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Supreme Court Favors ISPs Over Music Industry In Copyright Case – DTH

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Apple Resists India’s Anti-Theft App Mandate, Samsung officially unveils the Galaxy Z TriFold, and Apple replaces AI chief with former Microsoft, Google exec.

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Show Notes

Supreme Court Takes Up Major Copyright Case Against Cox

The Supreme Court is hearing a major copyright case between Cox Communications and the music industry. The music industry wants to hold ISPs liable for user piracy, a stance opposed by ISPs and tech companies like Google and X, who warn of mass disconnections and forced internet policing, potentially harming the tech industry and AI development. Justices seemed skeptical of the music industry’s argument, fearing entire communities could lose access over one infringer, but also questioned Cox’s legal shield. The case is compared to the 40-year-old Betamax VCR copyright fight.
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Apple Pushes Back on India’s Mandatory Cybersecurity App

Apple is reportedly planning to resist an order from the Indian government that mandates phone manufacturers, including competitors like Samsung and Vivo, to preload a state-backed, anti-theft cybersecurity app called Sanchar Saathi on all new and existing devices. Industry sources indicate Apple will cite privacy and security concerns for not complying with the directive, which was privately issued on November 28th and would reportedly prevent users from disabling the app. Apple intends to avoid public confrontation despite the app being made mandatory.
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Samsung Officially Unveils the Galaxy Z TriFold

Samsung has officially fully unveiled its Galaxy Z TriFold, a three-panel folding smartphone, which will launch in Korea on December 12th, followed by a US release in Q1 2026. The unique inward-folding design opens to a 10-inch main display, with a 6.5-inch cover screen when closed. It measures 3.9mm unfolded, 12.9mm folded, and weighs 309 grams. The TriFold features a custom Snapdragon 8 chip, a 5,600mAh battery with 45W charging, and the high-end camera setup of the Galaxy Z Fold 7. Due to its complex two-hinge design, the TriFold is expected to be priced significantly higher than the Z Fold 7’s $2,000 starting price.
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Apple Replaces Its AI Chief Amid Apple Intelligence Troubles

Apple’s AI chief, John Giannandrea, is being replaced by former Microsoft and Google executive Amar Subramanya following the troubled launch of Apple Intelligence and the delay of a Siri overhaul. Giannandrea’s departure comes after internal issues and poor testing, which led to him being sidelined. Subramanya, who previously worked on Google’s Gemini Assistant, is tasked with accelerating Apple’s AI efforts, which will reportedly include using Google’s Gemini to power the next version of Siri, a move that highlights the company’s struggle to compete while maintaining its privacy-first focus on smaller, on-device AI models.
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OpenAI Declares “Code Red” as Google Gains Ground

OpenAI is reportedly facing a “code red” as its lead in the AI race diminishes due to rising competition, particularly from Google. CEO Sam Altman has mandated an intense focus on improving ChatGPT’s speed, reliability, personalization, and ability to answer more questions, delaying other initiatives like ads, shopping agents, and a personal assistant named Pulse. This pivot comes as Google, which had previously declared its own “code red” after ChatGPT’s launch, is now gaining users with successful tools like the Nano Banana image model and the superior Gemini 3 model.
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Nvidia Unveils New Physical AI Models for Robotics and AVs

Nvidia is increasing its focus on physical AI, particularly in robotics and autonomous vehicles, with new infrastructure and AI models. A major introduction is Alpamayo-R1, an open reasoning vision language model based on the Cosmos-Reason model. Nvidia claims this is the first vision language action model for autonomous driving research, allowing vehicles to make nuanced, human-like decisions by processing visual and text data. The model is available on GitHub and Hugging Face, accompanied by the “Cosmos Cookbook” resources to aid developers, supporting Nvidia’s goal of being the central intelligence for all robots.
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YouTube Launches Year-End “Recap” With Personalized Insights

YouTube is rolling out a new global annual “Recap” feature, accessible on mobile and desktop, which provides users with personalized insights into their viewing habits, interests, and how their tastes evolved over the past year. This Spotify Wrapped-like experience uses up to 12 cards and assigns a unique “personality type” (e.g., Adventurer). While it includes some music stats, it is separate from the existing YouTube Music Recap. YouTube also released trend charts detailing the most popular topics, creators, podcasts, and songs in the US for 2025 alongside the Recap launch.
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Amazon Cuts Seller Fees in Europe Amid Shein and Temu Pressure

In response to competition from ultra-low-cost marketplaces like Shein and Temu, Amazon is enacting a major fee reduction for sellers in Europe. Effective December 15, referral fees for cheap clothing and accessories will be significantly cut, making Amazon’s fees more competitive. These fee reductions will also be extended to home, pet, grocery, and vitamin products starting February 1. Furthermore, Amazon will reduce fulfillment fees for parcels in major European markets from December 15, attributing the savings to operational improvements as it aims to maintain its dominance in the European e-commerce market.
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Discord Introduces In-App Game Purchases and Gifting

Discord is introducing a new commerce feature, starting with the game Marvel Rivals, that lets users buy, gift, and wishlist digital game items directly within the official game Discord server. This feature, which is currently limited to the desktop app and US currency, aims to simplify the purchasing and gifting process—a major part of Discord’s existing shop purchases—to help game developers earn incremental revenue and acquire new players. Discord plans to eventually expand this feature to all developers, consoles, and mobile devices.
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