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Apple and Google Settle Class Actions After Allegations of Unwanted Voice Recording

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Apple and Meta Hit With Nearly $800 Million in EU

Apple and Google are set to pay a combined $163 million to settle class-action lawsuits after allegations that their devices secretly recorded millions of users’ conversations.

The settlements follow complaints that Siri and Google Assistant were activated without the required prompts, capturing private discussions without consent.

Apple has already begun sending payments to resolve its $95 million lawsuit. The case claimed that devices recorded conversations even when users never said “Hey, Siri.”

Some people reported seeing ads for brands like Olive Garden and Air Jordan after discussing them at home, suggesting the recordings were used for targeted advertising.

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“Apple denies all of the allegations made in the lawsuit and denies that Apple did anything improper or unlawful,” the company said on its website.

Under the settlement, anyone who purchased an iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, MacBook, iMac, HomePod, iPod touch, or Apple TV between September 17, 2014, and December 31, 2024, and experienced unintended Siri activations is eligible for a payout.

According to the NY Post, payments are capped at $20 per device, with a maximum of five devices per person.

Google, meanwhile, reached a tentative $68 million settlement for similar allegations. Users claimed Google Assistant recorded audio without the trigger phrase “OK Google.”

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This agreement stems from a 2019 lawsuit and still requires federal court approval before finalization.

Apple, Google Under Fire for Voice Assistant Privacy

Siri and Google Assistant are voice-activated helpers designed to perform tasks like sending messages, making calls, or providing weather updates.

Both companies were accused of using the recordings to improve their products, though they have denied wrongdoing.

Apple now requires users to opt in before audio is used for enhancing Siri, reflecting a shift toward stronger privacy controls.

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The lawsuits are not the first time Apple faced legal challenges over device practices.

In 2020, the company paid $113 million to settle claims that it deliberately slowed older iPhones to encourage users to buy new models, Yahoo reported.

Similarly, Google has faced scrutiny over data privacy, especially in relation to its Assistant and other AI-driven features.

The cases highlight growing concerns about privacy in a world where voice-activated devices are increasingly common.

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“These settlements aim to resolve complaints while reinforcing users’ control over their data,” privacy experts noted.

Originally published on vcpost.com

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Diamond Hill International Strategy Q4 2025 Commentary

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Diamond Hill International Strategy Q4 2025 Commentary

Diamond Hill Capital Management, Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Diamond Hill Investment Group, Inc. Diamond Hill Investment Group is a publicly traded company, and its shares trade on the NASDAQ (Ticker: DHIL). Note: This account is not managed or monitored by Diamond Hill Capital Management, and any messages sent via Seeking Alpha will not receive a response. For inquiries or communication, please use Diamond Hill Capital Management’s official channels.

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DKSH posts higher underlying profit in 2025 despite currency headwinds

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DKSH posts higher underlying profit in 2025 despite currency headwinds

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Russia sentences US citizen to 4 years in jail for trying to take Kalashnikov stocks

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Russia sentences US citizen to 4 years in jail for trying to take Kalashnikov stocks

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The Hunt For Losers: The Great Rotation And The Illusion Of The Indices

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The Hunt For Losers: The Great Rotation And The Illusion Of The Indices

The Hunt For Losers: The Great Rotation And The Illusion Of The Indices

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iOS 26.4 Beta Lets You Generate Custom Apple Music Playlists Instantly Using Just Text Prompt

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Apple Music

Apple is improving music discovery with a new feature in the iOS 26.4 beta: Playlist Playground.

For those curious about this update, it’s an AI-driven addition to Apple Music where users can now generate fully customized playlists using nothing more than a simple text prompt. This makes curation faster, smarter, and highly personalized.

AI-Powered Playlist Creation

Apple Music

With Playlist Playground, manually selecting songs is no longer necessary. Users can type a mood, theme, or idea, such as evening breeze, city pop, dance songs, and even old songs from the ’50s. Apple Music instantly generates a curated playlist of 25 songs, complete with a custom title.

MacRumors reported that this feature also supports refinement through additional prompts, giving users control over genre, vibe, or era. Further personalization options allow selection of custom cover art and a unique playlist description, creating a fully tailored music experience.

How to Access Playlist Playground

Currently available in the iOS 26.4 developer beta, Playlist Playground can be accessed by opening Apple Music, navigating to the Library tab, and tapping the “+” button to create a new playlist. If the option does not appear immediately, restarting the app or device often resolves the issue.

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Like traditional playlists, creations made with Playlist Playground can be shared publicly and displayed on your Apple Music profile, making it easy to showcase personalized playlists to friends and followers.

While Playlist Playground is currently limited to developers, Apple is expected to release a public beta in the near future, with a full rollout planned for spring 2026.

Originally published on Tech Times

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Nebius: A Gift At Current Consolidation – Cloud Super Cycle Continues

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Nebius: A Gift At Current Consolidation - Cloud Super Cycle Continues

Nebius: A Gift At Current Consolidation – Cloud Super Cycle Continues

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Restaurants raising prices 'to keep doors open'

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Restaurants raising prices 'to keep doors open'

The Pavilion took to social media to reveal cost pressures

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BlackRock Advantage International Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

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BlackRock Advantage International Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

BlackRock Advantage International Fund Q4 2025 Commentary

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Opinion: Tech metals a dollar driver

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Opinion: Tech metals a dollar driver

OPINION: The AI-linked commodity boom is a tailwind for the Australian dollar.

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Dinesh Kumar Khara says RBI’s new guidelines balance customer protection and growth

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Dinesh Kumar Khara says RBI’s new guidelines balance customer protection and growth
Fresh regulatory moves by the Reserve Bank of India are set to reshape how banks sell financial products, fund acquisitions and lend to market intermediaries. In an interview with ET Now, Dinesh Kumar Khara Former Chairman, SBI shared his views on the implications.

Mis-selling norms signal stricter oversight

Khara said concerns around mis-selling have been building for years, with regulators stepping in to reinforce trust.

“When it comes to mis-selling, this was something which was brewing for quite some time… banking is a business of trust… unless it is right selling, there could be a challenge. Banks had introduced need assessment, delinked incentives from sales targets and looked at persistency ratios. But now RBI has defined mis-selling clearly and even indicated it could impact the licence… punitive measures are very strict… it is a clear reflection of the regulator’s intent.”

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He added that while the financial impact may be limited in size, customer experience and trust are critical.

Refund rules may need careful implementation
On proposals like refunds and compensation, Khara highlighted both safeguards and operational realities.
“Even now there is a free look period of about 30 days… insurance is a push product… need assessment is important. RBI has even said it could impact licensing. Bundling practices will need to change… recordings and documentation can help verify claims. The intent is welcome, but implementation may need tweaking.”M&A financing a welcome structural change
Khara described the new acquisition financing norms as a positive shift that could keep deals within the domestic banking system.

“M&A financing has been introduced for the first time… opportunities were earlier funded by foreign banks. Final instructions are more relaxed… unlisted acquisitions are permitted and leverage can be refinanced… very pragmatic steps and a welcome move.”

Broker funding rules aimed at curbing speculation
On tighter norms for broker financing, he said the focus is on reducing speculative excesses.

“The intent is to curb speculative trading fuelled by liberal funding… reducing exposure and increasing cash collateral will ensure right financing, while market making and working capital will continue to be funded.”

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The takeaway
The regulatory direction underscores stronger customer protection alongside deeper financial market development. For banks and financial firms, adapting quickly to tighter conduct standards while leveraging new financing opportunities will be key.

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