Cambridge launched the Evo 300, a streaming amplifier “engineered for music lovers who want serious, high-end hi-fi performance and effortless power” All you need to do is add speakers to it.
With Evo 300 300W per channel from its Hypex NCOREx Class D amplification configured in a dual-mono layout, there’s an ESS Sabre ES9038Q2M with audio support up to 32-bit/768kHz PCM, along with DSD512.
Also announced by Cambridge is the availability of a black version of its Evo One wireless speaker.


Meze Audio is known for its expensive wired headphones, but with the ARTA, it’s pushed the boat out even more in terms of price.
Rinaro has developed a new MZ5 HΩ planar magnetic driver that Meze claims is the highest-impedance planar magnetic headphone driver yet, operating at 225 ohms. Other specs include a frequency response of 3Hz to 115kHz, with distortion below 0.05%. Users can also replace every major part of the headphones to keep them lasting for as long as possible.
The price for the headphones is a stonking £6000 / $6000 / €6000.


Klipsch has two new notable products to note at High End and both speak to its past.
It marks its 80th anniversary by bringing out the Limited Edition 80th Anniversary of the Klipschorn, a modern take on founder Paul W. Klipsch’s original 1946 loudspeaker design. Only 280 pairs will be made.
The second loudspeaker is the Rebellion, the brand’s first compact entry in the Heritage line and directly inspired by Paul W. Klipsch’s original 1958 H8 design. It is a two-way speaker built around a high-efficiency design that Klipsch says it delivers deep bass and crisp, low-distortion highs from a relatively compact cabinet.


Moon will be showcasing the latest additions to its Compass Collection at High-End.
The Moon 491, in typical Moon fashion, is a Swiss Army knife of hi-fi, taking in network player, preamplifier, DAC, phono stage and headphone amplifier” skills so it can act as the hub “of a high-performance audio system”.
The Moon 461 power amplifier can act as a partner for the 491 network player, pumping out 150W per channel for low distortion and stable performance across a “wide range” of loudspeaker loads. They’ll both be on sale in the UK from July onwards.


Celebrating its 40th anniversary, Ruark Audio has revealed its R710 Music Console and Talisman-R floor-standing speakers.
The R710 delivers a “clean power output” of up to 200W per channel, and it supports Spotify Connect, Qobuz Connect, Tidal Connect, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, Internet Radio and aptX HD Bluetooth.
The Talisman-R is a two-way, bass reflex design, retaining Ruark’s preference for natural driver materials with a 165mm low throw treated fibre NS+ woofer, plus a 27mm silk dome tweeter.
The R710 Music Console comes in a choice of Fused Walnut or Satin Charcoal Finishes with a suggested retail price of £2199 / €2699. The Talisman-R floostanding speakers are available in the same finishes with an SRP of £1499 / €1799.


DALI is attending this year’s High-End with a preview of its interesting, upcoming all-in-one speaker system.
The Vega can be placed on a desktop of hung from a wall, with 10 drivers inside to produce sound, plus various streaming inputs and HDMI ARC for those who wish to connect to a TV. With plenty of style and grace, it’s an system that looks like it might give the Focal Hekla Muso some competition.


Clearaudio unveiled its biggest product line-ups in recent years at High-End, introducing everything from customisable turntables and limited-edition collector models to a new phono stage, power supply and cartridge.
Leading the announcements is the new Elevation Series, comprised of the Elevation 45 and Elevation 55 turntables. Considering the number of products Clearaudio announced, you’re advised to have a look at our write up of everything it launched.


Audeze has updated its Manny Marroquin Signature Series with the introduction of the MM-520.
Developed in collaboration with 18-time Grammy-winning mix engineer Manny Marroquin, the MM-520 are at audio professionals for monitoring across different playback systems.
This latest update comes with Audeze’s SLAM technology, short for Symmetric Linear Acoustic Modulator, which it claims optimises the air pressure inside the earcups to improve low-frequency performance and spatial presentation without altering the neutral character of the sound.


In a surprise for a premium brand such as Noble Audio, it’s launched a pair of true wireless at what some might describe as ‘normal’ prices.
The Osprey is a true wireless that brings Noble’s high-tech approach down to more affordable levels, with support for ANC, LDAC Bluetooth, and a hybrid driver design that cover the frequency range and deliver the precise and balanced sound that the brand is known for.
You won’t need to be at Vienna to sample them, though, as they’re on sale now.
Also featuring from Noble Audio is its FoKus Artemis over-ear headphones, which rather relying on a single full-range drive unit for sound, the Artemis combines three: a dynamic driver for bass, a balanced armature driver for midrange, and a planar magnetic driver for speed and detail.
Pricing is $899 / £799 / €949 with shipping expected to start in July 2026


Fyne Audio is presenting its recently announced Cubitt 5 active speaker at High-End Vienna.
The Cubitt 5 is an active stereo system with 240W of amplification, a built-in phono stage, and HDMI eARC to connect to a TV. There’s no Wi-Fi but there is Bluetooth 5 connectivity with AAC and aptX HD supported for streaming.
Sound is delivered through Fyne’s 5-inch IsoFlare point-source driver, a coaxial design that it says can radiate sound from a single point in space to produce a stereo image that’s consistent across a wide listening area.
The FyneFlute surround technology reduces colouration to improve midrange clarity, and there’s a front-firing bass port also allowing close-to-wall placement without reducing bass loss.


Canor Audio expanded its Performance series with the introduction two of its Verto D3 DAC and Asterion V3 phono preamplifier.
The Verto D3 is a tube-based digital-to-analogue converter, using a fully balanced dual-mono design and factoring in support for PCM files up to 768kHz and native DSD512 playback.
The Asterion V3 is a new tube phono preamplifier aimed at vinyl enthusiasts, and features support for both moving magnet and moving coil cartridges, with extensive adjustment options allowing users to tailor performance to different turntable setups.
Trump signed NSPM-11, ordering rapid military AI adoption and barring vendors from disabling models without approval. Hegseth must update autonomous weapons policy.
President Trump signed a national security presidential memorandum on Friday ordering the US military and intelligence agencies to accelerate their adoption of cutting-edge AI. The directive, NSPM-11, establishes a framework for “rapid onboarding of the most advanced AI models from multiple vendors.” It also bars any company from disabling, degrading, or modifying an AI system that warfighters depend on without prior government approval.
That vendor restriction is the most striking provision. It means an AI company cannot pull a deployed model from military use unilaterally, even if the company has safety concerns about how it is being used. The clause lands directly in the context of the Pentagon’s ongoing feud with Anthropic, which was blacklisted as a supply chain risk after refusing to allow its Claude models to be used for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance.
“The men and women who defend our nation deserve the best, most secure and most reliable AI in the world,” said Michael Kratsios, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
The memo also directs Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth to issue an updated directive on autonomous weapon systems within 90 days. That update would revise DoD Directive 3000.09, the foundational Pentagon policy governing when and how autonomous and semi-autonomous weapons can be used, including requirements for human judgment before lethal force is applied.
There are stated limits. The memo prohibits defence agencies from creating or releasing AI models designed to “censor free speech, embed ideological bias or conduct unlawful surveillance against the American people.” But it does not define those terms or explain how compliance would be enforced.
The directive follows Tuesday’s executive order that established a voluntary 30-day review window for frontier AI models before public release. Together, the two documents outline a dual approach: light-touch regulation for the commercial sector and aggressive adoption for the military.
The “multiple vendors” language signals a shift away from single-provider dependency. Until recently, Anthropic was the only AI vendor approved for classified military use. After the Pentagon signed classified deals with Nvidia, Microsoft, and AWS, the administration is now formalising a multi-vendor approach.
The memo makes accountability central. Commanders, directors, and agency heads remain responsible for ensuring AI is used in line with its stated obligations. Annual reviews of key guidance across the national security enterprise are required to keep pace with the AI frontier. Whether those reviews will be meaningful or performative remains an open question.
WWDC’s keynote will celebrate macOS 27, but it will also be a funeral for Intel Macs. The final countdown for their apps starts tomorrow.
The introduction of Apple Silicon immediately put a timer on the Intel Mac experience. Apple Silicon was the company’s new direction, and that everyone should migrate that way or be left behind.
Evolve or die. Except less morbid and that it really dealt with software and hardware support.
As the years have progressed, the migration to an Apple Silicon existence has marched onward. There’s no signs of it stopping until it reaches the end, when Apple no longer actually supports any Intel Mac at all with its operating systems and software.
Cupertino’s multi-year impression of the Terminator crossed with the Borg has already claimed some scalps. In 2025’s WWDC Platforms State of the Union address, Apple confirmed macOS 26 Tahoe will be the last major release to include native support for Intel Macs.
That means macOS Tahoe is the last Apple-created operating system you can install on Macs using an Intel chip.
Hardware communities such as OpenCore and Hackintosh users have braced for the end for over a year already. They all know that, hardware-wise, the time has come.
Intel hardware won’t be making the move to macOS 27. Software that uses it, though, will.
Reusing a trick from a previous architecture transition, Rosetta 2 is a macOS feature that translates Intel-based Mac apps to run on Apple Silicon Macs. This is handled automatically, and without modifying the source code of the app itself.
There’s a small performance hit, but otherwise the app runs fine.
The whole point of Rosetta 2 was to buy some time for both app developers and Mac users. The users get to keep running their existing collection of Intel macOS apps, while developers update them to work on Apple Silicon.
Back in the day, you were asked to install Rosetta 2 if you ran an Intel app on an Apple Silicon Mac. – Image Credit: Apple
Developers also benefited from a universal app, namely an app package that contained both Intel and Apple Silicon versions. To users, they wouldn’t have to remember whether they were using an Intel or Apple Silicon Mac, as they’d just install one app.
While you can expect universal apps to hang around for a few more years, Rosetta 2 won’t last as long.
During the same Platforms State of the Union address, Apple told developers that they need to get their apps supporting Apple Silicon in time for macOS 28.
This doesn’t mean that Rosetta 2 will be killed off entirely. Really, it’s only being scaled back to only support legacy apps that won’t get updated again, like really old games.
Don’t worry, your game saves are probably going to be playable for a while longer. To developers, this means embracing Apple Silicon if they haven’t already done so, assuming they care about their game.
Developers don’t have to go full Apple Silicon either, as they can still service Intel Mac users with the universal app package. This is especially good for apps that have a very large user base, who may be more likely to hold onto their older hardware.
They just can’t expect to produce just Intel-only apps and expect to build their audience.
While developers have their marching orders from Apple, it’s only half of the audience that should pay attention. End users should, too.
Like many other long-time users of Apple’s ecosystem, AppleInsider is a collection of digital packrats. We have excessive software collections, including apps and tools that are probably old enough to vote.
However, many users will be thinking that their existing apps are already fine, because they run on their Apple Silicon hardware. But, if they’re Intel-only apps, they’re running through Rosetta 2, which makes them a ticking timebomb of annoyance.
Updating the apps is a pretty straightforward way to migrate, but there’s no guarantee that the apps will switch to an Apple Silicon version. It’s easy to check your own Mac app collection for compatibility, too.
Many developers have already made the jump, with DoesItARM.com listing 52.2% of apps as running natively on Apple Silicon. If we factor out the 38.4% of questionable listings that “need info,” that works out to be a massive 84.7% of apps on the site being Apple Silicon-native.
That is a very encouraging sign, but there’s also 7.4% that work on Rosetta, or 12% if we ignore the “need info” group. While the current “unsupported” group is 2%, that will raise significantly if these Rosetta-needing apps don’t get an Apple Silicon alternative.
There’s also the issue of trusting a developer or a company leaving it late to bring out an Apple Silicon-supporting version of an app. If they’re this late to the party already, there may be other things to worry about on the horizon.
You may have a year to still comfortably use your apps, but seriously consider giving your library a check-through for any Intel-only apps. You’ll have plenty of time to either nag the developers to see sense, or to replace the stragglers with an alternative.
To be fair, you should act like a digital Marie Kondo and get rid of apps that don’t spark “joy” anyway.
This is, of course, discussed from the angle of users who have already moved to Apple Silicon. I do have to acknowledge that there are some who are still using Intel Macs, and don’t really intend to make the upgrade.
For computer archivists and historians, and those into retro computing in general, it’s completely understandable to use the older hardware. There’s no argument about that at all.
But, for those who have paid a lot for their Intel Mac and feel it still suits them fine, I implore you to check out Apple Silicon.
The claims during the launch of it being much faster than Intel were true. Years and multiple chip generations later, things have only become faster and better.
Sure, there’s the sunk-cost fallacy to deal with, in that you want to get your money’s worth from spending thousands on a Mac Pro.
Yes, we understand that the Mac Pro has its place as an upgradable computer for specialized applications. But really, it was a status symbol that can now be outpaced by a suitably kitted-out MacBook Pro.
The performance gains, even from models that aren’t top-of-the-line, is very real and should be considered. You’ll get over what you spent on your previous Mac, eventually.
Even if your Intel Mac is a mission-critical system for your business, seriously think about making the change. At some point, the metaphorical wheels will come off that wagon, and preventative upgrades are better than dealing with a potentially expensive cure, accompanied by severe downtime.
Monday’s WWDC keynote and Platforms State of the Union will introduce many new shiny features and a massive amount of AI news. What it also brings is the end of Intel hardware updates, and Apple’s preparation to sound the death knell for Intel apps.
It’s two messages that users may miss, but really should listen out for.
Last week’s Sunday Reboot asked Craig Federighi to make the WWDC announcements a little less AI-focused, and to make AI actually matter for once.
The Silent Ransom Group extortion gang is actively targeting U.S. law firms and professional services organizations in social engineering attacks that often lead to data theft within hours of initial contact, according to a new report by cybersecurity firm Mandiant.
The report follows an FBI FLASH advisory published last week warning that the Silent Ransom Group was targeting U.S. law firms in social engineering and even in-person data theft attacks, with Mandiant now providing additional technical details about how the intrusions are conducted.
Mandiant says the threat group, tracked as UNC3753, Luna Moth, and Chatty Spider, targeted dozens of organizations across the legal, financial, and professional services sectors between January and May 2026.
Mandiant warned that legal firms remain especially attractive targets because they store large volumes of highly sensitive client information and may feel pressured to resolve extortion incidents to avoid reputational and regulatory damage.
“Legal services firms represent high-value targets for extortion actors. They maintain concentrated repositories of extremely sensitive client transaction files, merger and acquisition plans, client trade secrets, and corporate regulatory reports,” explains Mandiant.
“Threat groups recognize that legal entities are subject to heavy reputational and regulatory exposure and may be highly motivated to resolve extortion situations quietly to protect their professional standing.”
The researchers say the attacks begin with invoice-themed phishing emails from consumer email accounts. These emails do not contain malicious links or attachments and instead serve as a precursor for follow-up phone calls from attackers impersonating corporate IT staff.
Conducting attacks via voice calls has been an ongoing tactic by these threat actors for years, which they previously used in BazarCall social engineering campaigns tied to Ryuk and Conti ransomware attacks. A callback phishing attack is when threat actors send benign-looking phishing emails containing alarming or IT-related lures that prompt the recipient to call them back at an enclosed phone number.
In the current campaign, the Silent Ransom Group impersonates IT help desks and convinces employees to join remote support sessions via Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Quick Assist, or Microsoft Terminal Services.
During these sessions, the threat actors trick the target into installing remote monitoring and management tools such as AnyDesk, Zoho Assist, Bomgar, or SuperOps, thereby granting them initial access to the corporate network.

Mandiant also discovered phishing domains tied to the campaign that impersonate internal IT portals using naming patterns such as:
-itdesk[.]com
-it[.]com
-helpdesk[.]com
The researchers say the threat actors also use privnote[.]com, a self-destructing messaging service, to share installation links and commands with targets during remote support sessions. According to Mandiant, this tactic helps reduce forensic artifacts left in browser histories or corporate chat logs.
Once inside a network, the group searches for sensitive legal and financial documents, including contracts, tax records, Social Security numbers, and merger or acquisition files. The attackers commonly target document management platforms and cloud storage repositories before exfiltrating the data using tools such as WinSCP or Rclone.
Mandiant says the extortion operation is highly aggressive, with ransom demands often arriving within 30 minutes of the attackers leaving the victim environment.
“These highly aggressive extortion letters give organizations a three-day deadline to respond and initiate ransom negotiations. If the victim organization is unresponsive, the threat actors declare they will call and email target employees and external clients directly to alert them of the data breach,” reports Mandiant.
“The extortion letters explicitly emphasize that the leak will compromise client trust, invite substantial regulatory fines, and suggest that external clients sue the victim organization for data mishandling.”
The report also references the FBI’s recent advisory in which law enforcement warned that the Silent Ransom Group was targeting U.S. law firms with in-person data theft attacks.
According to the FBI, attackers impersonate internal IT staff over phone calls and emails, then attempt to gain remote access or physically visit offices to “image” computers or create backups while secretly stealing files.
While Mandiant said there was limited forensic evidence, the researchers believe these in-person attacks are likely linked to UNC3753 based on similarities in targeting, timelines, and operational behavior.
The Silent Ransom Group has been active since at least 2022, when it was part of the Ryuk and Conti cybercrime syndicate.
As previously reported by BleepingComputer, the threat actors were previously linked to BazarCall callback phishing campaigns that provided initial access in Conti and Ryuk ransomware attacks.
After the Conti syndicate shut down in 2022, the group shifted to standalone data theft and extortion operations under the Silent Ransom Group branding.
Researchers say the group no longer relies on traditional ransomware encryption and instead focuses entirely on data-theft extortion, in which they steal sensitive data and pressure victims into paying to prevent leaks.
A separate report released this week by Resecurity found that the gang is also operating fast-flux infrastructure to hide and protect its data-leak platforms.
DNS fast flux is a method where attackers constantly rotate a domain’s IP addresses through a large pool of compromised devices to hide their infrastructure and make takedowns or blocking far more difficult.
According to the company, the infrastructure uses residential IP addresses across multiple countries and ISPs to make takedowns more difficult.
Resecurity said the group’s “business-data-leaks[.]com” leak site and related infrastructure rely on residential proxy networks spread across Latin America, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, the Middle East, and Asia. The researchers also linked the infrastructure to other cybercrime-related services and domains.
To defend against the attacks, both Mandiant and the FBI recommend implementing strict verification procedures for IT support interactions, limiting remote access tools, enforcing MFA, restricting USB storage devices, and training employees to recognize voice phishing attempts.
For organizations looking to defend against phishing, BEC, and account takeover attacks, BleepingComputer is hosting a webinar with Abnormal titled “Stop chasing alerts: Automating email security with behavioral AI.“
The webinar will explore how behavioral AI can help security teams detect and respond to modern phishing attacks, automate investigations and remediation, and reduce the operational burden caused by alert fatigue and increasingly sophisticated social engineering campaigns.
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The Scuf Omega is the Corsair subsidiary’s latest PlayStation 5-compatible controller. It’s received the PlayStation seal of approval as an officially-licensed product, so you’d expect it to be of at least a reasonably high quality, right?
Here’s the thing. I’ve reviewed loads of the best PS5 controllers, including a bunch of those at the premium price level, including the Razer Raiju V3 Pro, DualSense Edge, and the Victrix Pro BFG Reloaded. The Scuf Omega hasn’t outshone any of them in my testing, even though, on paper, it should win out with its feature set and customization options.
So, where has Scuf gone wrong? Much of it comes down to build quality. While it’s solid enough in the hands – and actually very comfortable – most individual parts can be removed, like the faceplate, touchpad plate, d-pad, face buttons, and the thumbsticks. In isolation, these parts (and the accessories included in the box, like button and paddle blanks and optional long-shaft thumbsticks) feel cheap and flimsy.
I’m also not at all a fan of the optional paddle buttons on the sides of the controller. These are far too easy to press accidentally, and because they come pre-mapped out of the box, even gently tapping one mid-game can feel like the video game equivalent of stepping on a Lego brick.
I’ll get into other issues I have with the Scuf Omega below, but I want to stress it’s not all bad news. Those side buttons and paddles are removable and can be replaced with included blanking plates, preventing accidental presses entirely if you don’t really feel like using them (though this is a controller squarely aimed at players who do appreciate these additional input options).
And in general, actually playing games with the Scuf Omega is a pretty wonderful experience. The d-pad and face buttons are extremely tactile with a ludicrously short travel. The textured grips are comfortable, and the controller just sits in your hands so nicely. I adore the digital trigger option here, too, giving them the exact same immediacy as the buttons you’ll be pressing the most.
Again, there’s plenty Scuf has gotten right with the Omega, but I just can’t recommend it at the triple-digit sticker price when it’s not as solidly or thoughtfully built as competing premium options.
It’s easy to baulk at the price of the Scuf Omega. However, this is the bracket where most third-party PS5 controllers sit. For example, the Razer Raiju V3 Pro comes in at $219.99 / £199.99, while the official DualSense Edge can be had for $199.99 / £199.99. Meanwhile, there’s the similarly modular Victrix Pro BFG Reloaded, which will set you back $209.99 / £179.99. It’s an expensive space.
The thing is, if you want to buy a PS5 controller that isn’t the standard DualSense, options outside of that premium space are practically non-existent. I could forgive many of the Scuf Omega’s shortcomings if it were made available at a more tempting mid-range price.
We know that Sony can be challenging to work with for third-parties, especially as it reserves features like haptic feedback, adaptive triggers, and native PS5 wireless connectivity for its own controller hardware. That often means that brands stick to PC, Xbox, or Nintendo consoles, thus drying up any meaningful budget-to-mid-range alternatives on PlayStation.
Still, when I look at controllers in other spaces, like the 8BitDo Pro 3 or GameSir Tarantula Pro, I’m seeing similar premium features on those pads, like Tunnel Magnetoresistance (TMR) sticks and extra remappable buttons. All available for much, much less.
My two cents right now? Wait for a sale. If you see the Scuf Omega drop by around 20-25% over a major sales period, then I’d say that’s a good time to consider picking one up.
| Row 0 – Cell 0 |
Scuf Omega |
|
Price |
$219.99 / £209.99 (around AU$300) |
|
Weight |
8.9oz / 254g |
|
Dimensions |
6.5 x 4.5 x 2.5in / 164 x 115 x 64mm |
|
Compatibility |
PS5, PC |
|
Connection type |
Wireless (2.4GHz, Bluetooth), Wired (USB-C) |
|
Battery life |
Around 17 hours |
The Scuf Omega is a mixed bag on the design front, but it has nailed it on the ergonomics front. The controller feels fantastic in the hands, resting snugly and firmly, thanks to the rugged textured grips on the back half of the controller. It’s close in shape to the DualSense Wireless Controller, though the Omega’s row of G1 to G5 buttons at the bottom between the grips adds some slight extra volume.
If you read that last sentence and thought “wow, that’s a lot of buttons,” then you’d be right. The Scuf Omega is not wanting when it comes to ancillary features. Those G1 to G5 buttons mainly govern headset volume and mic muting (which is lovely to have on the controller itself), though G1 and G5 are remappable on PS5.
Beyond those, you have a dedicated profile switching button, four paddle buttons on the back (two of which can be removed and replaced with the included blanking panels), a pair of side bumpers (one on each flank), and trigger locks that are built right into the triggers themselves.
The central touchpad also works as it would on a DualSense, enabling cursor movement and gestures in supporting games. That isn’t something you see often with third-party PS5 controllers, which often opt for the basic touchpad clicks and no actual touch functionality.
One design aspect I do find to be a bit finicky is how the Omega handles connectivity options. You can swap between 2.4GHz, Bluetooth, and wired connections with one switch, and PS5 and PC connectivity with another. That isn’t uncommon for third-party PS5 controllers.
The problem is that these switches are hidden beneath the Omega’s faceplate. So yes, that means you have to remove the faceplate every time you want to make a connectivity change. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s an irksome extra step you’ll need to contend with if you regularly swap between PS5 and PC play, for example.
It’s not just the faceplate that’s removable here, though. Practically every module on the Omega – from the sticks and touchpad plate to the rear paddles, d-pad, and face buttons – can all be taken out and swapped for other parts (many of which are sold on Scuf’s website separately). On the one hand, I like this; it gives the Omega the kind of customizable flair usually reserved for speciality controllers like fight sticks.
On the other hand, it reveals the Omega’s build quality isn’t at all what it seems. When put together, it feels solid enough. However, its individual parts in isolation feel rather cheap. Especially the faceplate, which feels brittle enough to snap in half with little effort. Obviously, I would never do this, and I imagine you wouldn’t, either. But a mischievous nephew might. Just something to be cautious about if you choose to buy the Scuf Omega yourself.
There are also some instances where the controller just doesn’t feel all that thoughtfully put together. Those blanking plates for the rear and side paddles can start to feel loose, and I often need to secure them back in place. The touchpad plate almost has the opposite issue, where it can sometimes get wedged to the left or right. While this didn’t have a profound impact on play, it does add to that feeling of cheapness that I shouldn’t expect from a controller that costs as much as the Omega does.
I’m going to keep this section short because I have virtually no complaints (I have one, but I’ll get to that) about the Scuf Omega’s game performance. It may fall short of the competition on build quality, but when it comes to actually playing games, the Omega does it better than any PS5 controller I’ve tested to date. Yes, even Sony’s own DualSense Edge.
Performance is where the Scuf Omega just about clinches a four-star rating from me. I adore the clicky immediacy of its d-pad and face buttons, both of which are powered by the brand’s own Omron mechanical switches. And on the thumbsticks front, you’ll have no issues with drift, thanks to Scuf leveraging Hall effect-like TMR tech here.
I think my favorite aspect of the Scuf Omega is its two-way trigger locks, though. These are housed on the underside of the triggers themselves, which is a really thoughtful design touch. I love the digital trigger press here, which provides fast, fluid inputs for shooters like Fortnite and Call of Duty. You can switch back to a more traditional analog pull at any time, too, which makes the Omega a dab hand at racing games like Forza Horizon 6.
It’d be almost a slam dunk if it weren’t for the awkward and frankly annoying side bumpers. Aesthetically, they’re horrible, jutting out of the sides of the pad where your fingers can accidentally press them all too easily. And because they come pre-mapped, my first hour or so with the Omega came with no shortage of mispresses in-game.
Sure, there’s a use case for pro players who like quick and easy access to input shortcuts, but they’re wholly unnecessary for casual folks. After a bit of testing, I swiftly swapped them out for the side blanking paddles.
If you’re not quite feeling the Scuf Omega, here’s a quick glance at a couple of other PS5-facing third-party options.
| Row 0 – Cell 0 |
Scuf Omega |
Victrix Pro BFG Reloaded |
Razer Raiju V3 Pro |
|
Price |
$219.99 / £209.99 (around AU$300) |
$209.99 / £179.99 (around AU$322) |
$219.99 / £199.99 (around AU$339) |
|
Weight |
8.9oz / 254g |
9.3oz / 265g |
9.8oz / 279g |
|
Dimensions |
6.1 x 3.9 x 2.6in / 154 x 101 x 65mm |
6.3 x 4.1 x 2.4in / 160 x 105 x 60mm |
6.6 x 4.2 x 2.6in / 168 x 105 x 65mm |
|
Compatibility |
PS5, PC |
PS5, PS4, PC (Xbox version sold separately) |
PS5, PC |
|
Connection type |
Wireless (2.4GHz, Bluetooth), Wired (USB-C) |
Wireless (2.4GHz), Wired (USB-C) |
Wireless (2.4GHz), Wired (USB-C) |
|
Battery life |
Around 17 hours |
Around 20 hours |
Around 10 hours |
I tested the Scuf Omega for roughly two weeks for this review. In that time, I made use of the controller’s broad swathe of features, including its remappable buttons and swappable modules. Games I played with the Scuf Omega include Assassin’s Creed Shadows and Saros on PS5, as well as Final Fantasy 14 Online and Forza Horizon 6 on PC, broadly aiming to test out a variety of game genres with the controller.
First reviewed May 2026
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