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Pixel Envy

U.K. Competition Authority Proposes Restrictions on Apple’s Anti-Steering Rules – Pixel Envy Australian Competition Authority Accuses Amazon of Avaricious Contracts – Pixel Envy Australia Pledges Tougher Enforcement of Social Media Ban for Teens – Pixel Envy The Claude Aesthetic – Pixel Envy The Real Problem the Metaverse Set Out to Solve – Pixel Envy Mark Zuckerberg Makes Another Sartorial Pivot – Pixel Envy Jason Snell Ends His Macworld Column – Pixel Envy Two More Things About Apple’s Pricing Increases – Pixel Envy Om Malik Has Died – Pixel Envy Apple’s Price Increases Have Arrived – Pixel Envy Meta Suspends Internal Surveillance Tech After Sensitive Information Was Left Unsecured – Pixel Envy Bill C–22 Could Expose Canadian Data to U.S. Surveillance – Pixel Envy How the New York Times Changed Its Coverage of Trans People – Pixel Envy The Deadly Rise of Giant Trucks – Pixel Envy Meta Is Moving Fast, Breaking Things (and People) – Pixel Envy Brazil Becomes the Latest Region Mandating More Competitive iPhone and iPad App Distribution – Pixel Envy Apple Announces Forthcoming Price Increases – Pixel Envy Every Frame Perfect – Pixel Envy iCloud’s ‘Hide My Email’ Feature Becomes Easier to Block – Pixel Envy Credit Where Credit Is Due Looking Back on Twenty Years of Intel Macs – Pixel Envy Apple’s List of Features Coming in Safari 27 – Pixel Envy Social Media Policy Is Evolving Beyond Age Limits – Pixel Envy Bill C–34 Punts Key Decisions to Cabinet and a Commission That Does Not Yet Exist – Pixel Envy YouTube Ad Blocker for Safari – Pixel Envy No Privacy Impact Assessment Was Conducted of Grok Imagine Until After Launch, Finds Canadian Privacy Commissioner – Pixel Envy Elon Musk’s Age of Impunity – Pixel Envy Siri Takes on Siri, Now Old Enough to Drive Siri A.I. Will Not Be Available on E.U. iPhones and iPads At Launch – Pixel Envy The Verge Liveblogged a Technical Q&A With Craig Federighi and Others – Pixel Envy Alberta Separatism and Monetized ‘Content’ on Social Media – Pixel Envy Small OS27 Details From WWDC – Pixel Envy Meta Says A.I.-assisted Account Hijackings Began in April – Pixel Envy Meta Removes Code It Added to Support Facial Recognition Feature That ‘Does Not Exist’ – Pixel Envy Effortlessly Block Ads on Your iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV – Pixel Envy Sanctioned Russian Bank VTB Sneaked an App Into the App Store – Pixel Envy Documents Show Social Media Companies Specifically Marketed to Schoolchildren – Pixel Envy Not-Yet-Enabled Code Added to Meta A.I. App for Glasses-Based Facial Recognition Feature – Pixel Envy Office 2019 for Mac Goes Read-Only in July – Pixel Envy Powerful A.I. Super PACs Duel Over U.S. Midterm Elections – Pixel Envy The Meta A.I.-Powered Instagram Account Takeover Problem Gets Worse – Pixel Envy Bill Gates’s Carefully Manicured Image Is Cracking – Pixel Envy Meta A.I. Support Bot Meets Robert Hackerman, the County Password Inspector – Pixel Envy Meta Legal Action Forces Sarah Wynn-Williams to Sit Onstage in Silence – Pixel Envy The Effects of Another Ad in iOS App Store Search – Pixel Envy Checking in on Some Pro-Hate-Speech Social Networks – Pixel Envy Iris, a Photo History Explorer – Pixel Envy Last.fm Announces It Has Gone Independent – Pixel Envy The Mythical App Store Reviewer Month – Pixel Envy FTC Settles With Cox Media Group and Two Others Who Lied About Using Device Microphones to Collect Ad Targeting Data – Pixel Envy Texas Attorney General Sues Meta, Claiming It Is Lying About WhatsApp’s End-to-End Encryption – Pixel Envy ‘How Deepfakes Tore a High School Apart’ – Pixel Envy Ontario Police Are Fighting to Keep Their Spyware Secret – Pixel Envy The Metaverse Fever Dream Meta Secured Over $3 Billion in Tax Breaks in Louisiana to Build a Data Centre – Pixel Envy Bill C–22 Can Be Corrected – Pixel Envy Rich Guy Quote Journalism – Pixel Envy Separate Lawsuits Claim OpenAI and Perplexity Are Sharing User Data With Third Parties for Targeted Advertising – Pixel Envy Signal Warns It Would Pull Out of Canada if Made to Comply With Bill C–22 – Pixel Envy We Are All Swimming in A.I. Murk – Pixel Envy Aaron Vegh and Ben McCarthy Launch Indigo – Pixel Envy The New York Times Published an A.I.-Fabricated Quote Attributed to Pierre Poilievre – Pixel Envy In a Privacy Improvement, Venmo Transactions Will Be Visible to Friends by Default – Pixel Envy
The Marketplace of Ideas Is Rigged When It Comes to Artificial Intelligence – Pixel Envy
Nick Heer · 2026-06-30 · via Pixel Envy

Terrence O’Brien, the Verge:

But this isn’t some fluke, or temporary supply chain problem. Companies are choosing data center clients over ordinary buyers because “the same chip earns far more inside an AI server than inside a consumer device,” according to Srikanth Jagabathula, professor of technology, operations, and statistics at the NYU Stern School of Business. Regardless of whether people are clamoring for more AI, and more AI data centers, or not.

O’Brien frames this question around the recent Apple price increases, but this observation can be generalized in a way that does not require tackling the question of whether the company’s extraordinary margins should cushion its customers against increasing costs. If someone wants to go out and buy a computer right now, they are going to be paying through the nose for any spec above the entry-level. Even if they want to buy a relatively “thin” client, it still needs plenty of RAM — in part because local models need it, itself a part of this issue.

There is, therefore, no way to opt out of this technological push when buying something new. That makes sense if you think of the family of artificial intelligence technologies as a feature, not a product. But it does mean we all end up paying for this explosive market regardless of whether we think any of this is a prudent, sensible, or ethical technology.

Kif Leswing, CNBC:

But while tech giants like Apple and Microsoft, which both announced price hikes this week, have a hefty cash cushion, supply chain leverage and customers numbering in the millions or billions, a much wider swath of businesses face potentially dire straits. Most consumer electronics companies have little margin to spare and can’t confidently raise prices in an economy already grappling with inflationary pressures.

Luke James, Tom’s Hardware:

Samsung, SK hynix, and Micron were sued on June 25th in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, where 17 plaintiffs accuse the three memory makers of illegally coordinating to restrict DRAM supply and inflate prices that the complaint says have risen roughly 700% over four years. The class action, filed as Garciaguirre v. Samsung Electronics and assigned to Judge Noel Wise, invokes Section 1 of the Sherman Act and targets companies that together hold around 90% of the global DRAM market. Samsung and SK hynix have pleaded guilty to criminal DRAM price fixing once before, with the latter paying a $185 million fine in April 2005.

The complaint (PDF) and docket are available on CourtListener which, notably, contains a reminder that these same companies did this before.