Tech
Grubhub waives delivery and service fees on restaurant orders over $50
Grubhub is making a bold move in an effort to close the gap with competitors DoorDash and Uber Eats.
On Monday, the company unveiled both its Super Bowl 2026 commercial and a significant policy change: Starting soon, all delivery and service fees will be eliminated for restaurant orders exceeding $50. This initiative could deliver significant cost savings for customers and may increase Grubhub’s appeal in a fiercely competitive market.
The new Super Bowl advertisement stars actor George Clooney at an extravagant dinner party. As the host dramatically asks, “Who will eat the fees?” Clooney responds, “Grubhub will eat the fees.”
Grubhub says this is a permanent offering aimed at putting more money back in customers’ pockets amid challenging economic times. The company notes that delivery and service fees on orders over $50 usually average about $13 per transaction across food delivery apps.
Grubhub’s move to permanently eliminate fees on all orders over $50 stands out as a unique offer in the food delivery space. Neither DoorDash nor Uber Eats offers a permanent waiver of delivery and service fees on large orders. Their promotions are typically limited-time offers or tied to paid subscription services (such as DashPass or Uber One), which often apply only to select restaurants or are subject to other restrictions.
Additionally, this new offering comes as Grubhub faces challenges in user growth and trails behind its competitors. The delivery company, which was acquired by Marc Lore’s Wonder Group in 2024, saw its monthly active users decline by 20% year-over-year in 2025, to 8 million, according to marketing intelligence firm Sensor Tower. DoorDash boasts nearly 50 million monthly active users.
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In addition to its new fee policy, Grubhub recently acquired Claim, a startup providing cash-back rewards at local restaurants, which customers can redeem for dine-in or pickup orders. With Claim, Grubhub aims to help more restaurants engage customers through personalized rewards programs.
Tech
David Sacks is done as AI czar — here’s what he’s doing instead
David Sacks has used up his days as Donald Trump’s AI and crypto czar.
Speaking with Bloomberg on Thursday, the longtime entrepreneur, investor, and podcaster confirmed that his non-consecutive 130-day stint as a special government employee is over and that he’s moving on to co-chair the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) alongside senior White House technology adviser Michael Kratsios.
“I think moving forward as co-chair of PCAST, I can now make recommendations on not just AI but an expanded range of technology topics,” he told Bloomberg via a video interview. “So yes, this is how I’ll be involved moving forward.”
What that means in practice is Sacks will be much further from the power center in Washington than since the outset of this second Trump administration. As AI czar, Sacks had a direct line to Trump and a hand in shaping policy. PCAST is a federal advisory body, so while it studies issues, produces reports, and sends recommendations up the chain, it doesn’t make policy.
The council has existed in some form since FDR, though Sacks made a point to Bloomberg of noting that this particular iteration has “the most star power of any group like this” ever assembled, and it’s hard to argue he’s wrong. The initial 15 members include Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Oracle’s Larry Ellison, Google co-founder Sergey Brin, Marc Andreessen, AMD’s Lisa Su, and Michael Dell, among others. (That’s a lot of billionaires.)
Sacks told Bloomberg the council will take up AI, advanced semiconductors, quantum computing, and nuclear power, and that near-term attention will go toward pushing Trump’s national AI framework, released just last week. The framework is aimed at replacing what Sacks described to Bloomberg as a mess of conflicting state-level rules. “You’ve got 50 different states regulating this in 50 different ways,” he said, “and it’s creating a patchwork of regulation that’s difficult for our innovators to comply with.”
What Sacks didn’t address head-on was why the transition is happening now and whether his recent comments were a factor. Earlier this month, on the popular “All In” podcast that he co-hosts, Sacks publicly urged the administration to find an exit from the U.S.-backed war with Iran, walking through a set of worsening scenarios — attacks on oil infrastructure in neighboring countries, the destruction of desalination plants, the possibility of nuclear use by Israel — and calling for a polite way out. Trump responded by telling reporters that Sacks hadn’t spoken to him about the war. (The U.S.-Israel war on Iran has now been going on for approximately 27 days.)
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Asked about the podcast episode on Thursday by Bloomberg, Sacks figuratively threw his hands in the air: “I’m not on the foreign policy team or the national security team,” he said, adding that his podcast comments represented his personal view, not an official one.
For all the marquee names Sacks is bringing to PCAST, it’s worth reflecting on what the council has historically been, which is an advisory body with some influence in some administrations and almost none in others.
President Obama’s version was seemingly the most productive on record, churning out 36 reports over eight years — two of which led to concrete policy changes, including an FDA rule that opened the market for over-the-counter hearing aids.
President Trump’s first-term council, by contrast, took nearly three years just to name its first members, produced a handful of reports, and made no particular mark, while President Biden’s council skewed heavily academic — Nobel laureates, MacArthur fellows, National Academy members — and issued a modest number of reports before the administration ended.
The current PCAST is a completely different animal, built almost entirely from the executive suites of the companies shaping the technology it will advise on.
Now, Sacks is again one of those unencumbered executives, free to resume his life as an investor and entrepreneur. A spokesperson for Craft Ventures, the firm Sacks co-founded and where he remains a partner, has not yet responded to related questions about next steps; TechCrunch reported last year on the ethics waivers Sacks obtained to maintain financial stakes in AI and crypto companies while shaping federal policy in both areas — an arrangement that drew sharp criticism from ethics experts and lawmakers.
Tech
OpenAI shuts down Sora while Meta gets shut out in court
When an 82-year-old Kentucky woman was offered $26 million from an AI company that wanted to build a data center on her land, she said no. Sure, that same company can try to rezone 2,000 acres nearby anyway, but as AI infrastructure stretches further into the real world, the real world is starting to push back.
That tension is everywhere this week, from OpenAI shutting down its Sora app to courts finally starting to hold social platforms like Meta accountable. On this episode of TechCrunch’s Equity podcast, Kirsten Korosec, Anthony Ha, and Sean O’Kane dig into what it looks like when the AI hype cycle meets reality.
Subscribe to Equity on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify and all the casts. You also can follow Equity on X and Threads, at @EquityPod.
Tech
Apple says no one using Lockdown Mode has been hacked with spyware
Almost four years after launching a security feature called Lockdown Mode, Apple says it has yet to see a case where someone’s device was hacked with these additional security protections switched on.
“We are not aware of any successful mercenary spyware attacks against a Lockdown Mode-enabled Apple device,” Apple spokesperson Sarah O’Rourke told TechCrunch on Friday.
It’s the tech giant’s most recent affirmation that Apple devices with Lockdown Mode can withstand government spyware attacks, after first making the claim a year after the security feature’s debut.
Apple in 2022 announced Lockdown Mode, an opt-in series of security protections that switches off certain features in iPhones and other Apple devices that are commonly exploited to hack targets with spyware. Apple specifically released this security mode to help at-risk customers defend themselves from the threats posed by government spyware made by companies like Intellexa, NSO Group, and Paragon Solutions.
In recent years, Apple has conceded that its customers can be hacked by spyware and has been more proactive about notifying customers who have been targeted.
Apple has sent numerous batches of notifications to users in over 150 countries, alerting them that they may have been hacked with spyware, which shows how much visibility the company now has on these types of attacks. Apple has never said how many users it has notified, but it’s likely fair to assume there have been dozens, if not more.

Donncha Ó Cearbhaill, the head of the security lab at Amnesty International, where he has investigated dozens of spyware attacks, said that he and his colleagues “have not seen any evidence of an iPhone being successfully compromised by mercenary spyware where Lockdown Mode was enabled at the time of the attack.”
Digital rights organizations like Amnesty International and the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab have documented several successful attacks on iPhone users, none of which have mentioned a bypass of Lockdown Mode. In at least two cases, Citizen Lab researchers publicly said they had seen Lockdown Mode actively block spyware attacks, one carried out with NSO’s Pegasus, the other with Predator spyware, made by a company now part of Intellexa.
In at least one documented case of a spyware attack targeting iPhones, security researchers at Google said the spyware would bail out of trying to infect the victim if it detects Lockdown Mode, likely as a way to evade detection.
Patrick Wardle, an Apple cybersecurity expert and critic, says that Lockdown Mode is an important feature that makes it more difficult for spyware makers to attack Apple users.
“I think it’s safe to say, Lockdown Mode is one of the most aggressive consumer-facing hardening features ever shipped,” he told TechCrunch.
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Wardle explained that by “shrinking the attack surface,” Lockdown Mode eliminates many techniques normally used to exploit the iPhone, and forces spyware makers to use more complex and expensive techniques to develop.
“It kills entire delivery mechanisms/exploit classes,” he added, “as it blocks most message attachment types, restricts WebKit features. This is really a huge reduction in remotely reachable attack surface, especially for zero-click exploit chains,” referring to hacks that can target people over the internet without any interaction from the victim.
It’s possible that Lockdown Mode has been bypassed, and neither Apple nor independent investigators have caught the attack. But given that Apple is typically publicly tight-lipped at the best of times, its latest statement marks a significant milestone for Lockdown Mode.
I have used Lockdown Mode for years, and I barely think about it — except when it pops up notifications that can be occasionally confusing. Some features that have been switched off require you to take an extra step, such as copying and pasting links from text messages to your browser. That’s why I, and several digital security experts, recommend anyone worried about being targeted by spyware or digital attacks to switch on Lockdown Mode.
