Tech
How to watch Jensen Huang’s Nvidia GTC 2026 keynote — and what to expect
Nvidia kicks off its annual GTC developer conference in San Jose, California, on Monday with CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote scheduled for 11 a.m. PT / 2 p.m. ET.
GTC — which stands for GPU Technology Conference — is Nvidia’s flagship annual event, running from March 16 to March 19. The chipmaker typically uses the spotlight to announce new products, champion partnerships, and lay out its vision for the future of computing. Huang’s keynote will focus on Nvidia’s role in the future of computing and AI. You can watch the two-hour address in person at the SAP Center or livestream the talk on the event’s website. The YouTube livestream is embedded below.
The broader four-day event is focused on what’s coming next for AI across industries, including healthcare, robotics, and autonomous vehicles.
On the software side, it’s rumored that Nvidia will release an open source platform for enterprise AI agents, dubbed NemoClaw, as originally reported by Wired. The platform would give businesses a structured way to build and deploy AI agents (software that can carry out multistep tasks autonomously) and would position Nvidia to mirror similar offerings from companies like OpenAI.
On the hardware side, the company is also rumored to be releasing a new chip designed to accelerate the AI inference process — the process by which an AI model applies what it has learned to generate responses or make decisions, as distinct from the initial training process, which requires far more computing power. Faster, cheaper inference is widely seen as one of the last bottlenecks to scaling AI applications broadly. The chip would represent Nvidia’s latest bid to dominate not just the training market, where it already commands an estimated 80% share, but the inference market as well, where competition from custom chips built by Google, Amazon, and others is fast intensifying.
There will also be a range of partnership announcements and demonstrations showcasing Nvidia’s AI capabilities across industries.
Kevin Cook, a senior equity strategist at Zacks Investment Research, told TechCrunch that attendees should also expect to learn what the company plans to do with its relationship with Groq, the inference company Nvidia reportedly paid $20 billion late last year to license its technology. There’s a lot of curiosity around this tie-up, given that Jonathan Ross, Groq’s founder; Sunny Madra, Groq’s president; and other members of the Groq team agreed to join Nvidia to help advance and scale that licensed tech.
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Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 is a version of Mythos the public can access today
Anthropic is bringing its most powerful AI model to the general public for the first time, but it’s doing it with guardrails.
On Tuesday, the AI firm launched Claude Fable 5, the first publicly available version of its Mythos model. Anthropic says Fable 5 excels at software engineering, knowledge work, and vision, but it comes with hard safety limits. In high-risk areas like cybersecurity, biology, chemistry, and distillation, the model blocks responses and falls back to Claude Opus 4.8.
Launched as a preview in April, Mythos was initially limited to a handful of partners due to cybersecurity concerns. Last week, Anthropic expanded access to hundreds of organizations across 15 countries, again focusing on organizations that manage critical infrastructure.
Now a version of that technology is available to anyone through Anthropic’s Claude API and consumption-based Enterprise plans. Access on subscriptions will roll out in stages: Through June 22, Fable 5 will be included in Pro, Max, Team, and seat-based Enterprise plans at no extra cost. On June 23, Anthropic will pull Fable 5 from those plans, requiring usage credits going forward, with plans to restore it as a standard subscription feature as soon as possible.
Anthropic is also deploying a new version of Mythos, called Mythos 5, to organizations that have already been approved to access the advanced model.
Fable’s launch comes as Anthropic prepares to enter the public markets, alongside OpenAI and Elon Musk’s SpaceX. It also follows the AI firm’s plea urging major global AI labs to establish a coordinated brake pedal on frontier AI development. Anthropic warned that systems are advancing so rapidly that they may soon achieve recursive self-improvement (RSI), autonomously improving themselves without human intervention.
Wary of what a Mythos-class model could do in the wrong hands, Anthropic says it stress-tested its classifiers with jailbreak attempts before releasing Fable 5.
“Internally, we ran an external bug bounty that produced no universal jailbreaks in over 1,000 hours of testing. We then worked with external red-teaming orgs which also failed to find universal jailbreaks.”
That said, there could still be novel attacks. As a result, with the launch of Fable 5 and Mythos 5, Anthropic said it will require a 30-day retention on all traffic, even if enterprises previously had zero-retention agreements. The company said it won’t use the data for training and will use it only to “defend against complex and novel attacks, including new jailbreaks,” and “identify and reduce false positives.” The policy could set an industry precedent in which access to increasingly powerful models comes with mandatory data-retention policies framed as a safety measure.
For those who continue to use the model, not every question will get a Fable 5 answer. Anthropic says the cases in which Fable has to defer to Opus 4.8 are rare, with early data showing at least 95% of Fable sessions running entirely on the model’s own responses.
In third-party testing, analytics company Hex said in a statement that Fable was the first to get a 90% on its core analytics benchmark of complex, long-running analytical tasks.
“On the hardest questions, it shows strong judgement and attention to nuance,” Hex said.
Vibe-coding platform Base44 noted in a statement that Fable is better at “one-shotting full apps” and has excellent tool-calling. AI-powered workspace and agent platform Genspark said Fable beat every other model in its evaluations and performed significantly better on tasks like UI design and game coding.
Pricing for both Fable 5 and Mythos 5 is $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens, double the price of Opus 4.8. That price alone might serve as a deterrent for widespread use.
Many enterprises are growing critical of AI costs after seeing the bills come in or blowing through their yearly AI budgets early. Advanced models like Opus 4.8 can exacerbate those issues, with advanced reasoning skills that can split a single request into multiple tasks.
Anthropic said it expects demand for Fable 5 to be very high and difficult to predict. And indeed some, like shopping rewards platform Rakuten, might think the upside is worth the price point.
“At the highest effort, Fable reflects on and validates its own work,” Rakuten said in a statement. “For us, that’s what makes highly autonomous operations possible — the extra thinking pays for itself.”
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Tech
CISA gives US federal agencies three days to fix a VPN bug under attack by a ransomware gang
A ransomware group is actively exploiting an unpatched flaw in security tools used across the U.S. federal government, prompting the U.S. cybersecurity agency CISA to order all civilian agencies to remediate the vulnerability by end of day Wednesday.
Cybersecurity firm Check Point Software said the bug affects several of its remote access tools, firewalls, and VPNs, which act as digital gatekeepers to protect company networks from unauthorized access.
The company said in a separate blog post that it had confirmed the bug was being exploited by a known ransomware group called Qilin to hack into “a few dozen targeted organizations globally” that rely on the affected security tools.
The hacks began on May 7 but activity began to rise last week, per Check Point.
Given the risk to the federal government’s enterprise network, CISA on Monday ordered all civilian federal agencies — such as Homeland Security, the Department of State, and the Treasury — to fix any instances where agencies are using the affected products by end of day June 11. The agency cited BOD 22-01, its operational guidance memo that allows it to instruct agencies to take security action when there is an active cyber threat to government networks.
Tech
WWDC 2026: Everything announced on Siri AI, iOS 27, Apple Intelligence, and more
Apple’s WWDC 2026 event kicked off yesterday at Apple Park, starting a week packed with reveals about Siri AI, iOS 27, Apple Intelligence, and more, along with developer events and demos as Apple looks to reassert itself with users and developers who haven’t been impressed with their releases within the wildly competitive AI space. It also marks CEO Tim Cook’s last WWCD with the company, after announcing he’s handing things off to Senior Vice President of Hardware Engineering John Ternus on September 1.
Did they succeed? Keep tabs on this page, and the rest of our ongoing coverage, to find out!
TL;DR — Apple spent WWDC 2026 catching up
This is far from our consumer news editor Sarah Perez’s first WWDC, and with all that context in mind, she provides the subtext on much of what was being showcased.
For the past two years, Apple has been racing to catch up in AI while frustrations with its core software quietly added up: a design overhaul users hated, a search function that barely worked, a file-sharing feature that routinely failed, and a Health app that didn’t focus enough on half its user base. Apple didn’t say any of that on Monday. But the structure of its WWDC keynote said it for them, leading with fixes before features, and framing a better Siri as one item on a long list of improvements rather than the main event.
Apple reveals Siri AI

As expected, Apple made the case for an improved experience with its long-standing Siri assistant, which it admitted faces greater expectations from users in the age of AI. With Google Gemini under the hood, Apple claims that the new Siri updates will make it more capable, conversational, and compatible with visual intelligence, and it will be housed in a stand-alone app in addition to working across existing apps. You can get a full rundown of all the new Siri AI updates right here.
Before rolling out the enhancements and features, Apple was adamant about its privacy-centric approach to AI. “We believe privacy in AI is non-negotiable,” Apple senior vice president Craig Federighi said during the stream, going so far as to say that “data is only used to execute your request, and outside experts can continue to verify this promise at any time.”
A potential foldable iPhone tease
No, Apple didn’t make such a big reveal during WWDC, but researcher @M1Astra dug through files within the iOS 27 developer beta and found references to things like “foldState,” “angleDegrees,” and other things that allude to the states a foldable device can be put into. And it’s not like there hasn’t been a bounty of foldable iPhone rumors over the past few years. Stay tuned for Apple’s annual iPhone event in September to see if we do get a formal reveal, unless Ternus really will be changing things up in the post-Cook era.
The next generation of Apple Intelligence

To go along with its new Siri AI overhaul, the tech giant announced a slew of new Apple Intelligence updates across its apps, including tab management for Safari, one-tap password updating, cross-app context awareness, and more. Additionally, Messages is getting AI-powered reply suggestions, while the Phone app can now pull context from other apps like Mail and Messages mid-call.
Apple said it collaborated with Google and the Gemini family of models to develop the next generation of Apple Foundation Models that power its integrated Apple Intelligence experiences.
Liquid Glass gets some opt-in rollbacks

If you are among those who aren’t exactly keen on last year’s Liquid Glass design updates, you aren’t alone. And while Apple isn’t switching to a new aesthetic, you will be able to dial back some of its elements, or really highlight them if you’re vibing with it. And for the app icon critics out there fresh from Spotify’s disco ball update, Apple showed off a new, layered approach to Liquid Glass within its apps.
Everything else coming to iOS 27
As is the case every year, a number of small tweaks and updates arriving with the upcoming iOS update didn’t get their time in the sun during Apple’s broadcast, but that doesn’t mean they’re not noteworthy. Ivan Mehta brought together several of them right here, including:
- Full-screen homepage widgets.
- Separate volume controls for alarms, timers, alerts, and so on.
- Design tweaks for the weather app, with highlights on notable upcoming events.
Image Playground gets another chance

The AI image-generating app Image Playground hasn’t exactly taken the world by storm, which depending on your view on AI slop may be a good thing. However, Apple rolled out a renewed pitch for users to actually start generating images, with a focus on its possible uses across many features of your devices, with an exclusion set on any training based on photos generated using the app. That, plus performance updates coming alongside Apple Intelligence upgrades, might at least take it out of the “suck” category for TechCrunch senior writer Amanda Silberling.
iOS 27 is stretching back to the iPhone 11

Claiming that its upcoming update will be “available to more users than any iOS release ever,” Apple revealed that all devices from the iPhone 11 onward will be eligible for their upcoming software update. And that update comes with a flurry of performance improvements it’s touting across a number of its OS releases this year, with Apple claiming that new photos will appear 70% more swiftly, AirDrop transfers will be 80% faster, and CPU schedulers will be improved to help multitasking.
New parental controls for iPhones

Apple spent a significant amount of the WWDC event showcasing a suite of tools for parents looking for greater control over what their children’s devices can and can’t do. Parents will be able to determine who their kid can call on the phone and what apps and websites they can access, with Apple making suggestions about how those restrictions can change over time. By default, though, its “Ask to Browse” feature limits access, and “Ask to Buy” for App Store and in-app purchases will be set as a default for devices set up for children younger than 13. You can get more parental control details right here.
Search gets an overhaul
Frustrated with searching through your iPhone for, well, pretty much anything? Search got a dedicated session during WWDC to tout a series of improvements, which you can learn more about here.
“We’ve all had that moment where you search for something you know is there, but it just won’t show up,” Stacey Ford, vice president of OS Program Management said. “So on iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, we’ve rebuilt the foundation of search that powers Spotlight, Photos, and Mail.

To take on popular AI photo-editing apps, Apple is bringing new AI features to its Photos app. A new spatial “Reframe” feature will let you use AI to adjust the perspective of an image as if you had repositioned the camera in the original scene. The new “Extend” tool expands images to adjust the aspect ratio or add more to a scene. The app’s popular “Cleanup” tool is also getting an upgrade so users can remove distractions with better quality and more realistic infill with generative AI.
Apple takes on AI dictation apps
Apple is launching a new systemwide dictation experience that’s built into the keyboard on iOS 27 and can correct spellings, punctuation, and capitalization. The update comes as AI dictation apps like Wispr Flow and Willow have been gaining popularity. These apps clean up filler words like “ums” and “ahs” and format the text after transcribing based on context.
Subscription bundles are headed to the App Store
For the first time, developers will be able to partner with each other to provide access to different subscriptions, for a lower bundled price. It’s not an uncommon practice for anyone who’s been pitched by various streaming services searching for subscriber growth, but it’s the first time this is available for things like productivity or photography apps in the App Store.
The App Store will start giving personalized recommendations
And if a bundled offer isn’t compelling enough, your interests and behavior will power a new means of discovery for developers: personalized recommendations that will appear across several App Store locations. These recommendations will include “App Notes” that detail why they’re appearing among other apps.
Shortcuts adds natural language creation

Apple is using AI to make its visual-scripting tool, Shortcuts, easier to use in iOS 27. The updated experience will allow users to write a prompt and simply describe what they want to do. The AI update makes the Shortcuts app more approachable and expands what non-technical people can do.
Health gets perimenopause insights

Apple’s Health app is adding perimenopause and menopause support to its existing cycle-tracking feature. The update embraces a topic that has gone mainstream, giving Apple a new product opportunity in a rapidly expanding market, as digital health tools targeting this demographic have attracted significant investment in recent years.
Tim Cook says farewell
At the end of the keynote, Tim Cook had a farewell message reflecting on his time as CEO:
Over the years, you have helped people connect, create, learn, and experience the world in extraordinary new ways, and with the incredible capabilities we introduce today, and so many more still to come, I truly believe the best is still ahead at Apple. Getting the best products in the world to deliver experiences that enrich people’s lives has always been our North Star. It’s been the honor of a lifetime to help advance that mission with teams whose creativity, care, and conviction continue to make a lasting difference in people’s lives.
Catch up on the rest of WWDC 2026’s reveals here
Miss out on WWDC? You can always catch up on the archive of the full event via the stream above or on Apple’s YouTube page right here.
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