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.
OPINION: I was on Facebook the other day, and something caught my eye: someone was using the fireplace to vent their portable AC out through the chimney. Genius, was my first reaction.
I live in a Victorian terraced house, which can get very hot in the summertime, and trying to get a portable AC unit near a window can be a real faff. So, using an open vent that’s there all of the time seems like a brilliant idea, and the unsightly hose can be tucked out of the way.
Only, the more I thought about it, the less this idea made sense. Despite finding people online who say that they’ve done this and it’s worked, there are definite issues that mean I would not do this.
Before I get into the details, it’s worth going over a few details (you can read in more detail how a portable air conditioner works if you like, too). The very short version is that portable AC units don’t cool the room by blowing air, they extract hot air from your room and then output through the hose and out of the window (the cold air coming out the front is just the air in your room with the heat removed).
Not only that, but all modern portable AC units (or any worth their salt) also dehumidify the room. To avoid using a tank, the water extracted from the air is also sent out through the same hose (the small tank inside and the drainage port are only needed in extreme humidity).
So, you have hot, moist air going out through the hose, and cool, dry air coming out of the front vent.
Hot wet air is the main concern here. Chimneys are designed to deal with very hot, dry air. Putting the AC pipe in means that the hot air will come into contact with the cooler chimney surface, so the moisture will condense and run back down your chimney.
As well as creating a damp environment, the run-down will be messy, mixing with years of soot. This is not a good idea.
If you’ve got a stove and a lined chimney, this still isn’t a good idea. You’d have to seal the front of the stove to get the AC pipe in, but the hot air will condense in the liner, and you’ll get water in your stove.
Not all fireplaces are working ones, particularly in old homes. It’s possible that the chimney has been capped or is blocked. Either way, there could be issues to stop hot air from escaping.
If you somehow manage to wedge the AC pipe into the flue, the warm air may not rise all of the way out of the chimney, and some can flow back into your home.
Ideally, you’d want to seal the chimney completely, say with insulation board and/or a sheet of ply, with insulation tape around the edges. Then, with a hole in your insulation, the AC hose can be fed into the chimney space.
But there’s a secondary problem: distance. Using a chimney, the hot air must travel a long way. A typical Victorian home will have 10-foot or 12-foot ceilings. From the ground floor, that’s at least 20 feet to the loft (just over 6m), and then you’ve got even more to get above the roof line. So, you’re looking at a good 9m or more.
Portable AC units have a maximum hose run of 1.5m. Longer than this, and you can get back pressure, which can stress the compressor. At best, this reduces efficiency; at worst, you could damage the unit. In simple terms, portable AC units are not powerful enough to push the output the distances you’d require in a fireplace.
For all these reasons, I would not use a fireplace, working or not, for a portable AC unit’s exhaust. A window is your best option. With sash windows, many units ship with a sliding bracket that can go in the bottom, but it’s easy to find window kits for casement windows that seal the window while allowing room for the hose. If you really don’t want anything on display and want something much neater, you need a properly installed split AC unit instead.
A new variant of the Gafgyt botnet called C0XMO is targeting DD-WRT router firmware and can move to other device types with various CPU architectures.
The researchers found samples for ARM, MIPS, PowerPC, SuperH, x86, x86_64, and other architectures, featuring exploits for DVRs, routers, video management platforms, and Android-based devices.
The botnet was seen targeting a Japanese technology company, but researchers discovered that the source IP address was for a device located in Germany.
Fortinet researchers discovered C0XMO and highlighted its modular design, which allows operators to update its exploitation techniques, add/remove targeted architectures, and expand its lateral movement capabilities independently of the main payload.
Fundamentally, C0XMO remains a malware for launching distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks and supports 19 methods, including UDP/TCP/SYN/ICMP floods, “ping of death,” NTP/Memcached amplification, Discord voice UDP floods, and Valve-specific floods.
According to the researchers, the C0XMO botnet malware is delivered by exploiting CVE-2021-27137, a buffer overflow vulnerability caused by insufficient user input. It can be leveraged without authentication and leads to executing arbitrary code.
For wider distribution, C0XMO downloads a Python script that installs additional packages such as ‘requests,’ ‘paramiko,’ and ‘beautifulsoup4,’ which are required for network scanning and communication, and for running activities over SSH and telnet protocols.
The scanner then uses worker threads to randomly scan internet-facing systems on common ports like 22 (SSH), 23 (Telnet), 80/443 (HTTP/HTTPS), 7547, 8080, 8443, 8888, and others.
After finding a target, the malware attempts to brute-force weak Telnet and SSH credentials, detects the CPU architecture, and deploys a compatible C0XMO binary.
The script contains almost two dozen functions for various tasks for scanning, exploiting HTTP and ADB-based vulnerabilities, detecting the CPU architecture, SSH/telenet login, and checking IP addresses. Its main purpose is to move laterally on the network.
Once it gains access to a device, the malware copies itself to hidden locations such as ‘/tmp/.sys,’ ‘/var/tmp/.sys,’ and ‘/dev/shm/.sys,’ and then creates cron jobs that relaunch it every 15 minutes. Also, shell startup files are modified to enable automatic execution.
Furthermore, C0XMO actively scans running processes to identify competitor botnet clients on the host, as well as red-team tools, programming tools, and network services that may interfere with its operation, and terminates them.
It does so by deleting binaries and removing their persistence mechanisms, including cron jobs, init scripts, system services, and shell profile entries.

After that, it connects to a hardcoded command-and-control (C2) address using a custom multi-stage handshake that includes magic strings and shared secrets, and then awaits commands.
The supported commands include heartbeat checks, starting and stopping scans, and launching DDoS attacks using one of the 19 supported methods.
The general recommendation for defending against C0XMO and other botnet malware is to keep devices up to date, use unique admin credentials, and disable remote access capabilities when not needed.
Fortinet describes C0XMO as having “a considerably more advanced architecture and feature set compared to earlier IoT botnets.”
The researchers note that the overall design of the malware indicates “a greater degree of operational sophistication and complexity than typical Gafgyt malware.”
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.
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders announced a plan for the public to take a 50% ownership stake in AI companies, remembers the Associated Press.
And then OpenAI’s Sam Altman “told Sanders that he, too, wants the public to have equity in AI companies.”
Though the CEO said he couldn’t support Sanders’ threshold of 50%, he nonetheless wanted to work with him to advocate for the general idea, according to people with knowledge of the conversation. The nearly hourlong meeting in Sanders’ Senate office this week, held at Altman’s request, highlighted the inherent tension between AI powerhouses and policymakers as Americans are increasingly asked to accept the costs of the AI boom even as they remain unconvinced of its direct benefits.
Yet it’s also creating odd political bedfellows fueled by populism as politicians from Sanders to President Donald Trump embrace giving the public a stake in AI’s growth. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Friday, Trump described a potential partnership “where the American people can benefit from the success of AI” and said executives from leading AI companies will visit the White House, “probably next week,” to discuss the idea.
The article points out that Altman also met with congressional leaders from both of America’s political parties.
Public sentiment seems to have taken a turn against large data center developments, and the trend shows no signs of stopping. Now we might have the first state-wide ban of its kind in New York, after lawmakers passed a one-year moratorium (a temporary prohibition) on large data centers with a peak demand of 20 megawatts or more.
As The Guardian reports, while the New York State legislature has passed the moratorium, it’s not law yet: it still needs the signature of Governor Kathy Hochul, who hasn’t said one way or the other if she will approve the bill, and has until December to decide.
So, there are caveats here. It’s more of a temporary pause than a ban, it’s not written into law yet, and it only applies to large data centers. Even so, it’s potentially the biggest legal move yet against the construction of these data processing structures.
“This is one of the first times that we’re really drawing a line in the sand and saying that as a state legislature, we have the responsibility to make sure that New Yorkers are in the driver’s seat,” said New York State senator Kristen Gonzalez. “Big tech has been used to writing their own rules, or not having rules that they have to play by.”
The purpose of the moratorium is to allow more time for New York authorities to assess the impact of data centers in terms of their energy use and environmental impact, and the state’s environmental agency will be tasked with putting together a report that lays out the demand on electricity, water, and land that comes from these buildings.
One recent survey suggested that 71 percent of Americans don’t want data centers constructed in their local area, with concerns over water and electricity use the main reasons why — so these structures are now less popular than nuclear power plants.
The main reason that so much compute capacity is needed is of course AI. Despite promises by AI companies that data centers will become much more eco-friendly in the near future, this isn’t the case for many projects currently at the planning stage.
As The Register reports, the moratorium has its opponents too. Some politicians and industry figures are arguing that data center development is essential for economic growth and technological advancement, while also acknowledging that concerns over energy usage and environmental impact need to be addressed.
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The best laptops for all budgets
Apple’s first foldable iPhone may be just months away, but anyone hoping for a stealth black iPhone Fold may have to look elsewhere if the latest leak turns out to be accurate.
With the clock ticking down to an expected September unveiling, we’re seeing more and more iPhone Fold leaks by the day. The latest claims that even Apple doesn’t yet know what colors the device will come in.
Writing in a post to the Chinese social network Weibo, leaker Instant Digital hinted Apple is still deliberating whether to launch a black iPhone Fold. He even went so far as to wonder aloud whether Apple has a grudge against the color.
Apple has moved away from black in its premium iPhones of late. The iPhone 17 Pro and iPhone 17 Pro Max aren’t available in black, for example.
Building on 2025’s snub, the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max are also expected to skip black. Instead, those models are expected to ship in Dark Cherry, Light Blue, Dark Gray, and Silver.
But all eyes are on the foldable iPhone right now, and Apple has a decision to make.
Apple’s reported indecision may explain the lack of concrete rumors around iPhone Fold colors. Reports continue to suggest a white model will be offered, with one other color available for buyers to consider.
With Samsung Display already lined up to produce the foldable display, Apple’s time has surely run out. Manufacturing tests were said to be already underway in April 2026.
We would have expected the iPhone Fold’s colors to have been set in stone before that testing phase.
There is one wild card to be considered, however. If Apple really is yet to choose a second color, it’s possible the iPhone Fold may miss the oft-rumored September/October release window.
It’s unclear how this would tie in with the April testing, though. If we take that report at face value, it seems more likely that the colors are locked in if the fall unveiling is to go ahead.
It’s worth noting that Instant Digital has consistently claimed the iPhone Fold would only be sold in two colors, with one being white.
No matter which colors the iPhone Fold (or is it iPhone Ultra?) comes in, we can expect it to be costly. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has hinted at a price north of $2,000. A previous Ming-Chi Kuo report had it costing as much as $2,500.
More images of a purported dummy unit of the iPhone Fold have appeared, helping solidify the appearance of the much-rumored model.
On June 1, an image circulated Weibo via a reputable leaker showing what seemed like a prototype or dummy unit for the iPhone Fold or Ultra. Days later, more shots have emerged.
Shared to X early on June 7, the images from Sonny Dickson outright describes the pictured item as an “iPhone Fold dummy unit.” There are four shots, showing the model in its opened and closed states.
The two open shots depict a “back” that looks like the previous image, with one half black to represent the external display. The other half is white with the camera bump to one side.
First look at the iPhone Fold dummy unit. It doesn’t look like Apple will offer multiple colors, with white currently appearing to be the only option. What do you think? pic.twitter.com/olMzm6t6Ts
— Sonny Dickson (@SonnyDickson) June 7, 2026
The other open image shows the large black screen, as well as the hinge on the top edge holding it all together.
The closed shots are unsurprising, with one showing just the black “screen” half that will be visible to users, and the other with the white camera-equipped back.
Just like the earlier photograph, the item certainly matches up to an earlier CAD drawing Dickson shared in March.
Dickson also adds a comment about the color options that users could expect this fall when the iPhone Fold ships. It’s not great news.
“It doesn’t look like Apple will offer multiple colors, with white currently appearing to be the only option,” Dickson writes on X.
This, too, lines up with a claim on Friday, when leaker Instant Digital hinted Apple was deliberating over whether to introduce a black colorway. Apple was apparently still trying to decide on what colors to use.
Sonny Dickson is one of the more reliable leakers, and has repeatedly been the source of images for future Apple products. However, in the age of easily accessible AI-generated images, 3D printing, and other ways to fake an image, there’s always a chance that they are fake items.
The shots are convincing and certainly go along with earlier rumors and leaks. But, as always, there’s no guarantee until Apple actually launches the device.
One of the delights of our tips line is that from time to time it brings us retrocomputing hardware that, despite years of reporting, we were not aware existed. [Hitmanmcc] has just such a machine, an NEC PC Engine LT. It’s a PC engine in a laptop form factor, and like many of this super-rare console, it has succumbed to capacitor failure. We’re treated to the process of bringing it back to life.
Replacing capacitors was only part of the story for this repair, as the electrolyte had caused damage elsewhere on the board. In particular there is a small transformer that forms part of an inverter to generate an LCD bias voltage, and this had been destroyed. Fortunately the art of switching power conversion has advanced in the decades since the console was produced, and a small module was procured to do the same job.
The result of all this surgery is another rare console rescued from e-waste, and an opportunity for the rest of us to take a look too. The PC engine is a relative rarity here, but we’ve had a few hacks over the years. This converter for its American cousin is one.
Kitchen knives are so personal. You can do almost everything you need in a kitchen with a chef’s knife, paring knife, and a bread knife. But the more time you spend in the kitchen, the more you develop preferences, and soon it becomes a bit of an n+1 thing, and there you are, pondering a cleaver.
There’s a lot of space between most chef’s knives and paring knives. What’s in that space—often called petty, prep, or utility knives—is often pretty weird. Consider the knives that you never use from a set and you’ll likely think of the short, serrated knives or the petty knives with no room for your fingers between the handle and the cutting board.
What if you’re a smaller person, or have smaller hands, or just think a smaller but still high-functioning all-around knife might be your jam? What if the right version of those midsize knives turned out to be really useful?
To my delight, the good ones are. With equal parts luck, research, and trial and error, I found both new and existing-but-flying-under-the-radar examples of midsize knives that were wonderfully functional, in part because of their size. The right ones are incredibly useful and the great ones are prep monsters.
Recently, I had seen signs at my favorite trade show that I might be on to something. At the Messermeister knives booth, a midsize blade stood out thanks to an olive wood handle and intriguing geometry. It felt balanced and comfortable with room for hands of any size to move back on the handle, or further forward in a pinch grip. Importantly, there was plenty of clearance, so knuckles don’t hit the cutting board at the bottom of the stroke. Keeping my eyes open, I saw more potential from Cangshan, Tarrerias-Bonjean, and Zwilling. This got my mind going. I remembered the Wusthöf Classic chef’s knife that comes in a 5-inch size. Similarly, I hoped I could find a short version of a nimble Japanese knife called a kiritsuke and put in a call to the good people at Seisuke Knife in Portland, Oregon.
Soon, I had a pile of beautiful knives on my cutting board. I tucked my own knives into my knife roll for storage and, for weeks, used the new, smaller specimens as my daily drivers.
The more I used them, the more I understood what I wanted. First, I threw their unhelpful names out the window: petty, utility, prep … whatever. Next, I decided my lovely Tadafusa santoku, the shortest of my longer knives, would be the longest I’d go at roughly 6.5 inches. Having these knives “do it all” felt like a stretch, but they definitely needed to be able to do a lot. I was willing to work with the knife to find its strengths, but preferred something that could handle different cutting styles and all kinds of food. They had to be prep monsters.
Meanwhile, CNBC cited sources who claimed that Elon Musk is considering combining Tesla with SpaceX.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX is hoping to raise $75bn in a gargantuan initial public offering (IPO), which estimates suggest would value the tech giant at around $1.7trn.
The Starship rocket producer, in a filing with the US government, said that it plans to offer more than 555.5m class A common stock shares at a value of $135 per share.
Last month, SpaceX posted a net loss of $4.28bn on revenue of $4.69bn for Q1, compared with a net loss of $528m on revenue of $4bn a year ago.
Musk’s decision to offer shares at a fixed price ahead of the order-taking is unusual for large US IPOs, reports suggested.
However, depending on its success, SpaceX could rank as the largest IPO listing in history, far exceeding the 2019 listing of Saudi Aramco for $29bn, the current record holder for largest IPO. Following the raise, Musk, the company’s chairperson, CEO and chief technical officer, is expected to hold more than 82pc of the voting power.
The space-tech company was last valued at a reported $1.2trn following the February acquisition of xAI, Musk’s other company, which is behind the AI chatbot Grok. This came less than a year after xAI acquired the social media platform X, another of Musk’s businesses.
Meanwhile, CNBC reported late last month that Musk is considering yet another SpaceX acquisition, this time of his electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla, which currently sits at around $1.6trn in value.
SpaceX’s filings showed that it had purchased nearly $700m worth of Tesla’s battery storage products across 2024 and 2025, as well as more than $130m of its Cybertrucks in 2025.
xAI, by April of this year, had purchased $292m in Tesla battery solutions, and more than $400m last year. Tesla, meanwhile, committed $2bn to xAI, while owning nearly 19m SpaceX shares at an approximate value of $2.5bn. The two companies are also collaborating to develop semiconductors as part of Terafab.
SpaceX’s IPO comes just ahead of Anthropic, which filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on 1 June. The AI giant behind Claude was last valued at $965bn after a $65bn raise late last month.
OpenAI, recently valued at $852bn, is also planning to go public. CNBC reported that the company was preparing to confidentially file for an IPO late last month.
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In 2023, Chinese smartphone major Honor made headlines when it released the Honor Magic5 Pro, with a new type of battery called the Silicon Carbon battery (Si/C). This battery sounded very different from the standard Lithium-ion batteries smartphones have used for decades. After their initial appearance in 2023, Silicon Carbon batteries became increasingly common among Chinese smartphone brands. While leading smartphone brands like Apple and Samsung are yet to jump onto the Si/C battery bandwagon, the list of devices featuring an Si/C battery is definitely getting longer.
Now, it is important to know that Silicon Carbon batteries are actually a type of subset of Li-ion batteries, and not an entirely new technology like Lithium-Sulfur batteries. The key difference between standard Li-ion and Si/C batteries is that the latter uses a different anode material. While traditional lithium-ion batteries feature a graphite (pure carbon) anode, the anode of an Si/C battery is enhanced with a small amount of silicon. Thanks to silicon’s inherent energy density, which is roughly 10 times higher than graphite, this anode can pack more lithium ions in the same volume as a standard lithium-ion battery. The result is a battery that can hold more capacity and charge faster while taking less space than a standard Li-ion battery.
While Si/C batteries have their share of advantages, detractors claim the technology isn’t free of drawbacks. This includes silicon’s tendency to expand during charging, potential cycle-life challenges, increased thermal management needs, and added complexity. Nevertheless, let us now take a look at some smartphones with Silicon Carbon batteries that you can buy in the U.S. market today.
While phones with Si/C batteries have been around since 2023, none of their makers had a significant presence in the USA. That changed in 2026 when Motorola announced its horizontally folding smartphone — the Motorola Razr Fold — for consumers in the U.S. It features an 8.1-inch foldable internal display and a 6.5-inch P-OLED cover display. The phone is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset, and comes in a single 512GB variant in the U.S.
What made the Motorola Razr Fold truly special was the fact that it was one of the first carrier-supported smartphones in the U.S. to feature a Silicon Carbon battery. As for the battery itself, the device packs in a massive 6,000 mAh lithium-polymer battery with the aforementioned Silicon-Carbon anode. It supports wired charging speeds of up to 80W with a compatible charger and wireless charging speeds of up to 50W. To put these numbers into perspective, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7, one of its closest competitors, features a much smaller 4400 mAh battery with slower max wired (25W) and wireless (15W) charging speeds.
The Motorola Razr Fold is not affordable by any stretch of the imagination, and the carrier-unlocked option retails for $1,899 in the U.S., making it as expensive as the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7.
The OnePlus 15 is the flagship smartphone made by Chinese smartphone maker OnePlus. It is also among the handful of Chinese smartphones officially sold in the U.S. market — albeit generally not through carrier-subsidized retail channels. OnePlus officially sells carrier-unlocked devices across the U.S., a strategy that may have cost the company long-term visibility among consumers.
Coming back to the OnePlus 15, this flagship device — while not the first OnePlus device in the U.S. to sport a Si/C battery (that was the OnePlus 13) — is the current flagship to use this battery tech. The 2026 flagship, however, gets a significant upgrade in terms of battery capacity over the OnePlus 13. It packs a massive 7,300 mAh battery, compared to the 6,000 mAh battery on the OnePlus 13. What is more remarkable is that the OnePlus 15 does not gain significant weight or thickness over its predecessor while achieving this.
The OnePlus 15 retains the same charging speeds as its predecessor, with the U.S. version capable of achieving up to 80W fast charging via the dual-port GaN charger. The phone also supports wireless charging at 50W. The OnePlus 15 is sold in two variants in the U.S.: a 12 GB + 256 GB option that retails for $899.99 and a 16 GB + 512 GB variant that retails for $999.99.
The Motorola Razr Ultra (2026) is Motorola’s flagship flip phone in the U.S. market. The phone goes by the Motorola Razr 70 Ultra moniker in other markets. This vertically folding flip phone features a foldable LTPO AMOLED inner display measuring 7 inches when unfolded, along with a 4-inch external display. The phone uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset and comes in a single 16GB RAM + 512GB storage variant in the U.S. market.
As for the battery, this device gets a 5,000 mAh Si/C battery that supports fast charging speeds of up to 68W. Wireless charging is also supported, capped at 30W. The phone even supports reverse charging, albeit at a very slow 5W rate. Motorola claims 36 hours of battery life on a single charge for the Motorola Razr Ultra (2026).
In the U.S., the Motorola Razr Ultra (2026) is positioned just below the horizontally folding Motorola Razr Fold, which is also part of this list. The single 16GB+512GB variant of the Razr Ultra (2026) is priced at $1,499 in the U.S. It is officially supported by all major U.S. carriers.
Alongside the flagship grade, $900 OnePlus 15, buyers in the U.S. also have the option to buy the more affordable mid-range offering: the OnePlus 15R. Think of this device as a watered-down version of the OnePlus 15, with a spec sheet that is more affordable-flagship than pure flagship. The processor used on the OnePlus 15R, for example, is the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 (instead of the Elite variant on the OnePlus 15). The phone is slightly larger and heavier than the OnePlus 15, a trade-off that is acceptable given that it has resulted in a slight increase in battery capacity.
Just like the OnePlus 15, its less expensive mid-range sibling — the OnePlus 15R — features a Silicon Carbon battery. What has changed, however, is the capacity, which has gone up from 7300 mAh on the OnePlus 15 to 7400 mAh on the OnePlus 15R. The phone supports the same fast-charging speeds as its flagship sibling: up to 80W with OnePlus’ own Dual-Port GaN charger. Note that both devices can support 100W charging speeds outside the U.S.
The OnePlus 15R is sold in two storage variants in the U.S.: a base 256GB model for $699.99 and a 512GB model for $799.99. Both variants feature the same 12GB of RAM.
We have another Motorola flip phone making it into our list of phones with a Si/C battery. The handset in question is the Motorola Razr+ (2026), marketed globally as the Motorola Razr 70+ outside the U.S. It is positioned as a relatively affordable alternative to the Motorola Razr Ultra. Priced around $1,000, the Motorola Razr+ (2026) is powered by the Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 chip.
As for the battery, the Motorola Razr+ (2026) gets a smaller 4,500 mAh Si/C battery compared to the 5,000 mAh Si/C battery used on its pricier sibling, the Motorola Razr Ultra. The two devices are identical in charging speed. The Razr+ (2026) supports 45W fast charging with Motorola’s Turbocharger and 15W wireless charging. The phone also supports reverse charging at a leisurely 5W. Like the Motorola Razr Ultra, this device offers 30-plus hours of battery life (31 hours, to be precise) on a single charge.
In the U.S., the Motorola Razr+ (2026) is available in a single 12 GB/256 GB variant priced at $1,099.99.
The 2026 Tony Awards will take place at Radio City Music Hall in New York City and will combine a lively ceremony with plenty of awards to give away, and live performances by Queen Latifah, Whitney Leavitt, and Alex Newell, among others. Hosted by Pink, the 79th edition of the ceremony is set to be a glamorous night celebrating the best Broadway shows of the past year.
You can watch Tony Awards 2026 online from anywhere with a VPN.
As for the predictions, Best Musical is likely to go to Schmigadoon!, a meta musical about musicals based on an Apple TV+ series. Without giving away any spoilers, it’s the story of a couple who become trapped in an alternate-universe town, stuck inside a 1940s Golden Age Broadway musical.
But the Tony Awards are no strangers to upsets and surprises, so the gong could to The Lost Boys, a pop-rock musical based on the 1980s movie about a family trying to fight vampires. Both Schmigadoon! and The Lost Boys are leading the nominations chart, with 12 each.
Liberation is highly likely to win Best Play. If it does, it would mark the first time since 2009 that a play by a woman has won the award, and the first time since 1989 that an American woman has taken home the prize. Other likely contenders in the category include Giant, The Balusters, and Little Bear Ridge Road.
Daniel Radcliffe is among the leading lights to land the Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play award, for his role in Every Brilliant Thing.
Read on to find out how you can watch the 2026 Tony Awards live online from anywhere in the world.
Tony Awards 2026 isn’t directly available to stream for free, but those in the US can benefit from free trials to catch the action without paying a penny.
In the US, you can benefit from the free trial periods of live TV services such as YouTube TV and Hulu+Live TV, both of which come with CBS so you can watch the ceremony coverage live.
You can also watch Tony Awards 2026 on Paramount+, which is available with a 30-day trial of Walmart+ for $1 (practically FREE!) thanks to this handy trick we’ve found.
Just note that this Walmart Plus deal includes the Paramount+ Essential package, where the awards ceremony will be available on-demand the following day, i.e., Monday.
Outside your home country at the moment? Use NordVPN to unlock your free stream from anywhere in the world.
If you’re keen to watch Tony Awards 2026 but you’re away from home and access to the event is geo-blocked, then you could always use a VPN to access it (assuming you’re not breaching any broadcaster T&Cs, of course). You may be surprised by how simple it is to do.
Use NordVPN to watch the 2026 Tony Awards online from anywhere.
The 2026 Tony Awards is being broadcast live on CBS in the US.
Cord-cutters can catch all the action via live TV options such as YouTube TV (21-day free trial) and Hulu+Live TV.
Alternatively, you can stream this year’s Tony Awards on Paramount+. The event is available live via the Premium subscription, which is $13.99 a month.
If you’re subscribed to the Essential plan ($8.99 per month), however, you can watch the ceremony on-demand the following day, i.e., on Monday.
As we’ve mentioned, another option is to get a 30-day Walmart+ trial (for just $1), which provides free access to Paramount+ Essential.
Traveling abroad? If you’re currently traveling outside the US, you can use a VPN to watch the 2026 Tony Awards from anywhere in the world. We recommend NordVPN.
Unfortunately for UK Broadway fans, the 2026 Tony Awards hasn’t been picked up for broadcast in the region.
Traveling to the UK from the US, Canada, or Australia? Use a VPN to watch Tony Awards 2026 from abroad. NordVPN is our recommended provider.
Like in the US and Canada, the 2026 Tony Awards is available to watch on Paramount+ in Australia as well. It will air live on 10am AEST on Monday, June 8.
Outside Oz right now? Use NordVPN to stream your local content library and watch Tony Awards 2026.
We test and review VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: 1. Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service). 2. Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad. We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services. Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing.
Weekend Open Thread: Evereve – Corporette.com
Jade Biosciences, Inc. (JBIO) Discusses Positive Interim Results From JADE101 Phase I Healthy Volunteer Study and Development Plans Transcript
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