Tech
Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Feb. 8
Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
It’s Super Bowl Sunday! Fittingly, today’s Mini Crossword includes some related clues. Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.
If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.
Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword
Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.
The completed NYT Mini Crossword puzzle for Feb. 8, 2026.
Mini across clues and answers
1A clue: The Eagles have the only N.F.L. logo that faces this way
Answer: LEFT
5A clue: Statement that’s self-evidently true
Answer: AXIOM
7A clue: Wash vigorously
Answer: SCRUB
8A clue: Classic opera set in Rome
Answer: TOSCA
9A clue: To the ___ degree
Answer: NTH
Mini down clues and answers
1D clue: Fourth place in an N.F.L. division, for example
Answer: LAST
2D clue: Former inmate, informally
Answer: EXCON
3D clue: Successful gain of ten yards, when combined with this answer’s direction?
Answer: FIRST
4D clue: Trip to the end zone, when combined with this answer’s direction?
Answer: TOUCH
6D clue: Deg. held by many a C.E.O.
Answer: MBA
Tech
AMD Just Made Another Radeon Mistake
AMD has an easy win sitting right in front of it, yet it’s choosing not to take it. FSR 4 already works on older Radeon GPUs, so why is AMD still holding it back?
Tech
5 Mobile Apps You Should Be Using On Your iPad Or Tablet In 2026
Tablets are a nice in-between device for consumers (between computers and smartphones, that is). They’re mobile like smartphones and have much of the same functionality, if not more, as personal computers. The problem with an iPhone or Android phone is that its screen is too small to appreciate some apps. PCs might benefit from expensive monitors from major brands, but they’re not always touchscreen.
Sometimes, apps are better suited or simply necessary on a tablet. iPads and other tablets are perfect for reading because they’re already handheld like a book, but you can also adjust the brightness or zoom in if you’re struggling with the text. Also, you might like to work on the road, where a tablet shines. No matter what you use your tablet for, here are the apps better suited to tablets.
Reuters
The world is messy, and reality is undeniably less fun than escaping into a hobby. However, the average person should stay informed. Even if you’re not a fan of tuning into a 24-hour news network on TV, it can be beneficial to download a news app onto your iPad and just check out one or two headlines once a day.
Don’t overwhelm yourself. Reuters is my go-to for news because it delivers the news with minimal editorializing. An AllSides study in 2025 placed Reuters in the political center, with Forbes, Newsweek, and BBC News.
Beyond that, the app is really clean and easy to navigate. You can see what’s trending in the news and customize categories, so you see only what you’re interested in, such as technology, business, legal, sports, and science, to name a few. This feature requires a monthly $4 subscription.
The Kindle app
I read 62 books last year, and a few of those were through the Kindle app. Yes, reading can be an escape from reality, but it can also be a learning experience, whether you’re reading about stoic philosophies or about a Viking mother traversing the world to save her son and fighting Norse-inspired gods.
Let me tell you how nice it is to read on an iPad. It’s definitely one of the best tablets for e-book reading. Not only is the device more responsive than a typical e-reader, but the screen is larger and brighter, making reading much easier. More than that, it’s the perfect device for comic book fans since the Kindle app also has a whole graphic novel section. The artwork on an iPad really pops, too.
You can zoom in to appreciate the art in depth, plus it’s so easy to navigate each page. The Kindle app really is a minimalist’s dream, too, because they can meticulously curate their space with just physical copies of their absolute favorite books.
Tidal
Who doesn’t enjoy music to some degree? It can help you focus on a specific task — like writing a 1,500-word article for work — help pass the time on a long drive, or even put you in the mood to complete some chores around the house. Obviously, if you have an iPad, you’re familiar with Apple Music, which is a fine choice. I started using Tidal, one of the top-ranked music streaming services, in 2025 strictly because it treats the artists better in terms of royalties, but that’s not why I stuck around.
You’ll hear a lot about Tidal’s sound quality, with its HiRes FLAC lossless tracks. I’m sure it sounds amazing compared to other services, but I’m not an audiophile, so it’s difficult for me to notice the difference between music on Tidal and that found on Apple Music. However, Tidal is more music-oriented than other apps. It has a whole magazine section, where you can read articles about the music industry. I came for the higher artist payout, but I stayed for the Tidal articles.
The biggest drawback with Tidal, though, is its lack of a free listening tier. You can make a free account, but that only lets you listen to songs for 30 seconds. You can get an individual plan for $10.99 per month or a family plan for $16.99. Eligible students can get an account for just $5.49.
Cloud storage (DropBox or Google Drive)
For a little bit of productivity, having some sort of cloud storage is a good idea. I personally use Google Drive because I’m knee deep in Google’s ecosystem, but Dropbox is just as good. I like to record videos and take pictures with my phone, and I found that uploading to Google Drive is a quick and easy way to get those files from my Samsung Galaxy S24 to a device with a bigger screen to edit. Sometimes it’s my computer, other times my iPad.
You automatically get free storage space with Google Drive if you already have a Google account, but to get 100 GB of space, it’s just $1.99. I was uploading a lot of videos at one point, so I needed more than the free 15 GB it gave me. You know Google Drive is a favorite for many when it has a 4.8-star rating in the App Store with over 7 million ratings.
Procreate
Was it dumb of me, somebody with next to no artistic talent, to pay $12.99 for an illustrator app? That’s debatable. I took art classes in college, so I know my way around a sketchpad, and I enjoy drawing images from my mind palace from time to time. It’s a nice escape, and Procreate is such an intuitive app that it makes it easy. Plus, I don’t have to waste paper when I’m unhappy with my creation. Just delete and try again. I’m a strong believer in everybody having at least one creative outlet, so if you like drawing and have an iPad, Procreate is not a bad app to download.
If you’re out running errands, like the dreadful DMV, you can bust out your iPad and sketch away. If you get lost in your art, time flies. One downside with Procreate is that there isn’t any kind of cloud storage to back up your creations, so if you ever delete the app, your drawings are gone. That is, unless you have your own cloud storage, such as Google Drive. So, if you get paranoid about losing your masterpieces, it’s advisable to get cloud storage.
There are other apps like Adobe Fresco, but I found Procreate to be more intuitive. If you have an iPhone 17 Pro or iPhone 17 Pro Max and don’t mind drawing on a smaller screen, there is Procreate Pocket, which is only $5.99.
Methodology
I set out to choose apps that I have personally used, and I tried to include ones that are useful to a broad audience. More importantly, I chose apps that have a high rating in the App Store (at least a 4.0) so you know they function properly. While I have a favorable opinion for each of these apps, they’re well-known enough that you can easily find professional reviews of each one if you prefer a second opinion.
Tech
CISA orders federal agencies to replace end-of-life edge devices
The U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has issued a new binding operational directive requiring federal agencies to identify and remove network edge devices that no longer receive security updates from manufacturers.
It also warned that end-of-life edge devices (including routers, firewalls, and network switches) leave federal systems vulnerable to newly discovered exploits and expose them to “disproportionate and unacceptable risks.”
“The imminent threat of exploitation to agency information systems running EOS edge devices is substantial and constant, resulting in a significant threat to federal property. CISA is aware of widespread exploitation campaigns by advanced threat actors targeting EOS edge devices,” the cybersecurity agency said on Thursday.
“These devices are especially vulnerable to cyber exploits targeting newly discovered, unpatched vulnerabilities. Additionally, they no longer receive supported updates from the original equipment manufacturer, exposing federal systems to disproportionate and unacceptable risks.”
Binding Operational Directive 26-02 (BOD 26-02) mandates U.S. government agencies to decommission end-of-support (EOS) hardware and software on federal networks to prevent exploitation by advanced threat actors.
The directive requires immediate action on vendor-supported devices running end-of-support software for which updates are available, and an inventory of all devices on CISA’s end-of-support list within three months.
Federal agencies also have 12 months to decommission devices that reached end-of-support before the directive’s issuance date. Within 18 months, all identified end-of-support edge devices must be replaced with vendor-supported equipment receiving current security updates.
BOD 26-02 also requires them to establish continuous discovery processes within 24 months to identify edge devices and maintain inventories of equipment and software approaching end-of-support status.
While these requirements apply only to U.S. Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies, CISA encourages all network defenders to follow the guidance in this fact sheet to secure systems, data, and operations against threat groups targeting network edge devices in ongoing attacks.
Three years ago, in June 2023, CISA also issued Binding Operational Directive 23-02, which requires federal civilian agencies to secure misconfigured or Internet-exposed management interfaces (e.g., routers, firewalls, proxies, and load balancers).
Months earlier, it announced that it would warn critical infrastructure organizations if they have network devices vulnerable to ransomware attacks as part of a new Ransomware Vulnerability Warning Pilot (RVWP) program.
Tech
Teaching Sex Education in Schools Is More Fraught Than Ever
Krystalyn Musselman holds a worn cardboard box up to the screen on our Zoom call. It’s the anonymous question box she relies on to field queries from high schoolers at Tecumseh Public Schools in southeast Michigan, where she teaches sex ed. The box, covered in pink and black patterned craft tape, is topped with a pink handlebar mustache, serving as a key visual set up for the “I mustache you a question” pun, which was popular about 15 years ago. Musselman acknowledges that this particular question box has been around for a while, and laughs. Clearly, the pun is still having its intended effect, as she’s fielding as many serious questions about sexual health as ever.
The question box remains a necessary tool for sex education instruction. It assures students’ anonymity while giving teachers like Musselman a direct line to the topics students are most curious about. She credits her students with asking great questions, but knows she must be careful in how she words her responses. This has always been the case; a 20-year veteran of sexual health in public schools, Musselman is well aware of her duty to adhere to state law and local district policies. She recently underwent the multistep process Michigan requires of the district to make lessons more current. The initial proposal included lessons on sexual orientation and gender identity, but she didn’t get approval for both.
“We do not actually teach or address gender identity or gender expression — that was something the curriculum review committee didn’t want,” Musselman said. “That was the give-and-take. We got a sexual-orientation lesson, but we didn’t get a gender one.”
While always used to some controversy, sexual health educators are in an especially tough spot right now. Amid a push to update comprehensive curriculums to include lessons on sexual orientation and gender identity, state legislators are also considering laws targeting the people these changes help the most. Meanwhile, the Trump administration has threatened to pull funding from districts that don’t remove lessons on gender from their sex education curriculums. District responses have been mixed, with some states quick to issue statements indicating compliance, while some districts have resisted anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric, at the risk of losing federal funding. Meanwhile some states have sued the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
The pressure to comply — and the resulting resistance — are illustrated by a recent fight in Michigan, which can be seen as a microcosm for what’s happening elsewhere. In November, Michigan’s Department of Education approved revisions to its health education standards. The revised standards covered a broad range of health education topics, from nutrition to mental health. And it included a recommendation that Michigan students be taught about sexual orientation and gender identity.
Taryn Gal, executive director of Michigan Organization on Adolescent Sexual Health, said the decision ultimately gives topics related to sexual orientation and gender identity more credibility.
“There’s now an opportunity for teachers to go to their school board or advisory board and be like, ‘This is the state guidance’,” Gal said. “It provides legitimacy that this is evidence-based, age-appropriate content that’s recommended by the state.”
How educators like Musselman will proceed remains to be seen. Though it ultimately passed, the new framework in Michigan was met with challenges from an opposition grassroots campaign similar to those that have been mounted against school boards in other states. The central, misleading claim of the campaign was that the proposed curriculum updates would strip parents of their right to opt their children out of sex education based on religious or moral objections. Gal found herself caught off-guard by the group’s unwavering commitment to the disinformation, lamenting that it hindered opportunities to have real conversations about the group’s primary concerns.
The purpose of teaching gender identity and gender expression, says Musselman, is purely informational — to provide context and clarity, and promote understanding.
“I think people are very scared and misinformed,” Musselman said.
More Opt-Outs
As philosophical and political arguments continue over the proper way to articulate concepts like gender identity and biological sex within the transgender rights discussion, sexual health educators are focused on the practical aim to educate students on basic human attributes.
The federal government has taken an aggressive stance against comprehensive sex education in schools. Trump officials threatened to revoke the Sexual Risk Avoidance Education (SRAE) program and Personal Responsibility Education Program (PREP) funding from states that mention gender identity in their curricula. This move politicized and created a false sense of urgency about what’s being taught by sex educators nationwide, and has had direct consequences, even in blue states like Maryland.
Laura is a sexual health educator in Maryland. EdSurge agreed to publish only her first name, because she feared retaliation from her school district for speaking with the media. She says she’s experienced an increase in discriminatory rhetoric reflecting homophobic and transphobic views from parents and students. Laura describes a significant increase in the number of parents requesting exemptions, which she began noticing in 2023. Before that, she estimates about 1 percent of parents opted their children out of her classes; now the rate is about 2 percent.
“So it’s not a huge percentage, but it’s definitely a 100 percent increase,” Laura said.
While Laura’s observation of a doubled opt-out rate may not be a “huge percentage,” some experts worry that challenges like those Laura has seen mean parents are really questioning the value of any sex education in schools. This is a problem, considering one in five adolescents say they received no sexual education from their parents, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. Rachel Lotus is founder and director of The Talk NYC, an organization that partners with public schools in New York City to provide customized comprehensive sex education workshops and classes for youth, parents and schools. She says she’s noticed more emboldened rhetoric from the parents pursuing opt-out options for sex education.
“I had a parent in a high school who reached out — not to me, but to the school — to protest against broadening this framework of what sex is,” Lotus said. “The idea that I was talking about queer sex specifically was the objection.”
Lotus hasn’t received any gag orders from districts she works with; if she did, she said those districts wouldn’t be worth partnering with to begin with. She notes that in a city like New York, it’s hard to conceive of a world in which students can unlearn inclusion.
“I have fourth graders who absolutely understand the difference between biological sex and gender identity,” she said. “I am not introducing those ideas [to them] for the first time.”
Historical Precedent
Major public health organizations, such as the World Health Organization, follow peer-reviewed research suggesting that sexual health education curricula is most effective when it covers a range of topics, and remains adaptive and sequential. Sex educators agree.
Despite these findings, incorporating comprehensive sexual health education in public schools has remained inconsistent because there is no federal mandate for sex education in schools. Instead, curriculum is determined at the state level. And districts within a state can differ widely in what they do and don’t teach. The closest the U.S. ever came to endorsing sex education in public schools was through the Personal Responsibility Education Program. Established in 2010 as part of the Affordable Care Act, PREP mandated the abstinence-plus approach, which meant including information on both abstinence and contraception in curriculum. PREP ended the abstinence-only-until-marriage model that preceded it.
Historically, teaching sex ed in public schools has been fraught from the beginning. Margaret Grace Myers, author of “The Fight For Sex Ed: The Century-Long Battle Between Truth and Doctrine,” published in August, said the framework for sex education in public schools was limited to discussion of gender identified at birth and sex between men and women only.
“When we first had ideas about sex ed — variously called social hygiene or personal purity or sex hygiene — of course historians know that LGBTQIA+ people have always existed and will always exist, but it was not even a thought that crossed the minds of anybody who was thinking about instructing young people in sex,” Myers told EdSurge. “The lesson was basically stay abstinent, do not have sex, get married, and the person you would marry would be of the opposite gender, and then only have sex with that person. That was the framework that worked as a disease-prevention angle, which is why doctors were able to get behind it.”
The 2015 documentary “Sex(ed): The Movie” uses archival film clips to show how sex education films shown in schools and in public tended to model relationship dynamics that may have been aspirational at best. The footage presents an image of the world that’s missing a lot of context and is unreflective of reality. This is because the old films weren’t designed to teach but to uphold societal norms, Myers says.
In areas of the U.S. where comprehensive sex education is taught, conversations about gender identity and sexual orientation didn’t become part of the curriculum until the mid- to late 2010s.
“Even for people who are getting the best curriculum available, it might not be relevant to them almost at all, which is wild,” Myers added.
Only nine states require gender identity and sexual orientation be covered in comprehensive sex-education classes, according to the Sexuality Information and Education Council, known as SIECUS, a 60-year advocacy group for sex ed in schools. Its series of heat maps show how nearly half of states received a “D” or “F” in how LGBTQ+ sex ed topics are handled. Similarly, a 2025 Guttmacher policy report highlights that only 26 states require sex and HIV education be medically accurate, while 10 states have broad laws prohibiting classroom instructions on these topics and seven still have laws explicitly requiring same-sex discussions be depicted negatively, if at all.
Sex education in Mississippi, a state that is legally bound to a strict abstinence-only or abstinence-plus requirement, does not cover sexual orientation or gender identity. Yet, according to Josh McCawley, deputy director of Teen Health Mississippi, those topics are what students have the most questions about. The organization is responsible for providing professional development to sex-education teachers in the state.
“In all of the curricula, there’s no actual written information on LGBTQ-related issues,” McCawley said. “However, in our training that we do with teachers, we have learned that this is pretty much the most popular topic for student questions.”
Miranda Estes, state policy action manager for SIECUS, says when it comes to the state of sex ed in American public schools, regional considerations matter.
“I think about Mississippi and it breaks my heart,” Estes said. “But [Mississippi] is 50 years behind in policy from places like Massachusetts, and so trying to jump the gun and say these organizations need to be providing comprehensive sex education in public schools when they’re not even legally allowed to, could it go wrong?”
It is well-documented that LGBTQ+ youth, particularly trans students, are more likely to experience bullying and to attempt suicide. Zach Eisenstein, director of communications with the Trevor Project, said the majority of LGBTQ+ youth report the political environment taking a measurable toll on their health and well-being.
“At The Trevor Project, our crisis counselors regularly hear from young people, especially transgender and nonbinary youth, who share how the onslaught of anti-LGBTQ+ policies and rhetoric are negatively impacting them,” Eisenstein told EdSurge in a statement, noting that welcoming school environments can serve as a lifeline for at-risk youth. “LGBTQ+ students who said they learned about LGBTQ+ people or issues in the classroom reported 23 percent lower odds of attempting suicide in the past year, compared to those who did not.”
Addressing Discrimination
It’s standard practice for a sex-ed teacher to screen questions submitted anonymously by students in the question box. Musselman in Michigan’s Tecumseh Schools finds that students generally ask insightful questions. But Laura in Maryland has been fielding more discriminatory questions and comments within her classes.
“They’re questions that kind of mirror what we’re hearing from adults, honestly,” she said.
She tries to transform these queries into teachable moments. Her approach involves two key strategies: Using first-person language that students can then mirror, and advising students not to submit the first question that comes to mind, but the second. Her theory is that the second question is the one her students are actually curious about; that it’s far more interesting and less likely to be informed by prejudices picked up from outside sources.
These strategies are crucial for Laura, seeing as the ultimate goal is to prevent students from being pulled out of the entire sex-education curriculum. In Maryland, where Laura teaches, opting a student out means they miss instruction on not only gender identity and expression, but also on vital topics such as consent, contraception, disease prevention, health relationships, and sexual decision-making. Basically everything else that sexual health encompasses.
“Sometimes we’ll have parents who say, ‘I just don’t want them to learn about gender’ or ‘I just don’t want them to be exposed to the transgender ideology’,” Laura said. “But when I talk to them about why they want their child excluded, it’s because they want them to sit out that one lesson and not from the broader unit.”
Maryland doesn’t mandate one uniform opt-out policy for Family Life and Human Sexuality units. Those details are left up to local decision-makers, although most of the districts in Maryland have adopted an all-or-nothing approach toward sex ed. Because Laura works for one of those districts, she finds herself on the phone with parents who have knee-jerk reactions to certain topics based on preconceived notions that may or may not be accurate. In these cases, it’s her job to explain what the lesson entails, what resources she’s using to teach it, and the education their children will lose if they’re opted out of sex ed entirely.
“I have about a 50-percent success rate of parents being like, ‘You know what? Actually, that’s fine. Go ahead and include them. I think it’ll be OK’,” Laura said.
Tech
Beats Studio Buds drop under $100 with a strong 41% off
For those who find the act of commuting to work a bit too boring and monotonous, an outstanding pair of earbuds can work wonders. Now you have a chance to pick up a top set on the cheap.
By giving you access to world-class audio quality, noise-cancellation, ambient sound and more, a good pair of earbuds can elevate your day-to-day routine instantly.
To that end, the true wireless noise-cancelling Beats Studio Buds + have just plummeted from their usual price of $169.95 to only $99.95 at Amazon. That’s an instant 41% discount as well as one of the lowest prices that you’ll find these buds in for the foreseeable future.
These Beats Studio Buds drop under $100 with a hefty 41% off, making it one of the strongest deals you’ll find on them right now.

Beats Studio Buds drop under $100 with a strong 41% off
For any Apple/Android users who are looking to make an upgrade, the Beats Studio Buds + are arguably the better buy over the AirPods line simply for the added compatibility across all of the main mobile operating systems.
Just the same as any pair of AirPods, the Beats Studio Buds + use a built-in microphone, which gets rid of any ambient noise around you when you’re on a call, so that the person on the other end of the line can always pick up what you’re saying clearly.
On top of replicating Apple’s noise-cancelling ambient sound set-up, the Studio Buds + also offer spatial audio, which makes each song, podcast, and audiobook sound as if they’re truly enveloping you, creating a more immersive experience that’s hard to go back from once you’ve tried it.
Our four-star review mentioned “Subtly better audio and improved noise-cancellation are all plusses, and the Studio Buds+ offer a great clarity and minimal noise for calls.”
Even though they are marketed primarily as an Apple device, these buds integrate seamlessly with Android as well, so regardless of which operating system you’re using, it’s easy to make the most out of what these earbuds have to offer.
For those who also like to indulge in the occasional bit of gaming, you’ll be glad to know that spatial audio also works with your PS5, letting you hear players sneaking up around you as you try to mind your own business in the latest multiplayer skirmish.
For just $99.95, the Beats Studio Buds + are an instant win for anyone in need of an upgrade from their current audio device.
A satisfying update over the original with improved noise-cancellation, sound, and battery life. There are areas where the Beats Studio Buds+ could be better, but they hold their own among tough competition from the likes of Sony and Jabra.
-
Improved noise-cancellation over original -
Clear, spacious audio -
Excellent call performance -
Improved battery -
Feature parity on Android and iOS
-
Patchy performance in busy signal areas -
Slightly loose fit -
More expensive -
No support for higher-quality Bluetooth codecs
SQUIRREL_PLAYLIST_10148964
Tech
Inside Live Translation on FaceTime on iOS 26
After a few years of rumors about the feature, Apple added live translated captions to FaceTime in iOS 26, allowing one-on-one calls to display real-time subtitles spanning languages. Here’s where to find live translation in FaceTime, and how it came to be.
FaceTimeLive translation in FaceTime is a big new feature, but many users don’t even know it’s there. That’s because Apple doesn’t make it clear or easy to find as a translation option.
Plus, the translation feature isn’t found under Apple Intelligence settings or FaceTime menus where you might expect it. Instead, it’s tucked away inside Live Captions, an accessibility feature that’s been around for years.
Consequently even people who use the accessibility features may not have had reason to spot this new addition. But it’s worth knowing about, because it is a boon in so many different situations, and while there are still limitations, Apple has implemented it well.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Tech
YouTube now lets you watch content auto-dubbed in your own language
YouTube is improving its auto-dubbing feature further to make it easier for viewers to watch videos in languages they actually understand. Auto-dubbing uses AI to translate and replace a video’s spoken audio with a dubbed version in another language.
The feature now supports 27 languages, and viewers can set a preferred language in YouTube’s settings. When a dubbed version is available, YouTube will automatically serve it in the selected language. So if a video exists in another language, YouTube wants it to feel accessible the moment you press play.
YouTube is making auto-dubs sound more natural

YouTube says it knows dubbing can feel awkward if it sounds robotic or out of sync. To address this, the company has rolled out Expressive Speech, a feature designed to preserve tone, emotion, and pacing in translated audio.
It is currently available for all YouTube channels in English, French, German, Hindi, Indonesian, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish, with more languages expected later.
The platform is also testing a Lip Sync pilot, which subtly adjusts a speaker’s lip movements to better match the translated audio. This will make dubbed videos feel closer to the original, especially for viewers who find mismatched audio and visuals distracting.
Auto-dubs are generated automatically, but creators are not locked in. They can disable auto-dubbing entirely or upload their own dubbed versions if they prefer more control.
YouTube also uses automatic smart filtering to avoid dubbing content that does not make sense to translate, such as music-only videos or silent vlogs.
However, YouTube acknowledges that auto-dubs can still contain errors, often caused by imperfect speech recognition or unclear audio. The company says these systems will improve over time as more feedback comes in.
Apart from auto-dubbing, YouTube is also leaning into AI-driven personalization through its Recap feature that assigns users a personality based on their watch history, adding another layer to how content is understood and surfaced.
Tech
One song can ruin your entire Apple Music algorithm & there needs to be a fix
Users shouldn’t be afraid of exploring music or letting their kids choose a song, but since Apple Music lacks manual algorithm controls, one wrong song can upend your recommendations for weeks.

Apple Music is great except when you accidentally poison your algorithm
Apple Music is debatably the best option for music streaming, especially for those committed to the Apple ecosystem. However, as great as the app and human curation aspects can be, there is a fatal flaw that requires users to either actively fight it or give up entirely.
It seems like it should be obvious to Apple’s development team, but year after year, we have gone without the ability to fine-tune our algorithm. If you dare to listen to a single Christmas song, video game soundtrack, or sleep-focused playlist without first turning off the algorithm altogether, your recommendations will be ruined for an indefinite amount of time.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Tech
Apple Vision Pro anniversary, Gemini confusion, and iPhone Flip on the AppleInsider Podcast
How the Apple Vision Pro has and has not moved forward in two years, plus what’s going on with Gemini and Siri, and what comes after the iPhone Fold, on the AppleInsider Podcast.

Apple Vision Pro seemed like the future, but for the present, it’s past its launch halo. And instead eyes are turning to the iPhone Fold and its different forms
It’s a week of looking back, forward, but as it turns out, not suspiciously. For despite reports of Apple and Google making contradictory statements about the tie-up between Siri and Gemini, the truth turns out to be plain and simple — and look fine.
But as we wait for the actual results of that deal, there is also the fact that it’s now two entire years since the Apple Vision Pro came out. One of your hosts remains a supporter, but perhaps less of a fan, and wonders what Apple’s plan for the device can be.
Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Tech
Flickr discloses potential data breach exposing users’ names, emails
Photo-sharing platform Flickr is notifying users of a potential data breach after a vulnerability at a third-party email service provider exposed their real names, email addresses, IP addresses, and account activity.
Founded in 2004, Flickr is one of the world’s largest photography communities and sharing sites, hosting over 28 billion photos and videos. The company says it has 35 million monthly users and 800 million monthly page views.
Flickr did not disclose which third-party provider was involved or how many users were potentially affected by this incident. A Flickr spokesperson was not immediately available for comment when contacted by BleepingComputer earlier today for more details.
The company said that it shut down access to the affected system within hours after being informed of the security flaw on February 5. While the vulnerability “may have” provided access to some member information, Flickr said that passwords and payment card numbers were not compromised in the incident.
“On February 5, 2026, we were alerted to a vulnerability in a system operated by one of our email service providers,” the company said in emails to affected users. “This flaw may have allowed unauthorized access to some Flickr member information. We shut down access to the affected system within hours of learning about it.”
The exposed information includes member names, email addresses, Flickr usernames, account types, IP addresses, general location data, and their activity on the platform.
The company has also encouraged affected users to review their account settings for any unexpected changes and to remain vigilant against phishing emails that may use their Flickr account information, noting that it will never request passwords over email.
Users are also recommended to update their passwords as soon as possible if they use their Flickr credentials on other services.
“We sincerely apologize for this incident and for the concern it may cause,” Flickr added in the emailed notifications.
“We take the privacy and security of your data extremely seriously, and we are taking immediate action to prevent any similar issues by conducting a thorough investigation, strengthening our system architecture, & further enhancing our monitoring of third-party service providers.”
-
Video5 days agoWhen Money Enters #motivation #mindset #selfimprovement
-
Tech4 days agoWikipedia volunteers spent years cataloging AI tells. Now there’s a plugin to avoid them.
-
Politics6 days agoSky News Presenter Criticises Lord Mandelson As Greedy And Duplicitous
-
Sports1 day agoJD Vance booed as Team USA enters Winter Olympics opening ceremony
-
Tech2 days agoFirst multi-coronavirus vaccine enters human testing, built on UW Medicine technology
-
Sports22 hours ago
Former Viking Enters Hall of Fame
-
Crypto World6 days agoMarket Analysis: GBP/USD Retreats From Highs As EUR/GBP Enters Holding Pattern
-
Sports2 days ago
New and Huge Defender Enter Vikings’ Mock Draft Orbit
-
NewsBeat5 days agoUS-brokered Russia-Ukraine talks are resuming this week
-
NewsBeat2 days agoSavannah Guthrie’s mother’s blood was found on porch of home, police confirm as search enters sixth day: Live
-
Business3 days agoQuiz enters administration for third time
-
Sports6 days agoShannon Birchard enters Canadian curling history with sixth Scotties title
-
NewsBeat6 days agoGAME to close all standalone stores in the UK after it enters administration
-
NewsBeat3 days agoStill time to enter Bolton News’ Best Hairdresser 2026 competition
-
NewsBeat1 day agoDriving instructor urges all learners to do 1 check before entering roundabout
-
Crypto World5 days agoRussia’s Largest Bitcoin Miner BitRiver Enters Bankruptcy Proceedings: Report
-
NewsBeat5 days agoImages of Mamdani with Epstein are AI-generated. Here’s how we know
-
Crypto World3 days agoHere’s Why Bitcoin Analysts Say BTC Market Has Entered “Full Capitulation”
-
Crypto World3 days agoWhy Bitcoin Analysts Say BTC Has Entered Full Capitulation
-
Fashion2 days agoKelly Rowland and Method Man Bring the Fashion for Relationship Goals Press Tour: Courtside in a Fringed TTSWTRS Jacket, Black and White Rowen Rose, Stella McCartney, and More!



