Tech
New GlassWorm attack targets macOS via compromised OpenVSX extensions
A new GlassWorm malware attack through compromised OpenVSX extensions focuses on stealing passwords, crypto-wallet data, and developer credentials and configurations from macOS systems.
The threat actor gained access to the account of a legitimate developer (oorzc) and pushed malicious updates with the GlassWorm payload to four extensions that had been downloaded 22,000 times.
GlassWorm attacks first appeared in late October, hiding the malicious code using “invisible” Unicode characters to steal cryptocurrency wallet and developer account details. The malware also supports VNC-based remote access and SOCKS proxying.
Over time and across multiple attack waves, GlassWorm impacted both Microsoft’s official Visual Studio Code marketplace and its open-source alternative for unsupported IDEs, OpenVSX.
In a previous campaign, GlassWorm showed signs of evolution, targeting macOS systems, and its developers were working to add a replacement mechanism for the Trezor and Ledger apps.
A new report from Socket’s security team describes a new campaign that relied on trojanizing the following extensions:
- oorzc.ssh-tools v0.5.1
- oorzc.i18n-tools-plus v1.6.8
- oorzc.mind-map v1.0.61
- oorzc.scss-to-css-compile v1.3.4
The malicious updates were pushed on January 30, and Socket reports that the extensions had been innocuous for two years. This suggests that the oorzc account was most likely compromised by GlassWorm operators.
According to the researchers, the campaign targets macOS systems exclusively, pulling instructions from Solana transaction memos. Notably, Russian-locale systems are excluded, which may hint at the origin of the attacker.

Source: Socket
GlassWorm loads a macOS information stealer that establishes persistence on infected systems via a LaunchAgent, enabling execution at login.
It harvests browser data across Firefox and Chromium, wallet extensions and wallet apps, macOS keychain data, Apple Notes databases, Safari cookies, developer secrets, and documents from the local filesystem, and exfiltrates everything to the attacker’s infrastructure at 45.32.150[.]251.

Source: Socket
Socket reported the packages to the Eclipse Foundation, the operator of the Open VSX platform, and the security team confirmed unauthorized publishing access, revoked tokens, and removed the malicious releases.
The only exception is oorzc.ssh-tools, which was removed completely from Open VSX due to discovering multiple malicious releases.
Currently, versions of the affected extensions on the market are clean, but developers who downloaded the malicious releases should perform a full system clean-up and rotate all their secrets and passwords.
Tech
LG’s massive 52-inch ultra-wide gaming monitor costs $2,000
LG kicked off the year by unveiling a new lineup of gaming monitors, and today the company has priced out the biggest of the bunch. The UltraGear evo G9 (52G930B) is now available for pre-order, and the massive screen will cost just $2,000.
Yes, you can buy a perfectly excellent gaming monitor for much less, but $2,000 is a surprisingly low price tag for this 52-inch ultrawide monitor with a 1000R curve, which LG is billing as “the world’s largest 5K2K gaming monitor.” In addition to its huge size, the G9 can run at a 240Hz refresh rate and offers a 1 millisecond gray-to-gray response rate. Visuals are supported by VESA DisplayHDR 600 and up to 95% DCI-P3 color gamut coverage.
LG has long done solid work on gaming monitors, and the G9 seems like a good choice for anyone who wants to be seriously immersed in their gameplay. Whether that’s for a high-fidelity experience like Microsoft Flight Simulator or for having the maximum coziness in Stardew Valley is up to you.
Tech
Column: Public trust is becoming AI’s real bottleneck

The two towers near Aberdeen weren’t supposed to be monuments. They were supposed to be engines.
Drive west from Olympia and you’ll see the unfinished nuclear plant rising from the evergreen canopy. The project promised clean energy, jobs, and technological prestige. Instead, it became a cautionary tale of cost overruns and evaporating public confidence.
Nuclear engineering remained sound. Public confidence did not.
Industries rarely stall because they hit a technical ceiling. They slow when political and social permission erodes.
Artificial intelligence now sits in a similar moment. Public trust in major institutions is fragile, and trust in large technology companies is even lower. Concerns about job displacement, wealth concentration, and infrastructure strain are no longer fringe anxieties. They are mainstream political energy. Across multiple states, lawmakers have introduced proposals to pause or restrict data center expansion. That momentum did not emerge overnight.
Tech executives and investors are no longer background actors. Their statements travel faster than their products. As taxes, oversight, and regulation come under debate, tech’s most visible voices often frame them as hostility toward innovation. It may feel like a necessary defense, but it can reinforce the perception that the industry is unwilling to adapt to broader political realities.
In Washington state, that energy is visible in the debate around new capital gains and high-income tax proposals. Some startup leaders have framed tax proposals as existential threats to Seattle’s innovation economy and warn that Washington risks becoming “the next Cleveland.”
Incremental taxes on high incomes are unlikely to determine whether Seattle remains a technology hub. But public panic about those taxes can shape how the industry is perceived. To an average voter worried about job displacement or rising costs, highly visible opposition to millionaire tax proposals can feel disconnected from broader economic anxieties. That contrast hardens the sense that tech operates in a separate lane from everyone else. Perception like that carries consequences.

When distrust hardens into political momentum, policy seldom arrives as a narrow correction. It tends to be broad and reactive.
What makes legitimacy risk particularly dangerous is that it rarely begins with statute. It begins with friction. Hiring becomes harder in communities that feel antagonistic toward the industry. Government partnerships face louder opposition. Enterprise buyers extend diligence cycles. Distribution slows in subtle ways that don’t show up in quarterly dashboards but compound over time. These costs compound even if they are difficult to measure.
Industries under suspicion move differently. Telecommunications once represented the frontier of American innovation. As power consolidated and public suspicion grew, the response included structural control and heavy supervision. Innovation did not end, but it moved under tighter constraints and at a slower pace. The center of gravity shifted from experimentation to permission.
As a founder building risk and regulatory infrastructure for financial institutions, I think about these dynamics constantly. I expect guardrails. Thoughtful regulation is not the enemy. In many cases, it creates highly functional markets.
What concerns me is overcorrection. Sweeping licensing regimes, expansive liability standards for model outputs, escalating compliance overhead, infrastructure caps written in frustration rather than precision. Those burdens fall hardest on young companies without large compliance teams.
We are careful about pricing market and technical risk. We are far less disciplined about legitimacy risk, the moment an industry loses its social license to operate.
Over the next decade, legitimacy may be the binding constraint. Durability matters more than short-term velocity, and durability is built on public trust.
Seattle became a technology hub because it was broadly trusted to build. That trust gave companies room to experiment and scale. It was a form of oxygen. You rarely notice it until it thins. By then, the towers are already standing.
Tech
Apple’s touch-screen MacBook Pro will get the iPhone’s pill-shaped Dynamic Island
Apple is expected to launch redesigned MacBook Pro laptops later this year, and these are expected to bring a massive overhaul in terms of looks and innards. The biggest change is going to be a touch-sensitive panel, one with OLED tech underneath instead of mini-LED panels that you get on the current crop of Pro laptops by Apple. But it seems the pill-shaped cutout from the iPhones — officially known as the Dynamic Island — will also appear on these laptops, as per Bloomberg.
What’s the big shift?
“The company’s initial touch Macs, due this fall, will have the Dynamic Island at the center top of the display, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the plans aren’t public,” reports Bloomberg. Ever since Apple put a notch on the MacBook — both Air and Pro models — fans have complained about the lost screen real estate and how it has remained untouched in terms of functionalities.
The open-source community, on the other hand, has developed plenty of apps that make the best use of the notch, turning it into a file container, clipboard manager, camera preview engine, mini-calendar, and more. But the aesthetic trade-off is still very much there. On the upcoming MacBook Pro overhaul, Apple is apparently solving two problems in one go viz., get rid of the notch, and put a Dynamic Island in its place that can serve as a hub of activities, similar to what we get on the iPhone.
At last, some good news
Currently in development under the codenames code-named K114 and K116, the upcoming 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pro will feature a UI that is designed around interactions. And if the user interaction with the Dynamic Island on iPhones is anything to go by, its counterpart on the MacBook Pro will do a lot more, from tracking ongoing activities to serving as a progress timer and more. But Apple is not going all-in with a touch-friendly design of macOS.
“The idea is to let customers use the touch input as much or as little as they’d like, and blend it with the familiar point-and-click approach,” adds the Bloomberg report. As far as the Dynamic Island itself is concerned, it will be smaller than what you currently see on iPhones. Either way, it’s an exciting turn of events. But it would still take some time getting used to. “There are other questions — how dynamic would this Dynamic Island be? If it frequently changes size like the iPhone version, that might mess with your muscle memory, as buttons are no longer where you expect them to be,” says our previous reporting on the possibility.
Tech
The era of human web search is over: Nimble launches Agentic Search Platform for enterprises boasting 99% accuracy
Web Search has already been disrupted by AI — just take a look at how readily Google is presenting users with AI Overviews (summaries of search results) at the top of their results pages, how Bing early on integrated OpenAI’s GPT models, and how Perplexity continues to build on its own AI-driven web search platform and browsers.
Nimble announced the launch of its Agentic Search Platform, a system designed to transform the public web into trusted, decision-grade data for AI systems and business workflows.
The launch is supported by $47 million in Series B financing led by Norwest, with participation from Databricks Ventures and others, bringing the company’s total funding to $75 million.
The initiative addresses a fundamental bottleneck in the current AI era: while large language models (LLMs) are becoming more sophisticated, they often reason over incomplete or unverifiable external information. Nimble’s platform aims to eliminate this “guesswork gap” by providing a governed data layer that searches, navigates, and validates live internet data in real time.
In an exclusive interview with VentureBeat, Nimble co-founder and CEO Uri Knorovich reflected on the early skepticism regarding his vision of a machine-centric internet.
“Whenever we started this company, and the first time I went to investors, I told them the web is built for humans, but machines are going to be the first citizens of the web,” Knorovich recalled. He noted that while initial reactions labeled him as “too visionary,” the current reality of AI adoption has validated his thesis.
Technology: Coordinated multi-agent architecture
The core of Nimble’s solution is a proprietary distributed architecture that orchestrates specialized agents to perform tasks traditionally handled by human researchers or brittle web scrapers. According to the company’s infrastructure documentation, the process is broken down into five distinct layers:
-
Headless browser and browsing agents: These layers manage the initial interaction with a target domain, navigating complex site structures as a human would.
-
Parsing agents: These agents interpret the page content, identifying relevant data elements across various formats.
-
Data processing agents: This layer aggregates, filters, and cleans noisy internet data to produce specific, structured answers.
-
Validation agents: The final step involves verifying the results to ensure accuracy and completeness before delivery.
Unlike standard search engines designed for consumer link-clicking, this architecture uses multimodal and reasoning capabilities from frontier models—including those from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Meta—to control real browsers. This allows Nimble to navigate dynamic layouts and cross-check results, producing auditable data outputs rather than simple text summaries.
A new paradigm: ‘The web is built for humans, but machines are the first citizens’
Knorovich points out that the scale of AI interaction with the web is fundamentally different from human behavior. “We, as humans, search for maybe three or five options before we making decisions… but every day, Nimble perform more than 3.2 million interactions in the web,” he explained. This sheer volume of billions of monthly searches represents a programmatic shift that requires a new type of infrastructure.
The bottleneck for enterprises today, according to Knorovich, isn’t the intelligence of the models, but the quality of the data they can access. “Agents are the headlines, and accurate and reliable web search is the bottleneck,” he stated.
Nimble vs. consumer search: Precision over speed
Knorovich explicitly differentiates Nimble from general-purpose tools like Google or consumer AI search assistants.
While Google has built a search experience for consumers that is optimized for speed and finding a local restaurant, enterprises require high-scale, high-accuracy results to make multi-million dollar decisions.
“General purpose web search tool are great to have a general answers, such as who is the wife Leo missing,” Knorovich remarked during the interview. “But enterprises need deep, granular data, and they need to have the ability to control the search filters, to control the regulation, to control what is a trusted source”. Unlike consumer AI modes that may summarize a Reddit post or high-level news, Nimble provides “street-level” information that can be stored directly in an enterprise system of record.
Product: Bridging the no-code and developer divide
The Agentic Search Platform is delivered through two primary interfaces designed for enterprise scalability:
-
Web search agents: A no-code AI workflow builder that enables business teams to describe the data they need and receive structured data streams without writing a line of code.
-
Web tools SDK: A suite of APIs for builders to search, extract, and crawl the web directly from their code. This includes specialized tools like the /crawl API for mapping entire domains and the /map API for creating domain trees.
The platform is built to deliver data with greater than 99% accuracy — meaning fewer than 1% inaccurate or hallucinated data for the total contents of each search result returned — and a latency of 1-2 milliseconds per request.
It integrates natively with major data environments, allowing users to stream clean data directly into Databricks, Snowflake, S3, or Microsoft Fabric.
During the interview, Knorovich emphasized that Nimble is designed to be model-agnostic, working seamlessly with state-of-the-art models from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google’s Gemini. This flexibility allows companies to use Nimble alongside their existing tech stack, whether they are running models in the cloud or on-premise for high-security environments like healthcare or banking.
Case studies: Accuracy in action
Knorovich provided several real-world examples of how this “street-level” data impacts professional workflows. For instance, a real estate broker looking to expand into a new territory doesn’t need a high-level summary from a general-purpose AI.
“If you want to know what’s happening in the commercial real estate in Atlanta… you’re not looking for search that’s optimized for the millisecond,” Knorovich explained. “You’re looking for street-level, neighborhood-level information… data that you can actually see on a table or download to Excel”.
Another use case involves major financial institutions utilizing Nimble for “know your customer” (KYC) processes. By deploying an autonomous search agent, banks can cross-reference multiple public reports, criminal records, and address verifications to build a complete profile of a client before they even enter the building. The goal, Knorovich noted, is to provide the “external truth” that exists outside an organization’s internal firewalls.
Enterprise licensing and compliance
Nimble differentiates itself from legacy scraping tools through a rigorous focus on governance and trust. The platform is “compliant-by-design,” holding certifications for SOC2 Type II, GDPR, CCPA, and HIPAA.
Pricing is structured to support both experimental startups and high-scale enterprise operations, aligned with the volume and depth of data retrieved.
“Pricing should be aligned with the value that the user is getting… therefore, we are pricing by the amount of searches that you’re running,” Knorovich said.
-
Search and answer APIs: Standard search inputs cost $1 per 1,000, while the “Answer” function—which provides reasoning based on search results—costs $4 per 1,000.
-
Managed services: For larger organizations, managed tiers start at $2,000 per month (Startup) and scale to $15,000 per month (Professional) for unlimited agents and priority support.
-
Proxy access: A network of over 1 million residential proxies is available starting at $7.50 per GB
Community and user reactions
The transition to agentic search has already been operationalized by several Fortune 500 companies and AI-native startups:
-
Julie Averill, former CIO at Lululemon, stated that pricing intelligence which once took weeks to review can now be responded to in minutes by putting control in the hands of an agent.
-
Itamar Fridman, CEO and Co-founder of Qodo, noted that the platform’s scalability was “crucial in developing more robust and reliable AI systems” by feeding LLMs with high-quality data.
-
Dennis Irorere, Data Engineer at TripAdvisor, highlighted that the platform simplifies the extraction of structured data from complex sources, which he described as “transformative” for his role.
-
Grips Intelligence reported scaling to over 45,000 e-commerce sites using Nimble’s Web API to deliver real-time pricing and product data.
-
Alta utilizes the platform to power millions of AI-driven go-to-market workflows daily, reporting 3–4× deeper context and >99% reliability
Series B to accelerate multi-agent web search and data governance
The $47 million Series B funding announced alongside the platform will be used to accelerate research in multi-agent web search and further develop the governed data layer.
The round saw participation from a wide ecosystem of investors, including Target Global, Square Peg, Hetz Ventures, Slow Ventures, R-Squared Ventures, J-Ventures, and InvestInData.
Andrew Ferguson, VP of Databricks Ventures, noted that Nimble complements their Data Intelligence Platform by providing a “real-time web data layer” that extends workflows beyond internal sources. This strategic investment signals a shift in the industry toward prioritizing “external truth” to ground mission-critical AI applications.
For Knorovich, the future of the web belongs to programmatic interaction. “Programmatic web search is where we are building towards,” he concluded. By moving away from legacy data vendors and brittle scrapers, Nimble aims to provide the real-time structure needed for AI to act with confidence in the real world.
Tech
Apple rolls out age verification tools worldwide to comply with growing web of child safety laws
Apple is launching new tools to comply with the growing number of age verification laws both in the U.S. and abroad. As part of the changes, Apple will block the downloads of apps rated 18+ in Brazil, Australia, and Singapore, while also rolling out other features to comply with laws in the U.S. states of Utah and Louisiana.
The company informed developers on Tuesday that it’s expanding its set of “age assurance” tools, including an updated Declared Age Range API now available for beta testing.
These tools allow developers to obtain a user’s age range without gaining access to the user’s personal information, like their date of birth. The need for a technical solution like this came about as more governments around the world have created laws to block or restrict certain apps like social media that can only be used by adults 18 and up.
In Brazil, for example, developers can use the Declared Age Range API to obtain the user’s age category, if the user or their parent or guardian chooses to share it.
In addition, Apple will block users in Australia, Brazil, and Singapore from downloading apps rated 18+, starting today, until they confirm they are adults. In this case, the App Store will perform the age confirmation automatically, but Apple notes that developers may still have separate compliance requirements they need to meet.
Also, developers whose games contain loot boxes, a gambling-like mechanism that lets players spend money for a random chance at in-game rewards, and that lawmakers believe shouldn’t be available to kids, will see their apps’ age ratings updated to reflect an 18+ audience in Brazil, specifically.
In the U.S., new users in Utah and Louisiana will soon have their age categories shared with their developers’ apps through the Declared Age Range API, as well. The company said it has expanded its other tools around age ratings and permissions to meet its compliance obligations.
“New signals are now available through the Declared Age Range API, including whether age-related regulatory requirements apply to the user and if the user is required to share their age range,” reads the Apple blog post. “The API will also let you know if you need to get a parent or guardian’s permission for significant app updates for a child.”
Apple last October worked to comply with similar age assurance requirements in Texas, but put some of its plans on hold back in December, as the state’s law is being fought in court. It also updated its age ratings system last year with more granular age ranges than before, and added a variety of new questions for developers submitting apps to Apple for review.
Tech
iPhone 18 Pro again rumored to feature a smaller, redesigned Dynamic Island
It’s been said time and time again that the iPhone 18 Pro will sport a noticeably smaller Dynamic Island. Now, yet another report has reiterated the claim.
-xl.jpg)
A repeat rumor says the iPhone 18 Pro will have a smaller Dynamic Island.
While the iPhone 18 Pro isn’t expected to feature any major design changes, Apple’s next high-end iPhone is set to receive new under-display technology that will reduce the Dynamic Island.
Following a January 2026 post with alleged dimensions of the new-and-improved Dynamic Island, a repeat rumor now says the iPhone 18 Pro will indeed receive a modified camera cutout.
Rumor Score: 🤯 Likely
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Tech
Sophia Space raises $10M to accelerate creation of orbital computing systems

Sophia Space says it has closed a $10 million seed financing round to accelerate the development of orbital computing systems that could serve as the foundation for space-based data processing.
The startup’s tabletop-sized satellite modules take advantage of a proprietary system that combines solar power generation and radiative cooling. Multiple tiles can be connected into racks to provide scalable computing power in low Earth orbit. The infrastructure concept is called Thermal-Integrated LEO Edge, or TILE.
“With this seed round, we’re not just building compute modules,” Sophia Space CEO Rob DeMillo said today in a news release. “We’re building the infrastructure for the next era of space-based AI and data processing.”
The investment round was led by Alpha Funds, KDDI Green Partners Fund and Unlock Venture Partners — and builds upon $3.5 million in pre-seed investment. The newly raised cash will support the continued hiring of engineering talent, the further maturation of Sophia’s TILE platform and the formation of strategic partnerships in the orbital computing ecosystem.
Sophia Space is based in Pasadena, Calif., and was founded by Leon Alkalai, a former fellow at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory who now serves as the company’s chief technology officer. But the venture has a Pacific Northwest connection in chief growth officer Brian Monnin, who worked at Intel and Microsoft before founding Seattle startups Play Impossible and Quivr.
In-space computing is increasingly gaining attention because of the potential for launching orbital data centers for artificial intelligence applications.
Orbital data centers could address some of the major challenges surrounding terrestrial data centers, such as the need for land and electrical power. But finding a way to cool data center satellites amid the vacuum of space poses its own technical challenge. Sophia’s founders say the company’s TILE architecture, combined with the placement of satellites in orbits around Earth’s day-night terminator, can address the cooling challenge.
Sophia Space is planning to conduct in-space demonstrations of its software with an existing communications network later this year.
DeMillo told GeekWire that the company is planning to start with edge computing applications — for example, doing on-orbit processing of imaging data collected by Earth observation satellites. “Until we get to the level where we’re going to be putting up our own orbital data centers, selling these as edge computers allows income to flow into the company and gets our name out there, and allows us to refine things going forward,” he said.
He said Sophia Space is planning to deliver its first TILE modules to customers in 2028.
Tech
How U Business’ new 3-Line Bundle with free flagship phone works
[This is a sponsored article with U Business.]
U Business just launched a new mobile device bundle to solve one of the biggest headaches for growing companies: getting teams properly equipped without burning cash upfront.
The U Biz 3-Line Bundle is a limited-time offer that packages multiple business lines together under one plan, with free flagship smartphones. Yes, including the latest Apple iPhone 15 and Samsung Galaxy S25.
Designed to make connectivity easier, it’s built on U Mobile’ 5G network to support the day-to-day needs of Malaysian entrepreneurs and SMEs, regardless of whether your team is desk-bound or constantly on the move.
Here’s everything you need to know about the new U Biz 3-Line Bundle.
The smarter business upgrade
As mentioned, the bundle gives businesses three mobile lines under a single plan, available with either the U Biz 68 or U Biz 98. Each line comes with a free flagship 5G smartphone, with no upfront payment required for the devices.
Instead of buying phones separately and managing multiple subscriptions, this limited-time offer bundle allows companies to consolidate your mobile needs into one structured plan.


In today’s Instagram and TikTok-driven world, flagship 5G smartphones are now a necessary productivity tool for businesses. Yet, buying several devices at once may not be financially strategic as it can strain cash flow, especially when paired with recurring operational expenses.
With the U Biz 3-Line Bundle, entrepreneurs and SMEs are able to spread those costs into predictable monthly payments.
What’s more if this new bundle includes flagship 5G devices. Businesses can choose between premium iOS and Android options, including the Apple iPhone 15 and Samsung Galaxy S25.
Access to these newer flagship 5G devices means that the team is able to enjoy stronger performance and longer software support. Thereby translating to more reliable day-to-day work tools.
Business performance without compromise
Businesses get to choose between the U Biz 68 (which starts from RM68/month per line) and the U Biz 98 (which starts from RM98/month per line).


Both plans are built for high-usage business environments. On the data front, users get up to 1,000GB of 5G high-speed data, supporting faster downloads, smoother video calls, real-time cloud collaboration, and reliable hotspot usage across teams.
Communication-wise, the bundle includes unlimited local calls, so teams can stay connected internally and with clients without worrying about extra charges.
There’s also free global roaming in over 60 destinations, useful for businesses that have regional travel needs or cross-border operations.
By combining multiple lines and devices under one bundle, companies can better optimise their monthly expenses.


All-in-one connectivity for SMEs
As Malaysia’s 5G ecosystem continues to expand, having access to a strong 5G network becomes increasingly important for businesses that operate across multiple locations.
Whether you’re a new startup or a business scaling up, the U Biz 3-Line Bundle is suited for teams of all sizes who want to stay connected without breaking the bank, regardless of where work takes you.
So if your team is seeking premium devices, then this is one bundle deal you do not want to miss.
To sign up or learn more about the U Biz 3-Line Bundle, check out the website here.
Tech
Meta AI Security Researcher Said an OpenClaw Agent Ran Amok on Her Inbox
Meta AI security researcher Summer Yue posted a now-viral account on X describing how an OpenClaw agent she had tasked with sorting through her overstuffed email inbox went rogue, deleting messages in what she called a “speed run” while ignoring her repeated commands from her phone to stop.
“I had to RUN to my Mac mini like I was defusing a bomb,” Yue wrote, sharing screenshots of the ignored stop prompts as proof. Yue said she had previously tested the agent on a smaller “toy” inbox where it performed well enough to earn her trust, so she let it loose on the real thing. She believes the larger volume of data triggered compaction — a process where the context window grows too large and the agent begins summarizing and compressing its running instructions, potentially dropping ones the user considers critical.
The agent may have reverted to its earlier toy-inbox behavior and skipped her last prompt telling it not to act. OpenClaw is an open-source AI agent designed to run as a personal assistant on local hardware.
Tech
BluOS Partners with airable to Enhance Radio and Podcast Discovery Across NAD, Bluesound, PSB and More
Tens of millions of people listen to podcasts and stream internet radio every day. The challenge isn’t access, it’s organization. With content spread across multiple apps and platforms, discovery can feel fragmented, and for many listeners that means sticking to the familiar rather than finding something new.
BluOS, the premium multi-room audio software platform from Lenbrook Media Group is addressing that with a new partnership with airable. The first phase integrates airable’s extensive global catalog of internet radio stations and podcasts directly into the BluOS Controller app.
The update gives BluOS users centralized access to a wide range of programming, from independent shows like the eCoustics Podcast to widely followed titles such as The Joe Rogan Experience, The Daily, and thousands of global radio stations. Rather than requiring separate apps, content is surfaced within the BluOS interface itself, with browsing tools organized by country, genre, city, and newly added stations.
Because BluOS operates as the software layer across hardware brands including Bluesound, NAD Electronics, PSB Speakers, DALI, Monitor Audio, Cyrus Audio, and Roksan, the integration rolls out across a broad installed base without requiring new hardware.
The goal is straightforward: streamline radio and podcast discovery inside the same control environment users already rely on for music streaming and multi-room playback.

What Is airable?
airable is a Germany-based media services provider that supplies internet radio and podcast aggregation to audio brands, automakers, and streaming platforms.
In simple terms, airable is the infrastructure layer. It licenses, organizes, and maintains access to a massive catalogue of global radio stations and podcasts, then integrates that catalogue into partner ecosystems through APIs and backend services.
Rather than each company negotiating station agreements or building its own discovery engine, airable handles:
- Aggregation of tens of thousands of global radio stations
- Podcast indexing and catalog updates
- Metadata, categorization, and search tools
- Geographic portals (country, city, genre browsing)
- Ongoing catalogue maintenance and scalability
For platforms like BluOS, airable acts as the content backbone behind the scenes. The user experience lives inside the BluOS Controller app, but the station and podcast database, discovery structure, and updates are powered by airable’s media services platform.
It’s not a consumer-facing brand most listeners recognize — and that’s intentional. It operates quietly in the background, enabling centralized radio and podcast access without requiring users to jump between separate apps.

The Bottom Line
By integrating airable into BluOS, Lenbrook adds a large, structured catalogue of global radio stations and podcasts directly inside the BluOS Controller app. That means no separate radio app, no bouncing between podcast platforms, and no fragmented search experience.
Who benefits? Existing BluOS users across Bluesound, NAD Electronics, PSB Speakers, DALI, Monitor Audio, Cyrus Audio, and Roksan. They get broader access and improved discovery through a software update, not a hardware upgrade.
In practical terms, BluOS becomes a more complete listening hub with music, radio, and podcasts in one control environment without adding complexity.
For more information: bluos.io
Related Reading:
-
Video5 days agoXRP News: XRP Just Entered a New Phase (Almost Nobody Noticed)
-
Fashion4 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Boden – Corporette.com
-
Politics3 days agoBaftas 2026: Awards Nominations, Presenters And Performers
-
Sports1 day agoWomen’s college basketball rankings: Iowa reenters top 10, Auriemma makes history
-
Entertainment6 days agoKunal Nayyar’s Secret Acts Of Kindness Sparks Online Discussion
-
Politics1 day agoNick Reiner Enters Plea In Deaths Of Parents Rob And Michele
-
Tech7 days agoRetro Rover: LT6502 Laptop Packs 8-Bit Power On The Go
-
Sports6 days agoClearing the boundary, crossing into history: J&K end 67-year wait, enter maiden Ranji Trophy final | Cricket News
-
Business2 days agoMattel’s American Girl brand turns 40, dolls enter a new era
-
Crypto World17 hours agoXRP price enters “dead zone” as Binance leverage hits lows
-
Business2 days agoLaw enforcement kills armed man seeking to enter Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, officials say
-
Entertainment6 days agoDolores Catania Blasts Rob Rausch For Turning On ‘Housewives’ On ‘Traitors’
-
Business7 days agoTesla avoids California suspension after ending ‘autopilot’ marketing
-
Tech2 days agoAnthropic-Backed Group Enters NY-12 AI PAC Fight
-
NewsBeat2 days ago‘Hourly’ method from gastroenterologist ‘helps reduce air travel bloating’
-
NewsBeat2 days agoArmed man killed after entering secure perimeter of Mar-a-Lago, Secret Service says
-
Politics2 days agoMaine has a long track record of electing moderates. Enter Graham Platner.
-
Crypto World6 days agoWLFI Crypto Surges Toward $0.12 as Whale Buys $2.75M Before Trump-Linked Forum
-
Tech6 hours agoUnsurprisingly, Apple's board gets what it wants in 2026 shareholder meeting
-
NewsBeat2 hours agoPolice latest as search for missing woman enters day nine



