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Get the PlayStation 5 Pro for its lowest-ever price at Target

Mashable

SAVE 50: As of June 3, the PlayStation 5 Pro is on sale at Target for 649.99. Get an extra 5% off with Target Circle. The coveted PlayStation 5 Pro has dropped to its lowest-ever price at Target. As of June 3, this console is 50 off at Target, now priced at 649.99. But that's not all -- get an extra 5% off if you're a Target Circle member.


Russia using drones to hunt Ukrainian civilians: HRW

Al Jazeera

Russian forces have been using drones to hunt and attack civilians in Ukraine and continue to do so, according to Human Rights Watch (HRW). In a report released on Tuesday, HRW stated that the Russian military has repeatedly deployed unmanned drones to attack civilian targets in its more than three-year war with Ukraine. The NGO said that dozens of civilians have been killed and hundreds injured in violation of the laws of war. Referencing video from Russian drones and witnesses and survivors, the rights watchdog alleges that Russia has "deliberately or recklessly" hunted civilians and civilian objects, particularly in the southern city of Kherson, using "commercially available quadcopter drones" made domestically and in China. "Russian drone operators are able to track their targets, with high-resolution video feeds, leaving little doubt that the intent is to kill, maim, and terrify civilians," Belkis Wille, a director on arms and conflict at HRW, said in a statement.


Inside the tedious effort to tally AI's energy appetite

MIT Technology Review

It was, of course, not so simple. After speaking with dozens of researchers, we realized that the common understanding of AI's energy appetite is full of holes. I encourage you to read the full story, which has some incredible graphics to help you understand everything from the energy used in a single query right up to what AI will require just three years from now (enough electricity to power 22% of US households, it turns out). But here are three takeaways I have after the project. We focused on measuring the energy requirements that go into using a chatbot, generating an image, and creating a video with AI.


The Most-Cited Computer Scientist Has a Plan to Make AI More Trustworthy

TIME - Tech

On June 3, Yoshua Bengio, the world's most-cited computer scientist, announced the launch of LawZero, a nonprofit that aims to create "safe by design" AI by pursuing a fundamentally different approach to major tech companies. Players like OpenAI and Google are investing heavily in AI agents--systems that not only answer queries and generate images, but can craft plans and take actions in the world. The goal of these companies is to create virtual employees that can do practically any job a human can, known in the tech industry as artificial general intelligence, or AGI. Executives like Google DeepMind's CEO Demis Hassabis point to AGI's potential to solve climate change or cure disease as a motivator for its development. Bengio, however, says we don't need agentic systems to reap AI's rewards--it's a false choice.


'Nobody wants a robot to read them a story!' The creatives and academics rejecting AI โ€“ at work and at home

The Guardian

The novelist Ewan Morrison was alarmed, though amused, to discover he had written a book called Nine Inches Pleases a Lady. Intrigued by the limits of generative artificial intelligence (AI), he had asked ChatGPT to give him the names of the 12 novels he had written. "I've only written nine," he says. "Always eager to please, it decided to invent three." The "nine inches" from the fake title it hallucinated was stolen from a filthy Robert Burns poem.


Why the end of Google as we know it could be your biggest opportunity yet

ZDNet

Google is cooked ... cooked like a luxurious, rich, decadent, yet tender steak on the Fourth of July. I know that sounds dramatic, but we could be witnessing the slow demise of Google as we know it. Testifying in Google's antitrust trial, Apple's head of services, Eddy Cue, confirmed that fewer iPhone users are using Google Search on Safari and are instead turning to AI. Now, before you think I'm writing Google's obituary, let me be clear. Like I've said before, I'm confident they'll figure it out, even if that means changing their business model.


Samsung could pre-load Perplexity AI on its future Galaxy smartphones

Mashable

Samsung users might have Perplexity-powered features on future devices. According to a report from Bloomberg, Samsung is "nearing a wide-ranging deal" to bring Perplexity search capabilities to the upcoming Galaxy S26 series. That could include the Perplexity app pre-loaded on Samsung devices, Perplexity search features within Samsung's web browser, and possibly integrating Perplexity with Samsung's Bixby virtual assistant. Samsung is also reportedly a major investor in Perplexity's latest funding round, which seeks to raise 500 million at a 14 billion valuation, said the outlet. Samsung was early to bring AI features to its devices, claiming the Galaxy S24 series was the "first AI phone."


Everything we expect from WWDC 2025: an iOS overhaul, Apple Intelligence, and macOS

Mashable

Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference is nearly here, and that means you can expect big updates from the tech giant. In 2023, the company pulled back the curtain on the Vision Pro. A year later, Apple Intelligence made its debut. Now, all eyes are on what's next. So far, WWDC 2025 rumors point to one clear headline: major iOS updates.


Ukraine's surprise attack shows it may take a 'major drone strike' to change US defense policy, experts say

FOX News

Ukraine's surprise Sunday attack on Russian offensive weapons caches may be a good time for the U.S. to reflect on its own weaknesses, should one of its adversaries attempt a similar strike. Col. Seth Krummrich, a retired Army Special Forces commander and vice president at the Virginia-based security firm Global Guardian, warned that the U.S. remains vulnerable to drone attacks. "Interestingly, it is not a technological gap, it is a policy/authority process to engage and deny drone attacks," Krummrich said. "I assess it will take a major drone strike in the U.S. to change policy." Even civilian operations have a tough time getting approval for drone-interception-authority protections, the NFL excepted, he said.


Perplexity AI coming soon to these Samsung devices - report

ZDNet

Samsung has been offering its mobile customers a robust selection of Galaxy AI features via integration with Google Gemini. A deal with Perplexity AI may soon expand the AI features on Samsung devices. On Sunday, Bloomberg published a report informed by persons close to the matter about a wide-ranging deal between Samsung and AI startup Perplexity AI, which would preload Perplexity's app and assistant on future Samsung devices. Perplexity's AI search engine would also be plugged into the Samsung web browser, giving users easy access to AI-powered browsing. Also: How much energy does AI really use?