Entertainment
Samsung teases new AI image editor for upcoming Galaxy S26 phones
Samsung is adding some more AI image editing tools to its next batch of Galaxy smartphones.
A series of short video teasers released today shows how users will be able to quickly and creatively edit photos with AI.
The Korean tech giant announced in a quick press blast on Tuesday that “the latest Galaxy smartphone” will have access to a new, unified suite of AI-powered editing tools. While Samsung didn’t specifically mention S26 in its announcement, we think it’s a safe bet.
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The company is widely expected to announce three new Galaxy S26 phones at a Galaxy Unpacked event next week, so this will surely be a flagship feature for the new devices. It makes sense, as Galaxy phones utilize Google Gemini, which is widely regarded as the best generative AI photo editor thanks to Nano Banana.
Based on the teasers, the ability to capture and edit photos and videos will seemingly be combined into one app experience, so users no longer have to switch between multiple apps to do all of their editing. Examples given included turning daytime photos into nighttime shots and merging multiple photos into one.
Perhaps most importantly, Samsung said it will expand upon this feature at Galaxy Unpacked. Otherwise, the press release was pretty short and somewhat vague, so we’ll have to wait until then to hear more.
Entertainment
Google announces dates for I/O 2026
Google has officially set the date for its next big developer showcase.
In a blog post published Tuesday, the company announced that Google I/O 2026 will take place May 19–20 at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California, with a simultaneous online stream at io.google. As usual, Google is promising keynote addresses, product demos, and updates across its ecosystem — with a heavy emphasis on “AI breakthroughs” spanning “Gemini, Android, and more.”
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If last year is any indication, “AI breakthroughs” is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
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At Google I/O 2025, the company packed nearly two hours of announcements into a keynote that was, in short, AI, AI, and more AI. CEO Sundar Pichai and the company rolled out updates to Gemini 2.5 Pro and Gemini 2.5 Flash, unveiled new generative models like Imagen 4 and Veo 3, and introduced AI-powered features across Search, Gmail, and Chrome. Google also launched AI Mode in Search to U.S. users, expanded its AI Shopping tools, and rebranded Project Starline as Google Beam with real-time translation in Meet.
Even the hardware-adjacent moments were AI-centric, from Android XR headsets to Gemini-powered smart glasses.
In other words, if you’re hoping for a return to the days of pure-Android version numbers, don’t hold your breath. Google I/O has fully transformed into the company’s annual AI roadmap presentation.
Entertainment
Anthropic releases Claude Sonnet 4.6: Benchmark performance, how to try it
Anthropic has just released its latest Large Language Model (LLM), Claude Sonnett 4.6. The Tuesday release quickly follows the launch of Claude Opus 4.6, the company’s premium AI model, on Feb. 5.
According to Anthropic, “Claude Sonnet 4.6 is our most capable Sonnet model yet.” The company says Sonnet 4.6 has a 1 million token context window in beta. Crucially, Anthropic reports that Sonnet 4.6 performed well on internal safety tests, showing a low tendency to hallucinate and engage in sycophancy.
“Sonnet 4.6 brings much-improved coding skills to more of our users,” Anthropic said, referring to Claude’s popularity among developers who use AI to code.
If you’re looking to use Anthropic’s latest AI model, the company has made it really easy. Here’s how to access Clause Sonnet 4.6.
How to use Claude Sonnet 4.6
For both free and Pro users, Claude Sonnett 4.6 is available now as the default model on claude.ai and Claude Cowork. Anthropic has also rolled the model out through its API and all major cloud platforms.
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Free users will have limited usage rates that depend on current demand. Limits reset every five hours. For those who need higher limits, Claude Sonnet 4.6 costs the same price rate as the previous model. The Claude Pro plan costs $20 per month or $17 per month if paid annual. If going through the API, Claude Sonnett 4.6 starts at $3 per million input tokens and $15 per million output tokens.
Claude Sonnet 4.6 benchmark performance
According to Anthropic’s benchmark tests, Claude Sonnet 4.6 is the company’s most powerful model for agentic financial analysis and office tasks, beating out competitors like Google’s Gemini 3 Pro and OpenAI’s GPT 5.2.
On those tasks, Claude Sonnet 4.6 also beats out Anthropic’s own Opus 4.6, Anthropic’s most powerful AI model.
In its release announcement, Anthropic said that many developers with early access to Claude Sonnet 4.6 preferred the model — not just to its predecessor, Claude Sonnet 4.5, but also Claude Opus 4.5. According to the Sonnet 4.6 system card, the new model improves on key benchmarks like Humanity’s Last Exam, though Claude Opus 4.6 scored higher.
Benchmark performance
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GPQA Diamond: 89.9 percent
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ARC-AGI-2: 58.3 percent
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MMMLU: 89.3 percent
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SWE-bench Verified: 79.6 percent
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HLE (Humanity’s Last Exam): With tools 49.0 percent, without tools 33.2 percent
AI-powered insurance company Pace told VentureBeat that Sonnet 4.6 scored the best out of any Claude model on its complex insurance computer use benchmark.
These results are notable as Claude Opus models are generally the more intelligent and preferable for complex reasoning.
Claude Sonnet 4.6 is not only more powerful than some Opus models, but more affordable too. As previously mentioned, Claude Sonnet 4.6 is priced at $3/$15, whereas Opus 4.6’s rates are $5/$25.
Topics
Artificial Intelligence
Entertainment
YouTube is down. Heres what we know.
Updated on Tuesday, Feb. 17 at 9:15 p.m. ET — As of this writing, YouTube appears to be working again. So far, Google and YouTube have not announced the cause of the outage, or confirmed that the problems are resolved.
Updated on Tuesday, Feb. 17 at 9.26 p.m. ET — YouTube has revealed the cause of the outage. In a statement on X, the company said it was due to an issue with their recommendations system, which stopped videos from appearing. “The homepage is back, but we’re still working on a full fix – more coming soon!”
Updated on Tuesday, Feb. 17 at 10:19 p.m. ET — YouTube has announced that the issue has been solved.
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Original story follows.
If you can’t watch YouTube videos right now, you’re not alone. A Tuesday evening YouTube outage affected users across the globe, with problems starting around 8:00 p.m. ET. Early reports are sketchy, but here’s what we know.
The platform DownDetector received 837,973 user error reports (and rising) in the U.S. alone, with 46.7 percent of users reporting problems accessing the YouTube app and 21.1 percent reporting problems with the website. Users in Canada, Brazil, the UK, and Germany are also reporting problems. (Disclosure: Mashable and Downdetector share the same parent company.)
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Mashable editors in both the U.S. and Australia were unable to access YouTube’s website and app. Attempts to access the website resulted in a blank black screen with only YouTube’s sidebar and search bar appearing.

The YouTube homepage goes dark…
Credit: Amanda Yeo / Mashable
YouTube acknowledged the outage on X, urging users to check the Google Support page for more information.
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The initial update from YouTube simply read, “Hi everyone, We’re aware some of you are having issues accessing YouTube right now. Our teams are aware, and we’ll provide updates as soon as we have them.”
An additional update from YouTube read, “We are aware of the ongoing issue impacting YouTube homepage, recommendations, search and uploads and are working to fix it. Please follow along in our Community for updates. Our support agents do not have any additional information to share with you at this time.”
YouTube is the largest streaming service by far in the U.S.
At this time, the cause of the outage is unknown. Mashable reached out to Google for more information (YouTube is owned by Google), and we’ll update this story if we receive more information.
This is a developing story …
