Meta confirms 20,225 Instagram accounts hit by HTS password‑reset flaw
Bug let attackers request resets to unassociated emails
HTS disabled, passwords reset, full recovery‑flow review underway
Last week’s attack against Meta’s customer support affected just over 20,000 accounts, the company has now confirmed. Hackers managed to break into these profiles and most likely exfiltrate the data found inside.
Last week, news broke that cybercriminals exploited a vulnerability in Meta’s AI-powered customer support service, tricking it into sending password reset codes for other people’s accounts.
Now, the Facebook and Instagram owner filed a new report with the Office of the Maine Attorney General, in which it stated that 20,225 persons were affected. In a letter Meta sent to the Maine AG, it was said that the company discovered a flaw in High Touch Support (an AI-assisted account recovery system for Instagram) on May 31, 2026.
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Mitigating the intrusion
“The tool itself worked properly and functioned as intended; however due to a bug in a separate code path, the system did not properly verify that the email address provided by the individual requesting a password reset matched the email address associated with that user’s Instagram account. As a result, when an individual provided an email address not previously associated with the account, the system incorrectly sent a password reset link to that unassociated email rather than rejecting the request,” Meta explained.
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The company says there is no evidence of data exfiltration, but leaves it as a possibility, given that the crooks were able to easily access it. That includes contact information (email address and/or phone number), date of birth, social media posts and content (photos, videos, stories), direct messages and communications, account activity and interaction history, profile information (biography, profile photo), and connected accounts and linked services.
To address the issue, Meta disabled the HTS system and reset the passwords for all affected profiles. It also enrolled all targeted accounts into a mandatory security checkpoint and asked all users to re-authenticate.
“Prior to re-launching the tool, Meta will fix the authentication check in the Instagram recovery entry point to ensure proper verification of email addresses against existing account information before any password reset is initiated,” Meta stressed. “Additionally, Meta is conducting a comprehensive review of similar account recovery flows across Meta’s platforms to identify and remediate any potential issues.”
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Muhammad Yahya Patel, vCISO & Cybersecurity Advisor at Huntress, said:
“This is a new category of risk that the industry needs to start taking seriously. As AI is embedded into operational workflows, customer support, identity verification, and access management. The attack surface shifts from technical vulnerabilities to logical ones.
Any organisation deploying AI into support, identity, or access workflows needs to ask one question before go-live: what happens if an attacker treats this tool as the attack surface? AI systems that can trigger privileged actions such as password resets, account access, data retrieval this needs the same rigorous access controls and verification logic as any other privileged system. The fact that it’s AI-powered doesn’t make it lower risk. Right now, for many organisations, it’s making it higher.
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The more significant issue is what this signals about the security review process for AI-powered tools before they go into production”.
Photo credit: Sonny Dickson New photos of a production-style dummy device for Apple’s first foldable iPhone have surfaced online. They come from leaker Sonny Dickson and offer the clearest view of the design yet. Sonny Dickson, the leaker, provided images from several perspectives. The unit appears in both closed and fully open variants, with a screen installed for a more realistic appearance than the previous crude iteration.
When you turn the device off, it shows a compact exterior display that is about 5.5 inches across. The front-facing camera is located in the center, with a circular cutout at the top. If you are familiar with the traditional iPhone, you will see that this one is somewhat shorter and wider, similar to a passport held upright. However, when you fold it open, the experience changes dramatically. The internal display stretches to about 7.8 inches and has a broader, shorter aspect ratio, akin to an iPad mini. That leaves plenty of room for apps, videos, and split-screen work, assuming the software can adjust to the new configuration.
Unfold extraordinary with Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold; with Pixel’s largest screen and Gemini, Google’s most advanced AI, it’s made for…
Unlocked Android phone gives you the flexibility to change carriers and choose your own data plan[2]; it works with Google Fi, Verizon, T-Mobile…
The gearless, high-strength hinge makes it durable enough to handle about 10 years of folding[3]; plus, Pixel 10 Pro Fold is built with Corning…
In the close-up images, you can notice a little round camera hole in the upper-left corner of the huge inner screen. Apple used a similar technique to previous Android foldables here, marking the first time this format has been used on an iPhone display. The vertical wrinkle down the middle of the interior screen is one of the most noticeable features. It appears faint on the dummy, but speculations suggest that Apple was able to reduce the depth and angle of the fold by changing the hinge. With some fancy glass and adhesives, the crease should be even harder to see on the finished units.
When the device is closed, a horizontal camera bar occupies a portion of the rear. Two lenses are side by side on a raised plateau that resembles the camera section of the iPhone Air, but no telephoto lens is seen at this time, and there is a small cluster of holes for the rear microphone. Other notable elements in the photographs include a titanium frame, volume controls relocated to the top edge, and a side button with Touch ID for unlocking and making payments, as this design does not appear to have Face ID.
Rumors suggest that there will just be one color option available at launch. White is the only color indicated in recent leaks, though we may see different colors later, as Apple has done with previous iPhone releases. It all comes together to create a device that fits in your pocket for everyday use and transforms into something resembling a small tablet when opened. The outer screen is ideal for fast peeks and calls without having to unfold the entire device, while the inner screen is far more comfortable for long-term tasks. [Source]
Apple is holding a lot of secrets this year, and it’s about to share some of them with us. But what will today’s surprises bring?
The keynote address at the company’s Worldwide Developer Conference starts at 10 a.m. PT today at Apple Park in Cupertino, California. We’ll get a glimpse of Apple’s upcoming features and software updates, like previews of iOS and WatchOS, but likely won’t see any new hardware, like Apple’s rumored foldable iPhone, yet.
For now, WWDC 2026 is all about Apple’s software features and AI developments. And everything is still a big mystery. But that makes it fun to speculate about what might be coming.
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To lean into the excitement, the CNET Group is hosting a Big Guessing Game contest across its websites — CNET, Lifehacker, Mashable, PCMag and ZDNET. Three rounds of guessing let you predict what Apple will unveil this year. Each answer you get right earns you one chance in a drawing to win the latest Apple Watch announced in September.
The Big Guessing Game Round 1 was all about Apple’s new software (like iOS, iPadOS, VisionOS, WatchOS and MacOS). Your guesses ahead of June’s WWDC event are in and are outstanding.
Most readers think Apple’s new CEO will speak at WWDC
June’s WWDC keynote is expected to be the last one for Apple CEO Tim Cook before he resigns in September. Whether Apple’s incoming CEO, John Ternus, will speak at the event is still unknown. The vast majority of CNET readers (96%) believe Ternus will speak during Monday’s keynote, while 4% think he won’t.
Here’s some food for thought. Cook was Apple’s chief operating officer before being named CEO. He was less involved with product development and announcements and instead created and refined Apple’s robust supply chain ecosystem, which helped Apple become a trillion-dollar company.
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Ternus is currently Apple’s vice president of hardware engineering, and has been a part of Apple event keynotes before. We’ll have to see if Ternus lands onstage at any point as a presenter, but it’s almost certain that Cook will kick off the event with his usual, low-key “good morning.”
MacOS 27 may not have a nickname this year
CNET readers didn’t come to a consensus on what MacOS 27 will be named, but there are a few guesses that stand out. Since 2013, MacOS has always had a nicknamed based on a California landmark, like Mavericks or Catalina. Prior to that, Apple’s Mac software had big cat names like Cheetah, Jaguar and Puma.
The names readers guessed for the new OS varied, but slightly over 9% believe it could simply be named MacOS 27 without a California nickname this year, which would be a first. Some readers think it could be Redwood (6%), Shasta (4%) and Mammoth (3%). Other names that stand out include Big Bear and Emerald Bay.
Here’s a look at earlier versions. Keep in mind that Apple changed its numbering conventions in 2025 to reflect the year following its release.
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MacOS 26 (2025): Tahoe
MacOS 15 (2024): Sequoia
MacOS 14 (2023): Sonoma
MacOS 13 (2022): Ventura
MacOS 12 (2021): Monterey
MacOS 11 (2020): Big Sur
The frequency of ‘Apple Intelligence’ mentions is a toss-up
Based on guesses from CNET Group readers, the term “Apple Intelligence” could be mentioned anywhere from zero to a billion times during the WWDC keynote on Monday. Even among the reasonable guesses, there was a wide variation.
The median guess, or the middle number of all the guesses, was 26, but the average guess was much higher at 68. (There were some very high guesses.)
We first heard the term Apple Intelligence at WWDC in June 2024, and it began rolling out to iPhones, iPads and Macs in October 2024. Since then, Apple Intelligence has become a buzzword for Apple amid the recent evolution of AI.
Apple Intelligence launched with a few features, including text rewriting, photo cleanup to remove unwanted objects, and notification prioritization. However, AI has advanced significantly since 2024, and Apple is increasingly investing in its evolution.
Recently Apple Intelligence updates to accessibility features were unveiled for hardware: VoiceOver and Magnifier, to describe what’s on your screen. Apple Intelligence now supports natural language, letting you speak like a regular person to control your iPad or iPhone.
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As Apple evolves to embrace AI, we’re likely to hear a lot about Apple Intelligence as it weaves into more OS features, like the overdue Siri update expected to run on Google’s foundational models for Gemini AI. We’ll need to wait to see exactly how much AI dominates Monday’s WWDC keynote.
Watch this: What to Expect From Apple at WWDC 2026 | Tech Today
Readers are certain WatchOS will get an AI health coach
Speaking of AI, most CNET Group readers (89%) believe the next WatchOS upgrade could include an AI health coach, while 11% don’t believe so. WatchOS 26 came with a few fitness upgrades, notably Workout Buddy, which is an AI-powered personal trainer that acts in real time.
Vanessa Hand Orellana, CNET’s lead smartwatch writer, said in her commentary that Workout Buddy could be Apple laying the groundwork for fitness and AI. It’s also a chance for Apple to see what it can do with AI on the smartwatch. Orellana added that an AI-powered coach helps you understand your health data and motivates you to build better habits. So a health coach that focuses on your overall well-being isn’t far-fetched based on what we’ve seen from Apple.
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Could the iOS 27 public beta drop as early as June?
I like that Apple gives us a chance to test out the new software before it’s officially released through its Apple Beta Software Program. But we never know for certain when the official public beta versions will be publicly available until they are.
A surprising number of CNET readers — 53% — think Apple will release the public beta version of iOS 27 this month, while only 17% predict it will come in July. Others think it could come in August (9%) or September (21%).
Even though it was the third-most-popular guess, there is a strong argument for July — the public beta of iOS 26 came out on July 23, 2025, and the public beta of iOS 18 came out on July 15, 2024. We’ll have to see whether Apple follows the same pattern and whether we’ll get any hints on Monday.
Mark your calendars for July 7 for the second round of CNET’s Big Guessing Game, where we’ll focus on Apple devices, like Apple’s beloved iPad and iPhone. Remember, every correct answer gets you closer to a chance at winning the latest Apple Watch in September.
Britain’s banks, telecoms, and weapons-makers have a new shared anxiety: that the AI they increasingly run on is built, owned, and controlled in the United States. A startup barely three years old is betting they will pay to fix it.
Cosine, a UK frontier-AI lab, has assembled a coalition of blue-chip British institutions to co-design Lumen Sovereign, what it bills as Britain’s first sovereign frontier AI model.
The signatories read like a roll-call of the national economy: BT, HSBC, Lloyds, NatWest, BAE Systems, Babcock, LSEG, PwC, Thales UK, Leonardo UK, and Telefónica Tech, each signing a memorandum of understanding to help shape the model’s use cases, security requirements, and governance.
The reveal was timed for the opening of London Tech Week, where Prime Minister Keir Starmer set out a more interventionist AI strategy and announced roughly £400mn of new spending on specialist AI chips to expand the country’s computing capacity. Britain’s next AI champions, he said, should “start here, scale here and stay here.”
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The selling point is control. Lumen Sovereign will be trained entirely on Isambard-AI, the Nvidia-powered Bristol supercomputer that ranks among Europe’s most powerful, using compute awarded under the government’s £500mn Sovereign AI programme, which named Cosine in its first cohort in April.
Cosine says the model will carry no dependence on foreign infrastructure at any stage, and can be deployed inside a customer’s own systems, including air-gapped environments with no connection to outside networks.
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That is the crux of the pitch.
For most companies, choosing an AI model is a procurement decision; for a defence contractor, a bank running anti-money-laundering checks, or an operator of critical infrastructure, it is a legal and security one first. Sending classified systems, AML alerts, or clinical data to a server in a US data centre is often simply not allowed.
“Enterprises are increasingly waking up to the risk of being wholly dependent on foreign providers,” said Cosine co-founder and chief executive Alistair Pullen, who argues that vendor lock-in brings “security risk, dependency risk, and cost escalation risks.”
Cosine is an unusual candidate for the job, and a credible one.
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Founded in 2022 by Pullen, Yang Li, and Sam Stenner, the Y Combinator-backed lab has raised just $8mn from investors including Lakestar, yet its coding models have topped independent benchmarks against OpenAI, Anthropic, Mistral, and DeepSeek for two years running. It supports more than 38 programming languages, among them the COBOL, Fortran, and Ada that still run Britain’s defence systems and financial plumbing, and that most AI tools handle badly.
Lumen Sovereign, it says, will be built from scratch on proprietary datasets spanning more than 30 regulated workflows, rather than fine-tuned from an open-source model, with deployment targeted for the end of 2026.
The coalition partners are blunt about why they are in. “Cosine has offered us a path to a completely UK native and highly customisable AI stack,” said Peter Passaro, director of AI and data at Babcock, pointing to “the very complex defence environments we operate in.”
Priority uses span cybersecurity, KYC and AML investigations, legal document review, and healthcare administration, areas where UK AI adoption has stalled on exactly these security concerns.
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Cosine’s effort is the sharp end of a wider British scramble for AI independence, one that keeps colliding with an awkward fact. The government has poured money into homegrown compute and chip supply, and struck sovereign-infrastructure deals with Nscale and Nvidia, even as flagship US projects such as OpenAI’s Stargate UK have stumbled.
Yet “sovereign” AI in Britain still tends to run on American chips, Isambard-AI among them.
For now, these are memoranda, not contracts, and Lumen Sovereign is still to be built. Training a frontier model from scratch to the assurance standards demanded by defence and finance, and doing it by the end of the year, is a formidable task, and Britain has announced sovereign-AI ambitions before.
What is different this time is the coalition: a row of institutions treating sovereign AI not as a slogan but as a procurement requirement.
We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.
Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop: 30-second review
The Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop is an innovative multi monitor design that essentially enables you to take the office with you. The four monitor set, stand and backpack is available as a complete system.
The build quality matches that of the TriScreen Pro side panels that I recently reviewed..
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The set also comes with a stand which considering it’s robust construction is surprisingly lightweight, and offers decent stability for the monitors through the test.
The monitors themselves are linked with the Transformer connectors, the same as those used on the TriScreen Pro, and as I found with that monitor setup the same is true here, careful alignment, then a firm press and a wiggle and click to ensure that everything is locked into place.
Once connected, the panels form a solid visual array with a decent of articulation once you discover that theres’s additional flex in the connectors once you pull the two ends apart, once you get that shift in angle you can position them around or above your laptop screen.
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For most of the test, I used the screens with my MacBook Pro M1 Max, and, as with the TriScreen, you need the USBDisplay app to get everything working; without it on the Mac at least, you’ll just see four blank monitors.
The installation process for USBDisplay does require a series of special permissions to be granted under Privacy and Security. Once done, the app lets you change the orientation of the screens via a menu accessible by clicking the icon at the top of your screen.
If you want to rotate a panel from horizontal (landscape) to vertical (portrait), you do it physically by unclipping the monitor and then clipping it back in your intended orientation, and then you can access the app to correct the orientation.
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The screen arrangement is, as ever, configured through the main display settings for the OS, whether Windows or macOS.
In use, having four 16-inch panels arranged around my MacBook Pro was genuinely useful and offered a great way to organise my workspace, allocating an application to each screen. I found that I essentially had five displays: the main MacBook display, then the four mounted above.
While all the displays are identical in size, I used one as the main display, and the others for all other windows and content. The main Laptop screen I left empty for use with any color-critical apps I needed.
The display quality as covered by the benchmarking was good, although the results and specifications highlight the limited resolution, color accuracy and refresh rate; however, in a work environment and for pure productivity, the system, with the solid stand, absolutely makes sense and works exceptionally well.
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Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop: Price and availability
The Lepow TriScreen Pro is available now direct from Lepow’s website here, where you can select between triple and quad display systems. At time of review, it’s priced at $769 (down from $819).
You can order the system with a US, UK, AU, JP, EU, and KR plug, depending on where in the world you’re based.
The system includes four 16-inch panels with proprietary connectors, an HDMI cable, a USB-C cable, a power supply, and a carry case.
Each of the four 16-inch panels in the Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop are identical, with a thin, lightweight construction that enables them to pack into the supplied backpack and makes everything ultra portable.
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When it comes to the size and weight of each, the monitors weigh 1050g per unit and measure 420 × 360 × 30mm. When the kit arrives, everything is nicely boxed, but it’s worth assembling before use just to check on the construction. I noted that the central monitor really needs to be screwed into the stand using the VESA mounting holes. Otherwise, once the other monitors are attached, it can feel unstable; attaching the monitor fixes this.
That said if you need to transport it in the back pack the monitor really needs to be detached from the stand to avoid it getting damaged, so I found securing it with two of the four screws saved time when disasembling, this is definately something in the design that needs reworking.
Each display is otherwise identical, with a matte IPS panel, a slim profile, and a finish that gives them a premium look, which is reflected in the price. Unlike the large 27-inch display from Lepow that I looked at recently, these are lightweight with a polymer composite build rather than metal, which makes each panel relatively light, which is handy due to their intended portability. The actual construction feels robust, the panels are rigid, and there is no flex when handling them, which is relevant when attaching the Transformer connectors.
The Transformer connectors are a real innovation and allow each monitor to connect seamlessly, and then there are just two cables that are needed to connect to the laptop and power. Each monitor has two USB-C ports: one for the display and the other for power, and it’s up to you which you use to connect to the system.
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The Transformer connectors then carry the data to each of the other monitors without the need for additional cables.
Each monitor in the review kit is identical, and these can be mounted on the lightweight CNC’d aluminium stand. This is incredibly lightweight, a perfect design for a portable system like this, and provides a good, solid base to support the weight of the monitors.
(Image credit: Alastair Jennings)
Once the first monitor is placed in the stand, the others can be clipped on, and, as previously mentioned, screwing the central monitor into the stand ensures absolute stability, this is a bit of a design flaw and not ideal.
It does take a few minutes to assemble and connect, but once done, the setup is solid and essentially lets you set up a larger workspace with plenty of screen real estate in a relatively space-limited location.
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Then at the end of your work session, the breakdown of all the components is relatively quick, and everything, including your laptop, can be neatly packed into the backpack along with the cables and charger. It’s a tight fit, but there is room.
Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop: Features
(Image credit: Alastair Jennings)
The Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor is a modular display system that’s been designed to work alongside your laptop to expand on the screen space you have available.
Each monitor features three connection points: one on each side and one on top, so you can configure the system as you want. For instance, you could have four panels in a horizontal row, a vertical stack, a mixed landscape-and-portrait that wraps around your laptop screen, a 2×2 grid, or in a triangle for meets where all participants can see a screen.
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In practice, the configuration I found most useful for day-to-day work had two panels in landscape mode above the laptop screen and one on each side also in landscape mode. I tried portrait, but I think that’s going to take a mind shift on my behalf. This configuration kept a relatively low profile while still providing plenty of screen space.
This meant I could keep my main applications centre focus, with email and music on the side panels, and an additional browser window open at the top. Everything was always visible, and there was never a need to switch between applications as you do when using a single panel.
While PC users are used to this multi-screen display, Mac users often face constraints, and this system requires some initial setup with the USBDisplay App. Once installed however, you’re good to go.
One interesting feature of the monitors is that, as they’re designed for productivity and office work, the aspect ratio is 16:10 rather than the more common 16:9. This just means you have additional screen height for email, document editing, spreadsheets, and web browsing in landscape orientation, and more horizontal width in portrait. This format really does make sense for the intended use.
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Switching between display modes, like turning a screen from horizontal (landscape) to vertical (portrait), has two steps: physically move the panel, then choose the correct option in the USBDisplay menu bar app.
The monitors switch relatively quickly, and the other part is to change the monitor arrangement in the operating system’s display settings. This takes only a few seconds and is easy after a couple of goes. The USBDisplay app is extremely simple and one of those single-screen support programs that runs in the background until you need it, when it can be accessed from the menu bar.
While the system is designed for multiple monitors, the modular approach means you can use one, two, three or all four even on a Mac.
If you need however, each panel can operate as an independent USB display with its own power and data connections, so if you want to travel with just one additional monitor for your laptop, then you can.
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Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop: Performance
(Image credit: Alastair Jennings)
Benchmark scores
Spyder X2 Calibration Results
Gamut: 5.0/5 Tone Response: 4.5/5 White Point: 2.5/5 | Measured 7200–7500K Contrast: 5.0/5 | Peak 1700:1 at 25% brightness Luminance Uniformity: 2.5/5 Color Uniformity: 4.5/5 Color Accuracy: 3.5/5 Overall Rating: 4.0/5 Peak brightness (measured): 333.2 nits at 100%
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Through this test, I was surprised by just how portable these monitors were, and while the supplied backpack was quite plain and uninspiring, it was perfectly sized to hold all four panels, with seperate sections for each, as well as a large cavity for the stand, and still room to squeeze in my 16-inch MacBook Pro.
The backpack was a little weighty, but no more than my usual work camera backpack, and perfectly acceptable for daily use on a commute from home to the studio/office or another location.
Over the test period, I varied the setup I took with me, and early on, screwed one of the panels onto the stand to make a secure base for any other monitor combination I would take.
The stand, while simple, is perfectly designed, with the three sections folding down securely so it essentially packs down nearly flat. Each section can be angled up to the position you need, and large push-button releases and locks the angle.
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Through the test, I found that my most common configuration was to have two landscape panels above the laptop, one landscape panel on each side, which gave five visible screens, and I assigned a specific application to each.
As an example, email on one, 3D printer monitoring on another, music and media controls on a third, server monitoring on the fourth, and the main laptop screen reserved for primary work.
The fact that the four monitors are identical makes them extremely easy to work with, and they essentially match the one on the MacBook Pro, at least in size.
Initially, it took a while to figure out the best configuration, but once settled on the monitor positioning it was then time to install the USBDisplay software. Locating the software wasn’t straightforward, and finding the correct page, which didn’t seem to be linked from any page on the manual or website, took time. You can use this link on the official site, and scroll down to the firmware section.
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Once this software is installed, everything else is straightforward: the monitors will flicker to life, ready to be oriented using the USBDisplay app and arranged in the system display settings.
Out of the box, the calibration is OK and perfectly adequate for productivity. If you do want to match them to the MacBook Pro monitor, then a calibration device is needed. Just as a matter of course for the test, I used the Spyder X2 Ultra to calibrate and analyse the displays.
During calibration, it showed that despite the relative limitations of the panels, they still scored 5/5 for Gamut and Contrast, with a Tone Response of 4.5/5, which is impressive.
White Point, however, was quite low at 2.5/5, out of the box, with a measured reading of 7200–7500K, but it improved after calibration as the monitors are set to a yellowish warm by default. More notable was the Luminance Uniformity, which also scored 2.5/5, with brightness differences across the panels. I tested each, and each was slightly different, though in all cases you’d be hard-pressed to notice it visually. Really, this would only be an issue for photographers and videographers.
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As the initial benchmarks showed, the panels arrive with a slight warm tint before calibration, which is easily corrected via the OSD. Running the Spyder X2 calibration across all four panels individually takes around an hour, but it brings them closer in representation to each other and to the MacBook Pro screen. For productivity applications, Word, Excel and PowerPoint, this really isn’t an issue, however this is something to note for color-sensitive work.
As these monitors are designed to be portable and will more than likely be used away from ideal office conditions, brightness is an important feature. Here, the benchmarking measured 333.2 nits at 100% against a claimed 300 nits.
In a studio or office environment at 50–75% brightness, the panels are a decent brightness, and in normal ambient light, there is no visibility issue. The 1920×1200 resolution is a bit of a limitation, and comparing these panels directly to the MacBook Pro display makes the difference apparent, but in use with Word and Excel rather than being used for creative displays, it is absolutely fine.
On Windows, the setup is considerably more straightforward than on Mac. Install the driver once you find it, again link above, connect the panels, and Windows handles the rest without prompting for permissions. Switching between Mac and PC required only swapping the USB-C and power cables with no reconfiguration of the panels.
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Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop: Final verdict
(Image credit: Alastair Jennings)
The Lepow Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop is a great choice if you’re looking for a lightweight multi-screen solution that is ultra-portable. The way they all connect is innovative, and once you figure out how you like to position them, they really do become a very slick display option.
These are, however, designed for productivity rather than creative use and gaming, and with the limitation of 1920×1200 resolution at 60Hz and limited color depth, those specifications lack for the creative or game sector, however, they are ideal for productivity. However, as an addition to a MacBook Pro or ASUS ProArt monitor, there’s no arguing just how useful the multi-display system is, we all have to write emails, and do you really need an Adobe RGB class monitor for your music library?
What I also liked was that, because of the modular design, you can take one, two, three, or all four, and that choice is fully up to you. That flexibility makes them extremely useful.
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Over a month of testing, I initially started taking the system with me as part of the test, but relatively quickly, the use alongside the MacBook and Netgear M7 made a powerful onsite solution giving plenty of space for documents and other media, and then the fact that it all packs into a handy backpack just made it ultra convenient.
It is a shame that the resolution is limited, and while the panels are 100% sRGB, which is fine for productivity for photographers and videographers, the fact that the minimum DCI-P3 requirement is not met and is way off the ideal of Adobe RGB accuracy means that most creative users will find them slightly limited on the creative front.
These modular monitors however seem perfectly suited for developers, business users, remote workers, or content creators who need multiple screens for productivity, monitoring, and organisation, rather than for color grading. The Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor is excellent and offers something that few other products at this price can match.
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Should I buy the Lepow 16″ Quad Monitor for Laptop?
(Image credit: Alastair Jennings)
Swipe to scroll horizontally
Value
Four 16-inch modular panels, a metal CNC stand, and a carry backpack for $893. Decent value for a portable quad-screen system.
4
Design
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The composite polymer build is a step below the TriScreen Pro’s CNC aluminium, but it feels robust and perfectly suited for portable use.
4
Features
Fully modular quad-screen configuration with 16:10 panels, 360° orientation options, and a versatile meeting mode
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4
Performance
The results say it all with a Rating of 4.0/5. 333.2 nits measured vs 400 nit claim. White-point mismatch before calibration, meaning they’re essentially excellent for productivity but not suitable for color-critical work.
3.5
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Overall
A genuinely portable modular quad-screen system that offers flexible configurations for wherever you work.
The stream will last for about 50 minutes, followed by a deep dive into gameplay.
Kamil Switalski/Unsplash
It’s been a busy, busy week in the world of video games. PlayStation and Xbox both held showcases amid the maelstrom of Summer Game Fest. Nintendo isn’t going to stand by and be left out of the party this time, though. Via its Nintendo Today app, the company announced a Nintendo Direct stream for June 9. It’ll start at 10AM ET and you can watch it on YouTube or below.
The Direct will run for about 50 minutes and feature games for both Nintendo Switch and Switch 2. Afterwards, we’ll slide into a Nintendo Treehouse stream, which will last for about 95 minutes and feature gameplay from several games shown during the Direct.
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Nintendo currently has Fire Emblem: Fortune’s Weave and an exclusive FromSoftware game, The Duskbloods, on its slate for the remainder of 2026. Perhaps we’ll get release dates for those.
This year marks the 40th anniversary of the Zelda series, so maybe we’ll get some news on the franchise during this Direct too (such as another look at the upcoming movie). For what it’s worth, rumors have suggested a remake of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time is in the works.
Retro gaming finds often arrive with layers of dust and stories. This Spider-Man plug-and-play TV game from Jakks Pacific, released in 2004, fits that pattern perfectly. James Channel recently pulled one from an online marketplace and gave it the full treatment: cleaning, testing every mode, and opening it up to see what made it tick. The result shows a licensed product that leaned hard into its character theme while delivering the kind of simple, self-contained entertainment common in that era.
When you take the unit out of the box, you can tell it has a distinct personality because Spider-Man’s masked visage stares at you from the front. The lower half of the device is an interesting blue with white eyes, while a long red joystick rises from the machine’s core, surrounded by a black web pattern. AV connections protrude from the back, connecting to any standard television, and a little white button sits at the top of the stick.
POSABLE SUPER HERO – Scale up the action with the highly articulated LEGO Marvel Spider-Man Hero Figure (76346) building toy for boys and girls ages…
COLLECTIBLE LEGO FIGURE – Capture the appearance of the web slinging hero as portrayed in the Spider-Man: Brand New Day movie
PLAY AND DISPLAY – Whether used for pretend play action or arranged on display, kids can position and pose the dynamic Super Hero and his…
Used accessories like this may eventually show signs of wear and tear, as battery leaks have been known to create corrosion, and unless you want to go through the cleaning procedure, you’ll have to fix it before the machine will start correctly. Even when it has been cleaned up, it reverts to a plain interface with only five built-in games and a high score list. There are no cartridges or memory cards needed; simply enter the device, turn on the power, and you’ll be ready to play.
The first game drops you into the streets and rooftops of a city as Spider-Man, and it’s a dead simple platformer in which you simply run, leap, and grab items while avoiding the traps that lay around every corner. The other modes are a touch more varied, with an on-rails shooter in a training facility, a time-sensitive battle against Venom, a sewer maze through which you must navigate all of the hazards, and an aerial shooter against the Vulture’s minions.
Controls are basically made up of the stick and the button at its end. Movement appears to be pretty direct for standard left, right, up, and down movements, but when you try to get crazy with diagonal inputs, the stick can become a little challenging. The rubber touch pads beneath have become hard over time, and the top button controls web shots or attacks depending on the game. There are also some more buttons on the base that let you to jump and perform other things, but some units can become loose with time, and the buttons can pop out in mid-game. Additionally, the spring inside the stick can wear down, making accurate swings or dodges more of a chance than a talent.
Inside the case, the build speaks for itself: you’re staring at a big integrated circuit attempting to manage everything, graphics, sound, processor, and memory, and it’s not up to the task. The game data is contained on a little flash ROM chip, and the PCB contains a few other supporting components and jumpers that allow you to toggle between PAL and NTSC countries. The problem is that the soldering and component quality all hint to a gadget designed to be inexpensive, since it works well for a time but isn’t made to last. Swapping the crystal might help get the video working, but that’s about all.
Most supply-chain attacks using Ruby’s package hosting site “exploit a narrow window,” according to a new blog post form Ruby core maintainer Hiroshi Shibata.
So its packaging-managing Bundler tool now offers a filter that blocks new version until it’s been public “for at least N days. Releases too new to have been scrutinized are passed over in favor of ones that have aged past the window.”
The feature was designed in the open, drawing on how other ecosystems approach the same problem. It is opt-in, and complements rather than replaces existing defenses like mandatory 2FA and trusted publishing… Cooldown is unset by default, so a project without it keeps resolving to the newest versions…. Passing 0 disables cooldown for the run…
Cooldown is most useful as one part of the wider security investment happening on rubygems.org. The registry now validates gem contents at push time and checks logins against Have I Been Pwned so that compromised passwords cannot be reused, work described in Protecting rubygems.org from the outside in. A dedicated team is running AI-assisted vulnerability scanning against the most critical gems, backed by Alpha Omega and Anthropic, and the direction of all of this is tracked on a public roadmap. Trusted publishing and mandatory 2FA already raise the bar for who can push a release in the first place.
Microsoft picked June 7 to show off a new limited edition Xbox Series X, called the X25, that celebrates the company’s gaming hardware reaching its 25th birthday. The machine carries a translucent green shell that lets light pass through and gives a glimpse of the structure inside. This marks the first time a Series X has received a see-through treatment.
The design is primarily inspired by the original Xbox system, which debuted in 2001. The enclosure includes a prominent 25th anniversary logo. When it boots up, the distinctive green light of the original Xbox button appears, just as fans remember it. There are references to Xbox heritage throughout the case, as well as a few cheeky surprises to honor long-time players. The shell preserves all of the standard qualities introduced by the Xbox Series X, so power, functionality, and performance remain unchanged. You still get a terabyte of storage. The special version simply covers all of the tried-and-true hardware in a new set of colors and embellishments.
NEXT‑GEN PERFORMANCE, COMPACT DESIGN — Experience the speed and performance of a next‑generation console in the smallest Xbox ever, delivering…
UP TO 120 FPS GAMEPLAY — Enjoy smooth, responsive gaming with frame rates up to 120 FPS, powered by Xbox Velocity Architecture and a custom NVMe…
512GB CUSTOM SSD & QUICK RESUME — Jump into games faster with lightning‑fast load times and instantly switch between multiple titles using Quick…
This restomod of sorts includes a matching controller, which completes the package. It’s also made of translucent green, with the rear cover and battery door totally transparent, letting you to view the iconic Xbox logo beneath. However, the buttons are identical to the original; green, red, blue, and yellow all return. The controller’s bumpers resemble the black and white buttons on the vintage “Duke” controller, but the grip texture and overall appearance are comparable to the current models, making it feel right at home in your hands. Wireless connectivity, button quickness, vibration, and all other great features remain same. You basically get a nice nostalgic touch for collectors and anyone who wants to go back to where Xbox began.
In November, the console and controller will be offered in a limited edition package, with the controller sold separately. Microsoft claims it will soon disclose the exact price and pre-order details with select stores in participating areas, but there is one catch: supplies will be limited, so if you’re interested, keep an eye out for updates.
According to Jason Ronald, Xbox’s vice president of next-generation efforts, the collection is all about reproducing the look and feel of the original console, plus a few clever touches to memorialize the journey with the people who helped launch the brand. The release is merely one part of a bigger effort to celebrate this major milestone with the community that has helped propel Xbox to its current position. For fans, this translucent green edition offers a fresh opportunity to own a piece of Xbox history while maintaining current-generation performance.
Massachusetts lawmakers have voted to pass privacy protections that grant the state’s residents new rights over accessing and deleting their data held by big tech giants. The bill also bans companies from selling their users’ precise location data.
Lawmakers in the Massachusetts House passed the state’s Consumer Data Privacy Act in a unanimous 146-0 vote on Thursday, months after all of the Senate’s 40 lawmakers voted in favor of advancing its own bill in September. Now, the bills will be combined in the Senate, and sent to the state governor’s office, where it is expected to be signed into law. It’s not immediately clear when that will happen.
The move makes Massachusetts the latest U.S. state to push for stronger consumer privacy rights after years of documented abuses by the wider technology, advertising and social media industries. While the United States does not have a nationwide privacy law, unlike many of the world’s major democracies, U.S. states have filled the void of legislation by bringing their own patchwork of privacy rules that apply to their states.
The bill, if passed into law, will apply to companies that handle or process the personal data of more than 100,000 consumers. It will largely affect medium-sized startups as well as Silicon Valley technology titans.
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The law would block the sharing or sale of sensitive information without a user’s explicit consent. This data includes biometrics (such as health data, genetic information, and fingerprints), their precise geolocation data, and other markers about their religion, immigration status and sexual orientation.
The collection and sale of people’s location data has been a major flashpoint in privacy debates for years. Data brokers have for years relied on app developers selling their users’ location data to repackage and sell it to anyone who can pay, including stalkers, governments and militaries. In many cases, the government says it does not need a warrant to purchase data that’s commercially available on the open marketplace.
The Biden administration came close to banning the sale of sensitive Americans’ data at the federal level, but the Trump government has since scrapped the change.
By applying the location data ban to both residents and visitors, the Massachusetts law will effectively blanket ban the sale of location data across the state. The bill is anticipated to have a broad effect on startups that collect, share and sell location data in Massachusetts, as well as advertising companies that use location data to target people with ads.
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According to local media WBUR and Massachusetts newspaper Lynn Journal, state lawmakers worked across party lines under the belief that privacy is a fundamental right to Massachusetts state residents.
The bill was generally praised by privacy groups and advocates.
Evan Greer, director of the Fight for the Future advocacy group, said the Massachusetts bill “took a major step toward cracking down on Big Tech’s surveillance abuses,” while the ACLU praised the landmark bill as positioning the state as a “leader in protecting personal privacy and curbing digital surveillance.”
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Global Talent visa program aims to draw in dissatisfied scientists from countries including the US
Britain’s much-heralded scheme to attract top scientific talent has managed to attract a total of 18 takers, the government has admitted.
The Global Talent visa program was launched last summer following announcements from the EU and France that they intended to tempt scientists unhappy with their lot in Trump’s America and elsewhere.
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But while the EU was putting up €500 million ($575 million) in funding for foreign eggheads, the UK could only stump up a dedicated pot of £54 million ($72 million) to lure boffins to Britain.
According to the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT), UK research organizations have managed to attract ten leading international researchers in the latest wave, who are expected to drive breakthroughs in clean energy, life sciences, and other advanced technologies.
This is on top of eight researchers previously announced by the agency.
Nevertheless, DSIT today declared a key milestone for the scheme, with all 12 of the Global Talent Fund research organizations taking part having successfully recruited international candidates. This demonstrates strong delivery against initial program objectives, it claimed.
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DSIT highlighted two scientists that have left the US for Great Britain: Professor Bryony DuPont is joining the University of Strathclyde in Scotland from Oregon State University to work on the use of AI to improve energy systems and make them more resilient to the changing environment.
The second is Dr Ivana Bukvin, who is joining the Medical Research Council Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, from Stanford University. She is researching proteins to advance understanding of aging and neurodegeneration in diseases such as Huntington’s.
UK Research & Innovation (UKRI), which oversees the scheme, says it is expanding its Global Talent visa fast-track route to cover all of the Association for Innovation, Research and Technology Organisation members (including IBM).
Doing so means it will cover about 100 R&D-intensive businesses across key high-growth sectors, including advanced manufacturing and digital technologies.
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“It’s no coincidence that the world’s top researchers, driving groundbreaking innovations in AI, life sciences, advanced manufacturing, and clean energy, are choosing to come to the UK to advance their work,” stated Lord Vallance, Minister for Science, Innovation, Research and Nuclear.
The government says the Global Talent Fund is also strengthening UK research capability thanks to early investment in infrastructure and lab equipment. Some organizations are already deploying funding into specialist facilities and start‑up resources to support incoming talent, it claims. ®
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