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Get 10 bottles of wine for $40 with this 75% off deal

TL;DR: Get 10 bottles of red, white, or mixed wine for $39.97 (reg. $160) through May 10 at 11:59 p.m. PT. Shipping not included.


If you like having several bottles of wine on hand without putting too much thought into the different blends you should buy, this deal keeps things easy. Right now, you can get a 10 bottles of wine in this bundle for $39.97, which is 75% off the usual $160 price. The sale runs through May 10 at 11:59 p.m. PT, with shipping added at checkout.

This bundle isn’t about rare vintages or overly technical tasting notes. Instead, the Swirl team curated these wines to be balanced and easy to enjoy. From a flavor standpoint, that usually means fruit-forward profiles, moderate acidity, and smoother finishes, which tend to appeal to a wider range of palates. Several of the included wines have also earned recognition in blind-tasting competitions, where selections are judged purely on taste rather than branding.

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There are three options available for the bundles: a red-only collection, a white selection, or a mixed set that includes rosé. The red wines feature flavors such as cherry, raspberry, and subtle spice, while the whites offer lighter notes like green apple or citrus. The mixed option provides variety for changing preferences or different occasions.

This kind of bundle makes the most sense for anyone who entertains occasionally, enjoys trying different styles, or just wants to cut down on frequent trips to restock. Having a variety on hand can make last-minute plans, dinners with friends, or even a quiet night in feel a little more effortless. Plus, a bottle of wine makes a great last-minute gift idea for a friend.

If that sounds like something you’d use, the $39.97 cost keeps the commitment relatively low for 10 standard 750ml bottles of wine. Just factor in the $29.95 shipping cost at redemption and get ready to say bottoms up.

StackSocial prices subject to change.

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LG W6 Wallpaper vs. The Frame Pro: Why is the Wallpaper TV so expensive?

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The resurrected LG Wallpaper TV is officially available to preorder. LG hasn’t announced a release date yet, but some interested buyers may need an extra second to think after seeing that the W6 Wallpaper TV costs $5,499.99.

And that’s just the smallest size. To be fair, the smallest size in question is 77 inches, but that’s still quite pricey — especially if your instinct is to compare the Wallpaper to Samsung’s The Frame. So, the $5,500 question is: Is LG delusional for the W6 Wallpaper’s price tag, or are we delusional for wanting it to be cheaper?

get $200 off a soundbar when you preorder

Why does the Wallpaper cost so much more than The Frame?

The most expensive Frame model, the 83-inch Frame Pro, costs $3,999.99. We’re certainly not used to any art TV making The Frame look affordable. But this time, the Frame Pro sounds more like a dupe for the LG Wallpaper than the other way around.

However, comparing these two designs is a real apple and oranges situation. The W6 Wallpaper is OLED and The Frame Pro is Neo QLED (Samsung’s version of mini-LED). Those are two completely different methods of lighting the TV screen, and OLED is already considered to be superior to QLED in most situations.

Collage featuring LG W6 Wallpaper TV hanging in transparent mount in living room beside side view of LG W6 Wallpaper

As you can see from the side view, the Wallpaper is unbelievably thin.
Credit: LG

(I don’t think brands do themselves any favors in the “convincing the average buyer that this TV is a practical purchase” department by strictly staging product photos in a home that looks like Bruce Wayne’s penthouse, but I digress.)

The W6 Wallpaper’s OLED tech is some of LG’s most advanced ever. Some key features include Brightness Booster Ultra and Hyper Radiant Color Technology, which LG says make the W6 Wallpaper nearly four times brighter than the average OLED TV. According to LG, the W6 is the most “reflection-free” of any LG TV. Brightness and legibility in bright rooms are typically an OLED TV’s rare weak spot against QLED TVs, but it sounds like LG bridged that gap here.

The most mind-bending part is that LG packed it all into a screen that measures 9 millimeters thick — even thinner than either The Frame model, which are already impressively thin. For reference, 9 millimeters is thinner than a closed MacBook Pro.

Comparatively, The Frame Pro’s Neo QLED technology isn’t even Samsung’s best Neo QLED work.

The best Samsung Neo QLED TVs use full array local dimming: Clusters of tiny LED bulbs arranged across the entire screen that can individually dim or brighten as needed, leading to deeper blacks, vibrant highlights without blooming, and overall more accurate picture quality. Instead, the Frame Pro’s mini-LED system consists of extra bulbs arranged across the bottom of the TV, pointing upward. While the Frame Pro’s picture is brighter and more contrasted than the regular Frame, it almost feels basic compared to the W6 Wallpaper.

As if gamers needed any convincing to blindly side with the OLED TV, the LG Wallpaper’s max 165Hz refresh rate is worth nothing — the Frame Pro can only hit 144Hz.

Samsung has a Wallpaper TV dupe. It’s just not in The Frame family.

The Frame Pro’s teetering title as the best art TV certainly didn’t get much cushion from Samsung’s latest TV launch. When the remaining half of Samsung’s 2026 flagship TVs were released at the beginning of April, the biggest news about The Frame Pro was a negligible HDMI port upgrade. That’s exactly the level of innovation needed to compete with LG’s new OLED art TV.

But during that launch, I noticed that the nicest new Samsung OLED embodied the core features of art or lifestyle TVs. The Samsung S95H rocks a steel-colored metal bezel and a “glare-free” matte screen coating, mounts flush with the wall, and can access The Samsung Art Store. It also sees boosted brightness and improved reflection handling over the 2025 Samsung S95F, which was already one of the internet’s favorite OLED TVs for bright rooms.

Art features or not, high-end OLED TVs are just expensive

It’s not like high-end OLED TVs aren’t always on the steep side of the pricing spectrum. The 2026 77-inch LG C6H OLED and 2026 77-inch LG G6 OLED cost $3,699.99 and $4,499.99, respectively. The 77-inch version of the aforementioned Samsung S95H OLED also costs $4,499.99. As one of the absolute best LG OLED TVs you can buy, plus the unique art TV features, the W6 Wallpaper is naturally pricier — just like we’ve long accepted that The Frame is simply going to be more expensive than other QLED TVs with similar specs.

If it makes you feel better, the new LG Micro RGB TVs are just as salty. The cheapest one, the 75-inch MRGB95B TV, just debuted at $4,999.99. The 85-inch version costs $6,999.99.

No one is alleging that the W6 Wallpaper is a realistic investment for the average household. $5K is still wickedly expensive for a TV, but it’s pretty in line with the common asking price for other premium OLED TVs.

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Hackers got data on 5.5 million ADT customers by phishing, report says

Millions of people use security company ADT to protect their home or business. And yet their cybersecurity may have been compromised in the latest high-profile breach from hacking group ShinyHunters.

The website Have I Been Pwned reports that a ShinyHunters data breach included 5.5 million unique email addresses associated with ADT customers. ADT says that customers’ payment information wasn’t compromised.

Still, the company confirmed that the breach included customer names, phone numbers, and addresses, as well as Social Security and Tax ID numbers in a minority of cases.

“ADT’s cybersecurity systems detected unauthorized access to a limited set of customer and prospective customer data on April 20,” reads an ADT blog post confirming the breach. “The company’s response protocols activated immediately — terminating the intrusion, launching a forensic investigation with leading third-party cybersecurity experts, and notifying law enforcement.”

ShinyHunters told Bleeping Computer they gained access to the ADT Salesforce account by compromising an employee’s Okta SSO login credentials. Bleeping Computer added that the hackers used voice phishing. The recent Panera Bread breach, also traced back to ShinyHunters, reportedly also involved SSO phishing.

Okta, a popular SSO service provider, recently warned about the prevalence of voice phishing attacks (also known as vishing) in a recent blog post, which included tips for guarding against these cyberattacks.

ShinyHunters is a prolific hacking organization. In recent months, the group has also been responsible for high-profile breaches involving Rockstar Games, Crunchyroll, Salesforce, Bumble, and others. Ransomware attacks may result.

In a typical ransomware attack, the hackers threaten to release or sell leaked customer or company data on the dark web unless the compromised organization agrees to pay a ransom.

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The Musk-Altman trial is already spilling the tea. Heres how.

Here’s the weather forecast for the next few weeks inside the federal courthouse in Oakland, Calif. — cloudy with a chance of tech world tea spillage.

Jury selection began Monday in Musk v. Altman, the Elon Musk-Sam Altman courtroom showdown over a lawsuit Musk filed two years ago. But the 12 citizens chosen may not be ready for the level of messy drama that’s about to unfold.

How messy? Corporate litigation lawyer Andrew Staltman, who’s been watching Musk’s lawsuit unfold for years, has offered the most memorable summary so far. “We’re about to witness the landing of the Hindenberg on the deck of the Titanic,” Staltman told the Washington Post. “It’s going to be crazy and nasty.”

That might sound like an over-the-top teaser for a pilot episode of “Real Housewives of Silicon Valley.” But if anything, it undersells the reality-show fireworks that may go off during this trial. Altman (a noted fabulist, as this month’s Ronan Farrow expose in the New Yorker made clear) and Musk (who has failed to keep his promises multiple times, most recently promises about Tesla’s full self-driving capabilities) look set to talk about each other under oath.

What’s at stake in the Musk-Altman trial

At stake in the long-awaited trial is whether Musk was defrauded in 2019. That’s the year Altman, who co-founded OpenAI with Musk and others, led the company’s pivot from a nonprofit to a for-profit enterprise.

If the Oakland jurors agree with Musk’s fraud accusations, that could throw a major spanner into OpenAI’s expected 2026 IPO (the company is currently valued somewhere north of $850 billion). Musk’s lawyers have claimed OpenAI owes Musk anywhere up to $138 billion.

But when it comes to these billionaires, it’s not necessarily about the money. Musk, after all, has sued Altman and colleagues personally, rather than OpenAI the company. Altman and Musk have a relationship for which Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, a mutual friend who also shows up in court documents, might as well have created the “it’s complicated” label.

If you need convincing, consider the tea that has already been spilled. Here’s a quick guide to the most eyebrow-raising revelations from court documents so far — and this is all stuff that the federal judge, Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, has already deemed central to the case.

1. What did Musk do at Burning Man?

Many dreams and schemes are hatched between members of the tech elite at the annual desert festival in northern Nevada; for many in Silicon Valley, Musk included, Burning Man is less a vacation and more a religion. But never has one of those rambling conversations become so central to a lawsuit.

In particular, we’re talking about Burning Man 2017, when the theme was “Radical Ritual” — said by the Burning Man organization to encompass “the ambiguous ground that lies between reverence and ridicule, faith and belief, the absurd and the stunningly sublime.”

That description could equally apply to the lawsuit, and in particular, Altman’s lawyers’ attempt to question whether Musk was even capable of recalling OpenAI negotiations while he was partying hard in the desert.

“Do you recall, at Burning Man 2017, ingesting rhino ket?” That’s what Altman’s lawyers asked Musk during his deposition. Musk said he didn’t know what rhino ket was; it’s amphetamines mixed with ketamine, apparently, as well as the name of a 2024 song by Irish hip-hop group Kneecap.

“It is plainly relevant that Musk spent multiple days at Burning Man in the midst of negotiations he now claims not to remember,” Altman’s lawyers have argued. “It speaks to the seriousness with which he took the discussions, and his focus, or lack thereof, on the future of OpenAI.”

Judge Rogers has ruled that Musk’s ketamine use is out of bounds in itself — asking about it could be “unduly prejudicial,” she wrote in a pre-trial ruling — but that a “supposed lapse in memory” based on that usage could be relevant. Musk has said he takes prescribed ketamine to treat depression.

Musk’s attendance at Burning Man, however, “is relevant to the attention he paid to his negotiations with OpenAI, which supposedly occurred during the same period,” Rogers notes.

What this means: “Rhino ket” won’t be mentioned in court, but less specific “memory lapses” might. And get ready for the trial to enter the surreal world of Black Rock City — full of art cars, wild costumes, and black light body paint — as Musk’s experience nine years ago is reconstructed. What happens at Burning Man may not stay at Burning Man.

2. Was Musk’s co-parent an OpenAI spy?

Reality shows often offer some form of baby mama drama. But in this case, spilling the tea on one of Musk’s many co-parents — Shivon Zilis — has been deemed more than mere gossip.

That’s because Zilis, a VC and AI expert, is way more than just the mother of four Musk kids. (Musk has a total of 14 children with four co-parents.) She is what Altman called in his deposition “an Elon whisperer” — a longtime ally who has since worked with him at Tesla and Neuralink. Zilis and Musk met after she joined OpenAI in 2016. She was the youngest member of the OpenAI board before she stepped down in 2023.

In 2018, according to a text exchange in court documents, Zilis asked Musk if she should “stay close and friendly to OpenAI to keep info flowing” or “begin to disassociate” from the company. Musk, who had just stepped down from the OpenAI board at the time, responded: “close and friendly.”

Musk’s lawyers, seeking to prove that a crucial Microsoft investment in OpenAI violated OpenAI’s nonprofit structure, are relying in part on Zilis’ testimony. But OpenAI says Zilis is compromised. Rogers has ruled that the relationship between Musk and Zilis is “highly relevant to Zilis’ credibility.” Zilis stated in her deposition that their relationship is currently romantic.

What this means: Look for Altman’s lawyers to argue that the romance part stretches back to 2016 and wasn’t disclosed at the time. So we may be wading through personal text messages between the two, learning curious details like the fact that Zilis has Musk saved in her phone under the name “Schrodinger’s Cat.”

3. Did Mark Zuckerberg censor posts for Musk?

Altman’s lawyers may seek to prove that even the biggest names in the tech world tend to kowtow to Musk. If the litigious tech celeb has Silicon Valley running in terror of him, the reasoning goes, that makes it less likely that he was duped by Altman in the restructuring of OpenAI — and more likely that this lawsuit is frivolous.

Entered into court documents already are several times in which Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Meta, sought to curry Musk’s favor. And this after Musk ridiculed Zuckerberg online, then publicly challenged the Meta chief to a cage match in 2023 and 2024.

“Looks like DOGE is making progress,” Zuckerberg texted Musk in Feb. 2025, as the highly controversial agency was taking a wrecking ball to the U.S. government and its employees were downloading social security data. Then he basically offered to cover up the real names of people like alleged cybercriminal Big Balls.

Disclosing names of government employees isn’t illegal; they are supposed to be working for (and get paid by) the people. But that was hardly the spirit of Zuckerberg’s message. “I’ve got our teams on alert to take down content doxxing or threatening the people on your team,” Zuckerberg wrote. Musk hearted the message, then asked Zuckerberg if he was interested in joining his OpenAI takeover bid. The two agreed to talk on the phone, although we don’t know if a call actually took place.

The Musk-led $97 billion takeover bid, announced several days later, was dismissed by Altman with a clap back that typifies their relationship. “No thank you but we will buy twitter for $9.74 billion,” Altman wrote on X.

4. ‘Jeff is a tool’: Is Silicon Valley basically high school?

Altman’s jibe is just the tip of a very Mean Girls iceberg. Musk v. Altman contains many such cases. In 2016, for example, the two men were discussing whether OpenAI should use Microsoft or Amazon for its server farms — a crucial question, as it turned out. Musk opted for Microsoft over Amazon, based, it seems, on the personalities of their respective CEOs.

“I think Jeff [Bezos] is a bit of a tool and Satya [Nadella] is not, so I slightly prefer Microsoft,” Musk wrote in an email. In his deposition, when asked about the “tool” comment, Musk doubled down before suggesting it wasn’t a permanent condition: “He can be, you know … there’s a redemption arc for all of us.”

As if this trial wasn’t high school enough, there’s also a diary involved, that of Greg Brockman, OpenAI president and co-founder. “This is the only chance we have to get out from Elon,” Brockman wrote in a partly-redacted entry filed by Musk’s lawyers. This was in 2017, when OpenAI was starting to consider restructuring. “Financially what will take me to $1 B[illion]?” he added.

Brockman, who was compelled to turn over the diary in March, cried foul on X.

But ultimately it doesn’t get more high school than the Altman-Musk relationship itself. “It really fucking hurts when you publicly attack OpenAI,” Altman wrote to Musk in 2023, according to this filing. Why? Because “you’re my hero.”

Incredibly, Musk texted back an apology. But then he added a phrase that baffled Altman, and that, if it remains his belief in the courtroom, practically guarantees fireworks between the two.

“It is certainly not my intention to be hurtful, for which I apologize,” Musk wrote. “But the fate of civilization is at stake.”


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