Samsung is not playing it safe in 2026. With the launch of the Samsung Galaxy Buds4 and Buds4 Pro, the company is taking a direct shot at the top of the premium wireless earbud market and squarely targeting both Apple and Sony.
The new Galaxy Buds4 series combines improved sound performance with a more refined industrial design built around Samsung’s signature blade form. That shape was developed using hundreds of millions of global ear data points and more than 10,000 simulations to create a fit that feels more natural and secure. This is not a cosmetic tweak. Samsung is leaning into computational modeling and ergonomic data to improve comfort, stability, and long term wear.
The earbuds now feature smaller heads for a tighter seal, a stabilized blade with a premium metal finish, and an engraved pinch control area that makes it easier to find and adjust settings without guesswork. It is a focused evolution designed to elevate both usability and perceived quality.
Samsung Galaxy Buds4
Samsung is clearly aiming higher. The question is whether better fit, smarter processing, and upgraded audio features are enough to disrupt the two companies that currently define this space. The Galaxy Buds4 and Buds4 Pro look ready for the fight. But do they deliver enough to change the outcome?
“Samsung understands that a truly premium audio experience combines technical sound quality with how that sound feels throughout a user’s day,” said Ikhyun Cho, Corporate Vice President of the Mobile Enhancement R&D Team within the Mobile eXperience Business at Samsung Electronics. “With the Galaxy Buds4 series, our design philosophy was uncompromising. We focused on delivering all day comfort without sacrificing audio performance because those are what consumers value most. We engineered our most powerful hi-fi audio and our most secure ergonomic fit to enhance one another, delivering the best listening experience we have ever created.”
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Samsung Galaxy Buds4 Pro
Ear Wearing Style Engineered by Data
Galaxy Buds4 Pro and Buds4 offer two distinct design approaches to suit different listening preferences.
The Galaxy Buds4 Pro features a traditional in ear design built to maximize sound isolation, performance, and advanced functionality.
The Galaxy Buds4 adopts an open ear design focused on everyday comfort and a more natural, user friendly listening experience. Both models are available in multiple color options, giving customers the flexibility to match their personal style.
Transparent Clamshell Case Puts the Design on Display
The Buds4 series introduces a new transparent clamshell style case that simplifies storage and charging while showcasing the refined blade design for a more distinctive look on the go. The Galaxy Buds4 Pro case features a 530 mAh battery and measures 51 x 28.3 x 51 mm, with a total case weight of 44.3 grams.
The Galaxy Buds4 case includes a 515 mAh battery in the same 51 x 28.3 x 51 mm footprint, weighing slightly more at 45.1 grams.
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Galaxy Buds4 Pro
Buds4 Pro Enhancements
The Galaxy Buds4 Pro features a wider woofer paired with enhanced Active Noise Cancellation and an upgraded Adaptive Equalizer. Together, these technologies are designed to deliver more accurate sound while intelligently responding to real world listening conditions.
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The enhanced ANC system reduces everything from heavy transit noise to everyday background distractions, helping create a more immersive listening experience that adjusts as your environment changes.
Targeted design updates, including intuitive hands free controls and deeper AI integration, reinforce Samsung’s focus on earbuds built for how people actually listen throughout the day.
The Galaxy Buds4 Pro uses a two-way driver system positioned along the upper portion of the metal housing to optimize Active Noise Cancellation performance while reducing interference from wind and other external factors.
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It also introduces a newly engineered wider woofer that makes more efficient use of internal space. By expanding the vibration area and minimizing the speaker edge, Samsung increases the effective speaker surface by nearly 20 percent compared to the previous generation without compromising comfort or wearability.
Combined with the dedicated tweeter, the Galaxy Buds4 Pro delivers immersive audio with cleaner bass and more refined treble response. The system supports 24-bit/96kHz playback, bringing listeners closer to the original recording with higher resolution detail and greater dynamic range.
These hardware upgrades allow the earbuds to reproduce everything from the soaring resonance of violins to the deep, textured weight of double bass notes, resolving nuances that were more difficult to capture in earlier generations.
Clearer Calls Without the Tunnel Effect
For phone calls, the Super Clear Call feature on both the Galaxy Buds4 Pro and Buds4 uses super wideband call technology along with machine learning based noise reduction and voice enhancement. This system delivers up to twice the bandwidth of conventional Bluetooth calls, improving clarity and vocal presence.
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Whether at a packed baseball game, in a busy restaurant, or at a noisy playground, the technology is designed to keep voices sounding natural and intelligible, closer to a face-to-face conversation.
For Samsung Galaxy Phone Users
For Galaxy Phone users, the Buds4 series provides features that enhance the Galaxy Phone/Earbud ecosystem experience.
Users can activate AI agents including Bixby, Google Gemini, and Perplexity using hands free voice controls, allowing them to stay aware of their surroundings while managing their audio experience.
Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra with Buds4 Pro
The Galaxy Buds4 Pro enables direct access to supported AI features without reaching for a phone, making AI assistance easier to incorporate into everyday routines.
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Galaxy AI Live Translate and Interpreter are supported in up to 22 languages on compatible Samsung Galaxy devices, including the Galaxy S26 series, when signed in with a Samsung account. Some languages require additional downloads.
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For Galaxy ecosystem users, setup is streamlined. Opening the charging case prompts a quick connection option through the Buds shortcut menu or Quick Panel, eliminating the need to install the Galaxy Wearable app. From there, users can adjust volume, manage EQ settings, and customize controls directly from their device.
Galaxy ecosystem users benefit from a more streamlined setup process. Opening the charging case triggers a quick connection prompt on compatible Galaxy phones or tablets, eliminating the need to install the Galaxy Wearable app. Through the Buds shortcut menu or Quick Panel, users can immediately adjust volume, customize EQ settings, and manage controls for a more personalized listening experience.
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The Galaxy Buds4 Pro also introduces Head Gesture controls for managing calls and interacting with Bixby, enabling additional hands free functionality. Combined with voice commands, these gesture based controls allow users to handle everyday tasks without reaching for their device, helping keep daily routines fluid and uninterrupted.
Galaxy Buds4 Pro vs Galaxy Buds4 Key Differences
Galaxy Buds4 Pro (top) and Galaxy Buds4 (bottom)
Earbud Design: The Galaxy Buds4 uses an open type design without silicone tips, while the Galaxy Buds4 Pro features a sealed in ear design with silicone ear tips for improved noise isolation and a more secure fit.
Speaker Drivers: The Buds4 Pro employs a two way driver system with an 11 mm woofer and 5.5 mm tweeter for deeper bass and more detailed highs. The Buds4 uses a single 11 mm driver in a one way configuration.
Active Noise Cancellation: The Pro model includes Adaptive ANC 2.0 with more precise, multi level, and responsive noise cancellation compared to the standard Buds4.
Battery Life: The Buds4 Pro delivers approximately six hours of playback with ANC enabled, about one hour longer than the Buds4, which offers up to five hours with ANC on.
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Water and Dust Resistance: The Buds4 Pro carries an IP57 rating for greater resistance to water and dust, while the Buds4 is rated IP54.
Microphones and AI Features: Both models support voice commands and AI functionality, but the Buds4 Pro includes upgraded microphones designed to improve call clarity in louder environments.
Only the Samsung Galaxy Buds4 Pro comes in Pink Gold
The Bottom Line
The Samsung Galaxy Buds4 and Buds4 Pro are clearly designed to tighten Samsung’s grip on its own ecosystem while taking aim at premium rivals from Apple and Sony. What makes them stand out is the combination of data driven ergonomic design, a refined blade aesthetic, upgraded driver architecture on the Pro model, and deeper AI integration that goes well beyond simple voice commands.
Features like Adaptive EQ, enhanced ANC, 24-bit/96kHz support on the Pro, head gesture controls, and Galaxy AI powered Live Translate and Interpreter give Samsung users a tightly integrated, forward looking experience.
These earbuds are best suited for Galaxy phone owners who want seamless setup, native control through the Quick Panel, automatic device switching, and full access to Samsung’s AI and audio processing features. If you own a newer Galaxy device such as the S26 series, the experience is cohesive and clearly optimized.
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The limitation is obvious. While both models will pair with an iPhone over Bluetooth, key Samsung specific features including Adaptive EQ, 360 Audio, automatic switching, and high resolution playback are not available, and audio is capped at 16-bit/44.1kHz.
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There is also no Samsung Wearable app for iPhone. In other words, these are built first and foremost for the Galaxy ecosystem. Outside of it, they are still solid wireless earbuds. Inside it, they are operating at full strength.
Price & Availability
General availability and shipping are expected to begin on March 11, 2026.
Rim-driven thrusters turn the normal propeller-motor arrangement inside out; rather than mounting the motor at the center of the propeller, they use a large hollow motor, with the blades attached to the inside of the rotor. They’re mostly used in ship propellers, though there have been some suggestions to use them in electric aircraft. [Integza], always looking for new and unusual ways to create propulsion, took this idea and made it into a jet engine.
Rather than using an electric motor, the fan in this design is propelled by miniature rocket nozzles along the edge. The fan levitates on a layer of high-pressure gas between the fan rim and the housing. To prevent too much pressurized gas from escaping, the fan and housing needed to fit together closely, but with minimal friction. A prototype made out of acrylic and resin and powered by compressed air proved that the idea worked, but [Integza] wanted to make to this a combustion-powered engine.
The full engine would be similar to a rocket engine, with the fan being the nozzle. The combustion chamber was built out of a brass fitting, and it burned propane in compressed air. The fan and housing were CNC-milled out of aluminium and brass, respectively. They worked well when powered with compressed air, but seized up when connected to the combustion chamber — the fan was thermally expanding and jamming in the housing. Progressively rounding down the edges of the fan failed to solve this, and a hole melted in the fan during one test. [Integza] machined a new fan, which he anodized to increase its heat resistance.
To keep it from overheating, he sprayed water into the combustion chamber, creating steam and cooling the exhaust stream to a manageable temperature. The engine did work, though we do wonder whether the fan actually increases its thrust over that of the base rocket engine.
Panic, the company behind the tiny and excellent Playdate console, is taking a stand on generative AI. The company has published an AI disclosure that says as of this month, the Playdate Catalog “will no longer accept titles that use ‘Generative AI’ for art, audio, music, text, or dialog.” Panic does allow for developers to use AI assistance for coding, but also says that “we will flag any title as such and specify the extent that it was used (for example, “Lua debugging”) so the customer can decide whether to support it or not.”
This comes a day after Panic announced that Playdate season three was happening and would arrive later this year. For those who don’t recall, the Playdate includes a “season” worth of games when you buy it, 24 titles in total with two revealed every week. Season two came out last year with 12 games — but, as Game Developer notes, one of those games used generative AI for writing and coding. On Bluesky, someone asked Panic if it would disclose what games in season three used AI, and the company confirmed that it was a requirement for season three that developers not use AI for art, music, writing or coding.
Specifically, Panic says you can’t use large language models like ChatGPT or Google Gemini, AI image generators like Stable Diffusion or audio generators like MuseNet and Suno. Previously-approved games with generative AI will be allowed to stay on the catalog with a disclosure that indicates what exactly AI was used for. The company says these guidelines are “under constant discussion and is subject to change at any time.”
I recall seeing AI disclosures on games in the Playdate Catalog in the past, but it makes sense to be up-front and clear on exactly what Panic allows and what it will reject. That said, it’s fairly easy to sideload games onto a Playdate, so anyone who wants to use generative AI to make a game isn’t entirely out of luck — though distribution and discovery for Playdate owners will obviously be harder.
Welcome to our latest roundup of what’s going on in the indie game space. Once again, there are some neat new games for you to check out this weekend. We’ve got a bunch of updates and announcements for upcoming titles to tell you about too.
There have been a bunch of solid indie showcases lately (and highlights from another one to tell you about below). If you want to learn about a ton of other games ASAP, you might want to set your alarm pretty early on April 25.
Starting at 5AM ET that day, the latest edition of Indie Life Expo takes place on YouTube, Twitch, TikTok, Bilibili and elsewhere. This one will feature more than 200 games! A rapid-fire Indie Waves segment will power through 160 of them. Organizers received 1,100 submissions for this installment, so hats off to them for featuring a sizable percentage of those.
Before that, you can check out another showcase on April 21. Top Hat Studios Presents: Spring Showcase 2026 will start at noon ET on the publisher’s YouTube and Twitch channels.
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The stream will feature Motorslice, Well Dweller and survival horror game Becrowned, as well premieres and other Top Hat games. I’ve been looking forward to Motorslice, which has a May release window. I wager we’ll get a precise release date for that during this stream.
Meanwhile, there’s an interesting Steam event taking place soon. InterfaceX26 will run from April 27 until May 4. This one is focused on games that deal with made-up operating systems and other custom interfaces. Organizers have brought together more than 150 developers and publishers, who are asking Valve to introduce an official “Fake OS” tag for games on Steam.
Some neat games will be included in a sale and a showcase on May 2, including Blippo+, TR-49 and The Roottrees are Dead. Expect demos and relevant new releases too. Speaking of which…
New releases
We’ve been waiting a very long time for Replaced. This cyberpunk adventure from Sad Cat Studios and publisher Thunderful finally landed this week on Steam, GOG, Xbox on PC and Xbox Series X/S. It’s on Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass. Otherwise, the base game costs $20. A supporter edition that includes the soundtrack is $25. It’ll hit the Epic Games Store at a later date.
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The game was initially supposed to arrive in 2022. It certainly didn’t help that Sad Cat Studios was forced to relocate from Belarus to Cyprus after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But the game is finally here and it debuted to generally positive reviews.
Replaced is a 2.5D action platformer set in an alternate version of 1980s America, in which you play as an AI trapped in a human body that may or may not dream of electric sheep. I haven’t yet had a chance to properly jump into this gorgeous-looking game, but I’m hoping to do so this weekend.
Speaking of games I’ve long had on my wishlist, Gecko Gods arrived this week. I think I first clapped eyes on this around 2022. Various trailers charmed me with the idea of a puzzle exploration platformer that casts you in the role of a gecko that’s able to run along walls and ceilings.
I’ve played around 90 minutes of this one so far. I dig the look and the gecko is very cute (being able to customize its appearance is a nice touch). I love that you “collect” different types of bugs by eating them. It’s a fairly relaxing game, which is broadly what I need at the minute.
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I think there are some issues here, though. I’ve explored two of the main five islands in the open world and it feels a bit sparse so far. The joy of being able to clamber up and around any object complicates things when it comes to more precise platforming sections. While the sailing sections are pretty, the boat is clunky to control on the choppy water. I ran into some mild technical issues as well on PS5 with occasional framerate dips and objects popping in. Hopefully, that’s something the developers at Inresin are able to address.
Gecko Gods — from publishers Super Rare Originals and Gamersky Games — is available now on Steam, PS5 and Nintendo Switch. It’s normally $20, but there’s a 10 percent launch discount until April 30 (on PS5, this only applies to PlayStation Plus members)
Another highly anticipated game landed this week in the form of Mouse: PI for Hire. We’ve had our eyes on this first-person shooter/detective game with sumptuous rubberhose-style animation for quite some time. Reviews have been generally positive so far, and it seems that there’s enough substance here to live up to those stellar visuals.
Thirsty Suitors developer Outerloop Games and co-publisher Outersloth served up the cooking-themed Dosa Divas this week. It tells the story of two sisters who set out on a journey with their mech to take down a fast food empire and reconnect communities through cooking.
It caught my eye when I saw it during a showcase a while back and it has a great concept, though I don’t exactly love turn-based combat. I’ve read a few lukewarmreviews of the game, and the consensus seems to be that the cooking mechanics and combat perhaps needed some more time to simmer.
If you’d like to try Dosa Divas yourself, you can pick it up on Steam, Xbox Series X/S, PS5, Nintendo Switch and Switch 2. It’ll usually run you $20, but there’s a 10 percent launch discount until April 28.
If you’re looking for a puzzle game that can be relaxing or rather dark, depending on your mood, it might be worth checking out A Storied Life: Tabitha. As you pack up the home of a late loved one, you’ll need to decide which items to keep in the limited storage space you have and discard the rest. You’ll need to wrap fragile items in bubble wrap and vacuum pack soft items to save room in the boxes.
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As you save items, you’ll unlock words that you can use to fill in the blanks of your loved one’s life and tell their story, Mad Libs-style. Given that you’ll find items like a blackmail letter and a shirt with lipstick on the collar, it seems like there’s a lot of variety to the kinds of stories you can tell.
A Storied Life: Tabitha is available on Steam now. It’ll normally run you $15, but you can save 10 percent if you buy it before April 28.
To round out this section, I’ll quickly note that Hades 2 is out now on PS5 and Xbox Series X/S for $30, with a 20 percent launch discount. It’s on Game Pass Ultimate, Game Pass Premium and PC Game Pass too.
I bought Hades 2 when Supergiant Games brought it to Steam early access two years ago, telling myself I’d wait until the full game was out. But I still haven’t gotten around to it yet. There are always too many games tugging at my fragile attention span and Hades 2 faded into the background for me. I really ought to play it, I know!
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Upcoming
I’m keeping an eye out for Agefield High: Rock the School from Refugium Games. This spiritual successor to Rockstar’s Bully is set to arrive this summer on Steam. It emerged this week that it will hit PS5 and Xbox Series X/S later in the year.
It’s a coming-of-age adventure in which you play as Sam, a young lad who has moved to a new school in the early 2000s. He wants to make his last few months of high school a time to remember.
There’s a branching narrative with multiple endings here — you can opt to go to classes and be a good student, or skip school and cause trouble. As a mostly rule-abiding student way back when, I’d be tempted to go for the latter. This seems like a bit of a life sim with a broad array of activities and ways to get into bother. I’m looking forward to it.
The latest edition of the Galaxies Showcase — yet another indie spotlight event — took place this week and The Backworld caught my attention. This is a Mother-inspired RPG from Numor Games and publisher Top Hat with charming art direction (yes, I did see that one character doing a Naruto run), an intriguing mix of characters and…
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Oh no, why did the music stop? Why did it get so dark all of a sudden? What are these horrifying beasts that are chasing my character? Yup, there’s a heavy horror element here. Numor took inspiration from The Backrooms as well.
The Backworld will be released later this year. A demo just hit Steam.
A Study in Blue, from Relate Games, was another highlight of the Galaxies Showcase, thanks in large part to that impressive animation. This is a point-and-click adventure in which you play as two characters with complex pasts: private detective Kenneth and runaway Blue.
You’ll explore a semi-open world and solve crimes by collecting clues and calling out characters’ lies. There are three intertwined story acts and multiple endings. A Steam demo featuring a side quest from the main game that’ll take around two hours to complete is available now.
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I’m always going to be interested in any game that riffs on The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past. On the face of this trailer, Elementallis developer AnKae Games seems to borrow quite a bit of the design language and other ideas from the SNES classic. Still, if you’re going to crib from anything, it may as well be the best game of all time.
This 2D action RPG, which is also published by Top Hat and has a heavier focus on elemental powers than A Link to the Past, looks very much like my kind of jam. It’s coming to Steam, GOG, Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox Series X/S and Xbox One on April 28. Per the eShop listing, it’ll cost $18.
The biggest benefit of Apple’s AirTags is that they help you find your belongings, whether you’re looking for lost keys or keeping track of your luggage while traveling. But AirTags can also be used to track you without your knowledge.
AirTags work by combining built-in sensors, wireless signals and Apple’s wide Find My network to let you keep tabs on your valuables. If you ever lose your wallet with an AirTag inside, for example, you can use the Find My app to locate it on a map, have it play a sound to help you find it nearby, or mark it as “lost,” which allows other Find My users to help you find it.
One of the biggest complaints about AirTags, however, is that someone with malicious intent could easily slip one of the tiny tags into your bag and then track your movements without your consent. Multiple people have reported AirTag-related stalking incidents where the victims didn’t know the trackers were placed on them until much later.
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Apple and Google (Android users have their own choice of Bluetooth trackers, such as the Moto Tag, which works with Google’s Find Hub) have since collaborated on an industry standard that alerts the user if a device is being used to track them without their knowledge. Thanks to this collaboration, Android users will be able to know if an AirTag is being used to track them, too.
Apple, for its part, has also made some changes in the past few years that improve the ability to detect an unwanted AirTag. In the initial rollout, an AirTag would make a sound three days after it’s separated from its paired device. Now, that duration is 8 to 24 hours. If you have unwanted tracking notifications enabled (which we’ll get to below), you’ll receive an audible alert.
We should note here that the new AirTag is 50% louder than the first-generation model, and would therefore be theoretically better at alerting you to the unwanted AirTag. Apple has also said that the speaker on the second-gen AirTag is harder to remove than on the first-gen model, in case bad actors try to remove it.
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Apple’s Find My helps you set up and track an AirTag. It can also help notify you if an unwanted tracker is detected.
Patrick Holland/CNET
Detecting unwanted trackers
To be able to detect unwanted trackers, first enable unwanted-tracking notifications. For AirTags or other Find My accessories, these pop-up notifications (e.g., “AirTag found moving with you”) are available on devices with iOS 14.5 or later. For other Bluetooth tracking devices, these notifications are enabled on iOS 17.5 or later.
You should enable Location Services, Find My iPhone, Bluetooth and Allow Notifications. Here’s how:
Head to Settings, then Privacy & Security, then Location Services and toggle it on.
After that, head to Settings, then Apple Account, select Find My and turn Find My iPhone on.
To enable Bluetooth, go to Settings, then Bluetooth and turn that on.
Then go to Settings, then Notifications, scroll down to Tracking Notifications and toggle on Allow Notifications. Make sure airplane mode is off, or you won’t receive tracking notifications.
Watch this: Testing the New AirTag, While Tim Cook’s White House Visit Sparks Apple Boycott Calls
What to do when you get the tracking notification
If you do get a notification like “Unknown tracker alert” or “Item detected near you,” you can try to find the unwanted AirTag by tapping it. Tap continue and then tap Play Sound or tap Find Nearby to locate the AirTag in question.
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If it doesn’t play a sound or you’re unable to find it, the item may no longer be on your person. Apple suggests checking your other belongings or the area around you, just in case. If you want to review the notification at a later time, you can open the Find My app, tap Items and then tap Items Detected With You.
Be aware that there are often “false positives,” when notifications are triggered when someone nearby has a tracker on them. If you’re traveling on a train, plane or bus, waiting in line or seated in a public space, a mistaken tracking alert could stem from glitches or high-density Bluetooth environments.
If you get an alert, though, it’s always a good idea to take it seriously and investigate what might be causing it.
If you do find an AirTag that doesn’t belong to you, hold the top of your iPhone near the tracker until you see a notification. Tap it, and this will launch a website that provides information like its serial number, the last four digits of the phone number or a blurred-out email address of its owner. If the AirTag is marked as “lost,” you may see a message with instructions on how to contact them.
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If you’re concerned that the tracker is being used to monitor your movements and location, Apple advises taking a screenshot of the information above for your records. You can then disable the AirTag by pressing down on the back of the AirTag, turning it counterclockwise to remove the cover and removing the battery.
Of course, before making any of these changes, it’s important to come up with a safety plan, especially if you’re afraid you’re being tracked by a current or former abusive partner. Contact your local law enforcement if you feel like your safety is at risk, or the National Domestic Violence Hotline 800-799-SAFE (7233).
Can English Premier League leader Arsenal hold its nerve, or will second-place Man City take the chance to close the gap on the Gunners in this crucial title race showdown at the Etihad?
A home victory for the hosts on Sunday looks essential if Man City is to claim a sixth EPL title under manager Pep Guardiola. A win here would move City to within three points of Arsenal. The hosts can draw plenty of encouragement from the comfortable 2-0 win in last month’s League Cup final as they look to heap further pressure on the Gunners. That pressure may be starting to get to the league leaders.
While Arsenal’s 2-1 home defeat last Sunday against Bournemouth has given City renewed optimism that it can catch its title opponents, Mikel Arteta’s team nevertheless claimed a positive result in midweek. Arsenal’s goalless draw at the Emirates against Sporting Lisbon ensured its passage into the UEFA Champions League semifinals for the second season in a row.
Man City takes on Arsenal on Sunday, April 19, at the Etihad Stadium, with kickoff set for 4:30 p.m. BST. That makes it an 11:30 a.m. ET or 8:30 a.m. PT start in the US and Canada, and a 1:30 a.m. AEST kickoff in Australia in the early hours of Monday morning.
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Midfield star Declan Rice is set to start for Arsenal on Sunday. He recovered from an illness to star in the Gunners’ midweek 0-0 draw with Sporting Lisbon in the Champions League.
Catherine Ivill/AMA/Getty Images
How to watch Man City vs. Arsenal in the US without cable
Sunday’s crucial clash will be broadcast on NBC and streaming service Peacock. To catch the game live on Peacock, you’ll need a Peacock Premium or Premium Plus subscription.
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Peacock offers two Premium plans, and after recent price increases, the ad-supported Premium plan costs $11 a month and the ad-free Premium Plus plan costs $17 a month.
How to watch the Premier League 2025-26 with a VPN
If you’re traveling abroad and want to keep up with Premier League action while away from home, a VPN can help enhance your privacy and security when streaming.
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It encrypts your traffic and prevents your internet service provider from throttling your speeds, and can also be helpful when connecting to public Wi-Fi networks while traveling, adding an extra layer of protection for your devices and logins. VPNs are legal in many countries, including the US and Canada, and can be used for legitimate purposes such as improving online privacy and security.
However, some streaming services may have policies that restrict VPN use to access region-specific content. If you’re considering a VPN for streaming, check the platform’s terms of service to ensure compliance.
If you choose to use a VPN, follow the provider’s installation instructions to ensure you’re connected securely and in compliance with applicable laws and service agreements. Some streaming platforms may block access when a VPN is detected, so verify whether your streaming subscription allows VPN use.
Price $78 for two yearsLatest Tests No DNS leaks detected, 18% speed loss in 2025 testsJurisdiction British Virgin IslandsNetwork 3,000 plus servers in 105 countries
ExpressVPN is our current best VPN pick for people who want a reliable and safe VPN, and it works on a variety of devices. It’s normally $120 a year for its most popular plan (Advanced), but if you sign up for an annual subscription for $90, you’ll get three months free. That’s the equivalent of $6 a month.
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Note that ExpressVPN offers a 30-day money-back guarantee.
73% off with 2yr plan (+4 free months). Now only $3.49/month
Livestream Man City vs. Arsenal in the UK
This Sunday afternoon clash is exclusive to Sky Sports and will be shown on its Sky Sports Main Event channel. If you already have Sky Sports as part of your TV package, you can stream the game via its Sky Go app. Cord-cutters will want to set up a Now account and a Now Sports membership to stream the game.
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Now TV
Sky’s standalone streaming service Now offers access to Sky Sports channels with a Now Sports membership. You can get a day of access for £15 or sign up to a monthly plan from £35 a month right now.
Livestream Man City vs. Arsenal in Canada
If you want to livestream EPL games in Canada this season, you’ll need to subscribe to Fubo. The service has secured exclusive rights to the Premier League and is broadcasting all 380 matches live.
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Fubo
Fubo is the go-to destination for Canadians looking to watch the EPL, with exclusive streaming rights to every match. It currently costs CA$27 for the first month, then CA$31.50 per month from then on.
Livestream Man City vs. Arsenal in Australia
Livestreaming rights for the EPL are now with Stan Sport, which is showing all 380 matches live, including this game.
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Stan
Stan Sport will set you back AU$20 a month (on top of a Stan subscription, which starts at AU$12). It’s also worth noting that the streaming service is currently offering a seven-day free trial.
A subscription will also give you access to Premier League, Champions League and Europa League action, as well as international rugby and Formula E.
The investment will fund growth across auditing and engineering, with expansion expected across Ireland and the UK.
Dublin-based start-up Audrey AI has announced the closure of a $1.8m pre-seed funding round, which was led by Sure Valley Ventures and Delta Partners. There was additional participation from Enterprise Ireland, former CEO of Calypso Donnchadh Casey, former CBO of Wayflyer Conor Jones, alongside former Big 4 auditors.
Established in 2025 by Ryan Loughran and David Burke, who met on the Founders programme at Dogpatch Labs, Audrey AI develops AI solutions for financial auditors. The AI-powered platform aims to automate the most time-consuming parts of financial audit engagements.
The organisation has stated that the newly secured funds will be put towards the expansion of Audrey AI’s specialist audit and engineering teams, as the company expands its reach across Ireland, the UK and “beyond”.
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Commenting on the announcement, Loughran, who is also the company’s CEO, said: “Developers have Copilot, lawyers have Harvey, but auditors still primarily work in Excel. We’re building AI that understands auditing deeply enough to raise the bar on quality, not just speed, freeing auditors to focus on the judgement and oversight that matters most.”
A number of Irish organisations operating within the artificial intelligence space have already announced major investments in April. Start-up Otel AI, which is building an AI platform for hotel managers, recently announced a raise of €2m, bringing the company’s total funding to date to €2.8m.
E-commerce technology company Zellor raised €850,000 in its very first external funding round. The start-up, which is led by CEO Niall O’Sullivan, received backing from Enterprise Ireland and a number of strategic Irish investors.
Galway-based AI security software start-up Octostar, which also has offices in Italy and the UK, raised €6.1m in an extended seed funding round.
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Updated, 1.05pm, 16 April 2026: This article was amended to clarify Audrey AI’s expansion plans.
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A new malware called ZionSiphon, specifically designed for operational technology, is targeting water treatment and desalination environments to sabotage their operations.
The threat can adjust hydraulic pressures and raise chlorine levels to dangerous levels, researchers found during their analysis.
Based on its IP targeting and political messages embedded in its strings, ZionSiphon appears to focus on targets based in Israel.
Researchers at AI-powered cybersecurity company Darktrace found a flawed encryption logic error in the malware’s validation mechanism that makes it non-functional but warn that future ZionSiphon releases could fix the flaw to unleash its power in attacks.
Upon deployment, the malware checks whether the host IP falls within Israeli ranges and whether the system contains water/OT-related software or files, to ensure it is running in water treatment or desalination systems.
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Strings from the targets list Source: Darktrace
Darktrace notes that the logic for country verification is broken due to an XOR mismatch, causing the targeting to fail and triggering the self-destruct mechanism instead of executing the payload.
If ZionSiphon were to activate, it could cause significant damage by increasing chlorine levels and maximizing the flaw and pressure.
It does this via a function named “IncreaseChlorineLevel(),” which appends a text block on existing configuration files to maximize the chlorine dose and flow as much as it is physically supported by the plant’s mechanical systems.
“IncreaseChlorineLevel()” checks a hardcoded list of configuration files associated with desalination, reverse osmosis, chlorine control, and water treatment OT/Industrial Control Systems (ICS),” Darktrace says.
“As soon as it finds any one of these files present, it appends a fixed block of text to it and returns immediately.”
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“The appended block of text contains the following entries: “Chlorine_Dose=10”, “Chlorine_Pump=ON”, “Chlorine_Flow=MAX”, “Chlorine_Valve=OPEN”, and “RO_Pressure=80”.”
The intention to interact with industrial control systems (ICS) is obvious from scanning the local subnet for the Modbus, DNP3, and S7comm communication protocols.
However, Darktrace has found only partially functional code for Modbus, and merely placeholders for the other two, indicating that the malware is still in an early development phase.
ZionSiphon also has a USB propagation mechanism that copies itself to removable drives as a hidden ‘svchost.exe’ process and creates malicious shortcut files that execute the malware when clicked.
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Creating shortcuts on removable drives Source: Darktrace
USB propagation is key in critical infrastructure systems, where computers that manage security-critical functions are often “air-gapped,” meaning they are not directly connected to the internet.
While ZionSiphon isn’t operational in its current version, its intent and potential for damage are concerning, and all that’s needed to unlock both is to fix a minor verification error.
AI chained four zero-days into one exploit that bypassed both renderer and OS sandboxes. A wave of new exploits is coming.
At the Autonomous Validation Summit (May 12 & 14), see how autonomous, context-rich validation finds what’s exploitable, proves controls hold, and closes the remediation loop.
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23-year-old Kamerin Stokes of Memphis, Tennessee, was sentenced to 30 months in prison for selling access to tens of thousands of hacked DraftKings accounts.
According to court documents, the accounts were hijacked by Nathan Austad (aka Snoopy) with the help of Joseph Garrison (a third accomplice charged in May 2023) in a massive November 2022 credential-stuffing attack that compromised nearly 68,000 DraftKings accounts.
U.S. prosecutors said Austad and Garrison used a list of credentials stolen in multiple breaches to hack into DraftKings accounts, then sold access to others who stole around $635,000 from roughly 1,600 compromised accounts.
While they made over $2.1 million selling some of these hijacked DraftKings accounts (as well as FanDuel and Chick-fil-A accounts) through their own “shops,” they also sold many in bulk to Stokes (also known online as TheMFNPlug), who resold them through his own “shop.”
One month later, the sports betting giant said it had to refund hundreds of thousands of dollars stolen from hacked accounts, after all available funds were withdrawn following the addition of a new payment method and a $5 deposit to verify its validity.
After being arrested, pleading guilty, and released while awaiting trial, Stokes reopened his shop with a new “fraud is fun” tagline and continued selling access to compromised accounts for various retailers.
Prosecutors said he also admitted “he had been running these types of shops for three years” and that he relaunched the shop because he needed money to pay his attorney.
“Kamerin Stokes victimized thousands of users of an online betting website though [sic] a cyberattack,” U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton noted in a Thursday press release.
“After pleading guilty to federal crimes, Stokes audaciously reopened his criminal business, marketed using the tagline’ fraud is fun,’ and said that he opened the new Shop in part because ‘gotta pay my attorneys,’ referring to his prosecution in this case.”
After reopening his website, Stokes was again remanded into federal custody after being arrested for violating the conditions of his pretrial release.
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In addition to 30 months in prison, Stokes was given 3 years of supervised release and ordered to pay $1,327,061 in restitution and $125,965.53 in forfeiture.
AI chained four zero-days into one exploit that bypassed both renderer and OS sandboxes. A wave of new exploits is coming.
At the Autonomous Validation Summit (May 12 & 14), see how autonomous, context-rich validation finds what’s exploitable, proves controls hold, and closes the remediation loop.
A truck makes a historic trip around CERN’s facility on the France-Switzerland border, transporting the world’s most expensive material for the first time.
The antimatter inside is made by CERN’s enormous particle accelerator, and then antimatter particles are decelerated and captured for storage, shipment and study.
Antimatter is the mirror opposite of matter. The particular type of antimatter transported was 92 antiprotons, the negatively charged equivalent to the positively charged protons found in regular matter. This perplexing and precious material could hold the key to unlocking some of the largest looming mysteries remaining in physics, going back to the origins of our universe.
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Animation of the Penning Trap that holds antiprotons in place, preventing them from annihilating with the surrounding matter.
CERN
When matter and antimatter meet, they annihilate, turning most of their mass into pure energy. This reaction is the stuff of science fiction, powering spaceships and super weapons. However, with current technology, it would take billions of years to acquire enough antimatter to do any serious damage.
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Annihilation is routine at CERN’s antimatter factory, happening on a small scale with individual particles and showing up as a line on a graph (pictured below).
This is what it looks like to scientists when matter and antimatter annihilate.
BASE/CERN
One of the mysteries the study of antimatter could solve is the reason why there’s so much more matter than antimatter in the observable universe, a question with roots going all the way back to the big bang.
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So far, the science shows that matter and its antimatter equivalents are identical opposites in weight and magnetism. Stefan Ulmer, founder and spokesperson of the BASE experiment at CERN, believes more precise measurements could help find discrepancies which could hold the key.
The search for these discrepancies means that the antimatter particles must leave their birthplace at CERN because the same enormous magnets necessary to produce antimatter also make it difficult to study due to magnetic interference.
This may seem like a lot of work just to get more precise measurements of particles, but Ulmer says chasing answers to the biggest questions in science “makes you creative,” and this is his own version of heaven.
To see the truckload of antimatter make its historic trip, check out the video in this article.
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