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High school’s AI security system confuses Doritos bag for a possible firearm

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A high school student in Baltimore County, Maryland was reportedly handcuffed and searched after an AI security system flagged his bag of chips as a possible firearm.

Taki Allen, a student at Kenwood High School, told CNN affiliate WBAL, “I was just holding a Doritos bag — it was two hands and one finger out, and they said it looked like a gun.” But as a result, Allen said, “They made me get on my knees, put my hands behind my back, and cuffed me.” 

In a statement shared with parents, Principal Katie Smith said the school’s security department had reviewed and canceled a gun detection alert, while Smith (who didn’t immediately realize the alert had been canceled) reported the situation to the school resource officer, who called the local police.

Omnilert, the company that operates the AI gun detection system, told CNN, “We regret that this incident occurred and wish to convey our concern to the student and the wider community affected by the events that followed.” Nonetheless, Omnilert said “the process functioned as intended.”



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Superhero workplace comedy, more powerwashing and other new indie games worth checking out

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Welcome to our latest roundup of what’s going on in the indie game space. It’s been a packed week with lots of tasty new games arriving, and news and reveals of upcoming projects. So, let’s take a look at a bunch of them.

Before we get started though, Engadget senior editor Jessica Conditt spoke with Maxi Boch, one of the core trio behind Baby Steps, about how the game came together. Boch offered some fascinating insights into the game’s development process (which started in 2019), especially on the audio side.

New releases

Dispatch is a superhero workplace comedy from AdHoc Studio, a team that includes former Telltale Games developers. It adopts the narrative-heavy, dialogue-driven gameplay of Telltale’s games, with your choices having a bearing on how everything plays out. Dispatch has a packed cast as well, as it includes the likes of Aaron Paul, Laura Bailey and Jeffrey Wright.

I really dug the demo, so I’m hoping to carve out some time to play Dispatch soon. As with many of Telltale’s games, AdHoc Studio went with an episodic approach for this one, but the developer is releasing them on a weekly basis. The first two episodes of Dispatch are out now on PS5 and Steam, and reviewers’ impressions so far are generally positive.

We’ve got a trio of titles that just hit Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass to talk about, including PowerWash Simulator 2. I don’t typically listen to music or podcasts while I’m playing games. I prefer to listen to the game audio and I’m a terrible multitasker, anyway.

However, I did catch up on a bunch of podcast episodes while playing the original PowerWash Simulator. I’m looking forward to doing that once again while blissfully ignoring IRL chores as I blast away virtual gunk with a pressure washer.

“More of the same, but better” is exactly what I wanted from PowerWash Simulator 2, so I was very glad to read some reviews indicating that’s the case. As well as Xbox Series X/S, this sequel from FuturLab is also available on Steam, Epic Games Store, PlayStation 5 and Nintendo Switch 2.

Next up, we have a surprise Game Pass addition as Pacific Drive arrived on the Ultimate, Premium and PC tiers without prior warning this week. It wasn’t available on Xbox at all until now. Pacific Drive turns the title of Netflix’s F1 docuseries into an actual “drive to survive” horror game. You’ll roam the Pacific Northwest in a station wagon to search for parts to upgrade your vehicle and stay alive.

Ironwood Studios and publisher Kepler Interactive brought Pacific Drive to Xbox on the same day they released an expansion called Whispers in the Woods. The game (and DLC) is also available on PS5 and Steam. I’ve been meaning to play Pacific Drive for a while but, as always, there are too many games and not enough time to check everything out. Perhaps I’ll finally try this now that it’s on Game Pass, but I might just end up waiting for the TV show instead.

Here’s something interesting from DinoGod and publisher Annapurna Interactive. Bounty Star is a blend of mech action game, farming sim and base builder. As war veteran Clem, you’ll try to become a force for good in a “post-post-apocalyptic version of the American Southwest.”

I’m interested to see how the core aspects of Bounty Star play off each other as you take care of your homestead and hunt down bounties in your mech (which you can customize). It’s out now on PS5, Xbox Series X/S, Steam and Epic Games Store. Bounty Star is on Game Pass Ultimate and PC Game Pass too.

Ila: A Frosty Glide is a chill, 3D platform adventure from Magic Rain Studios and publisher First Break Labs. As a young witch-in-training named Ila, you’ll explore a snowy mountainous island while searching for your missing cat.

My favorite thing about the game, at least based on the trailer and what I’ve read, is that instead of a broom, Ila uses a “skatebroom” to get around. It’s a skateboard and a flying broomstick in one! I’d like one of those.

As it happens, developers Ítalo and Yesenia met while skateboarding. They started making games with skateboarding elements a few years later. Ila: A Frosty Glide is out now on Steam, Epic Games Store, Xbox Series X/S, PS5 and Nintendo Switch.

After reading one sentence of a pitch for The Bench, I was sold: “In The Bench, you played as a retired secret agent on one last mission: escaping the retirement home and unfolding a pigeon conspiracy.” Wonderful stuff, there.

As said pensioner, you’ll amass a flock of customizable pigeons to help you during your adventure as you explore some parks. Along the way, you’ll solve puzzles, play bowls and chess, doodle in your notebook, play pranks and go fishing.

The Bench — from Voxel Studios and Noovola Publishing — is out now on Steam. I hope I don’t have to wait until I’m retired to have time to play it.

Upcoming

No More Robots unveiled two games this week, and one of them is a step in an (almost) entirely new direction for the publisher of Descenders Next and Little Rocket Lab. It’s now making games internally, and the first one to see the light of day is Cruise Control. This is a cruise liner management sim in which you’ll try to make your guests happy by fulfilling their needs and wants. It looks quite charming. I’m a big fan of the oversized bingo cage device.

This is actually the third game No More Robots has worked on in-house, but it’s the first one that the company has unveiled. The publisher noted that Cruise Control isn’t quite ready. Still, playtests should start later this year ahead of an early 2026 release.

The other upcoming game No More Robots showed off is Thank You For Your Application from IceLemonTea Studio. Here, you’ll review job candidates’ resumes and make decisions whether to bring them on board based on the hiring company’s criteria.

This has an air of Papers, Please and No More Robots’ own Not Tonight series about it — you’ll have to deal with bills, rent and otherwise managing your life too. It also seems quite timely given that the job application process is now so onerous for many people. Thank You For Your Application will arrive in 2026 and there’s a demo available on Steam now.

Finite Reflection Studios, the developer of last year’s acclaimed Void Sols, has revealed its next game. Mouseward is another Soulslike, but it’s one in the vein of ’90s collectathon platformers like Banjo-Kazooie. As a reincarnated Royal Mouse Guard, you set out to save the kingdom from a curse.

I love the aesthetic here. There’s no release window for Mouseward as yet. It’s coming to Steam and you can play an early build on Itch right now.

Speaking of games inspired by ’90s platformers, there’s danger that Windswept could become my entire personality for a spell. It’s coming to Steam, Nintendo Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S on November 11.

Windswept — from WeatherFell and publisher Top Hat Studios — is a precision platformer which sees animal buddies Marbles (a duck) and Checkers (a turtle) trying to get back home after a storm whisks them away. The 40-plus stages are full of collectibles and have secrets for you to discover.

The glimpses of levels where you have to navigate sticky walls and ceilings, thorny brambles and pirate ship masts are very reminiscent of Donkey Kong Country 2. I’m not exactly complaining though, as that’s one of my favorite games of all time.

We’ve known for a while that a beat-’em-up based on the splatterfest movie series Terrifier was on the way and now we have a release date. Unfortunately, it’s not coming your way in time for Halloween, but you will be able to gingerly set foot into Terrifier: The ARTcade Game on November 21.

Yes, yes, even Art the Clown is in Fortnite now, but you can also play as the brutal killer in his own game from Relevo and publisher Selecta Play. There’s support for local co-op for up to four players (and you can turn on each other, if you like. Terrifier fans will probably be pleased that they can use weapons like chainsaws and cleavers to cause bloody carnage. Terrifier: The ARTcade Game is bound for Steam, PS5, Xbox Series X/S and Nintendo Switch.



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What you get with Google AI Pro and AI Ultra [October 2025]

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At I/O 2025, Google One AI Premium (and Gemini Advanced) became “Google AI Pro,” while a higher, more expensive tier was introduced with “Google AI Ultra.”

Updated 10/25

Google AI Pro 

AI Pro is simply a rebrand that drops the explicit “Google One” connection, while being a bit snappier and shorter than “AI Premium.” In the US, it remains available for $19.99 per month.

[Updated] Gemini app 

In the Gemini app, you get “expanded” versus “limited” (on the free tier) access to: 

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  • 2.5 Pro (100 prompts / day)
  • Image generation and editing (1,000 images / day)
  • Veo 3.1 Fast (3 videos / day)
  • Deep Research with 2.5 Pro (20 reports / day)
  • Audio Overviews (20 audio overviews / day)
  • Scheduled actions (10 active actions at a time)
  • Spreadsheet and code analysis

There’s also the 1 million token context window, which is equivalent to 1,500 pages of text or 30,000 lines of code. In comparison, free users get a 32K context window (“around 50 pages of text”).

Gemini in Google Workspace 

The Gemini side panel and other inline features are available in: Gmail, Google Drive, Docs, Sheets, Slides, Meet, and Chat. 

You also get access to Google Vids. This AI-powered video creation app lets you create, write, produce, edit, collaborate, and share videos. It’s catered towards more presentation-style videos in school or business contexts, but there are personal use cases. Specific capabilities include adding:

  • Stock images
  • GIFs
  • Video clips
  • Stickers
  • Music
  • Sound effects
  • Self recording
  • Screen record with narration
  • Screen record with video recording
  • Voiceover through the Vids recording studio

Gemini in Chrome

More

[Updated] Google Search AI Mode

AI Pro subscribers can access Gemini 2.5 Pro for more complex “Reasoning, math & code” searches. In the top-left corner, “AI Mode” is now a dropdown menu, with the “Default” model providing “Fast all-around help.”

On the web, you can access the model picker before you submit a prompt. At the moment, google.com/aimode is also where you can access Deep Search, which is powered by 2.5 Pro, to “ask more sophisticated queries and get back longer, more detailed responses.” Like Gemini’s Deep Research, responses take a few minutes. Google is performing “hundreds of searches” and reason “across disparate pieces of information” to generate a “comprehensive, fully-cited report.” Google can ask you for more details before starting the process.

You also get the “Highest” level of Nano Banana image generation and editing, while there’s AI-powered calling for local business pricing.

[New] Google Home Premium

Google Home Premium Standard was previously Nest Aware and an additional $10/month. You get:

  • Gemini Live: Will be available on the Nest Mini, Nest Hub Max, Nest Audio, and 2nd-gen Nest Hub.
  • 30 days of event-based video history
  • Intelligent alerts: Familiar faces, garage door detection, package detection, smoke & CO alarm
  • Automation creation: With Ask Home and Help me create, you can create automations using natural language prompts.
  • Saved information: You can have Ask Home remember things about your household to personalize your experience.

Google Home Premium Advanced can be purchased for $10 more as an add-on.

[New] Google Photos

From the Create tab, you get Higher remix generations and photo-to-video generations (versus Limited for free users).

NotebookLM

The paid tier for Google’s research tool was previously called NotebookLM Plus. Like in the Gemini app, you now see a “Pro” badge next to your profile image in the top-right corner. Google AI Pro provides:

  • 5x more Audio Overviews: 20 per day (versus 3 on free)
  • Have up to 500 notebooks (vs. 100)
  • Add 300 sources per notebook (vs. 50)
  • Start 500 chat queries per day (vs. 50)
  • Sharing “Chat-only” notebook
  • Advanced chat settings: Preferred response style, like Guide, Analyst, or custom
  • Notebook analytics

2 TB of Google One storage 

This can be used for Gmail, Drive, and Photos. The standalone storage cost is $9.99 per month. 

[New] Jules + Gemini Code Assist + Gemini CLI

Jules is Google’s asynchronous coding agent. AI Pro subscribers get 5x higher limits (versus free users). It’s “ideal for daily coding.” You also get higher daily model requests for Gemini Code Assist and Gemini CLI.

Whisk Animate

This Google Labs experiment was announced in 2024 where images of a subject, scene, and style are used as prompts. The Whisk Animate feature uses Veo to turn images into short videos.

Flow 

At I/O 2025, Google announced Flow as an AI filmmaking suite for video creation and editing. It offers features like: Text to video, Ingredients to video, and Frames to video.

1,000 AI Credits per month 

With this new plan, Google has introduced the concept of AI Credits that apply to Whisk and Flow. Refer to the following table:

The AI Credit costs below are per generation, not per request. Some product features will create multiple generations per request. For example, in Flow, a single request may generate 2 videos.]

AI Pro subscribers can now buy “top-up AI Credits” at the following rates. They are valid for 12 months, with this ability previously just for the AI Ultra tier.

Top-up amount (USD) AI Credits
$25 2,500
$50 5,000
$200 20,000

Google AI Ultra 

AI Ultra is also available in 150+ countries. It costs $249.99 per month in the US.

Whisk + Flow + 12,500 AI Credits per month

[Updated] Gemini app

  • 2.5 Pro (500 prompts / day)
  • Veo 3.1 (5 videos / day)
  • Deep Research with 2.5 Pro (200 reports / day)
  • Deep Think (10 prompts / day with a 192,00 token context window)

Agent Mode takes advantage of Project Mariner to “manage complex, multi-step tasks from start to finish with minimal oversight from you.” It will “soon” be available on desktop.

[New] Google Home Premium Advanced

Replacing Nest Aware Plus, you get:

  • 60 days of event-based video history
  • 10 days of 24/7 video history
  • AI descriptions provide more detailed long descriptions of camera events.
  • AI notifications provide short versions of AI descriptions within camera event notifications.
  • Home Brief an overview of what happened at home each day.
  • Ask Home video history search

[New] Google Photos

From the Create tab, you get the Highest level of remix generations and photo-to-video generations.

[New] Jules + Gemini Code Assist + Gemini CLI

Jules in Google AI Ultra gives you 20x higher limits “for intensive, multi-agent workflows at scale.” You get the highest daily model requests for Gemini Code Assist and Gemini CLI.

NotebookLM

“Later in 2025,” Google is teasing the “highest limits and best model capabilities” in NotebookLM with AI Ultra. 

30 TB of Storage 

This otherwise costs $149.99 per month.

YouTube Premium 

The Individual plan costs $13.99 per month.

Project Mariner

This research prototype for browser agents lets you perform 10 tasks simultaneously. Example use cases include research, shopping, and booking travel. 

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Throw away: FDA issues Class 1 recall of nearly 5 million pounds of chicken

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In an immense product recall involving nearly 5 million pounds of food, Hormel Foods Corporation is recalling ready-to-eat frozen chicken products that may have been contaminated with metal.

The Federal Department of Agriculture (FDA) issued the recall as a Class I recall — the agency’s most severe level. That indicates a situation where there is a reasonable probability that consumption of the product will cause “serious adverse health consequences or death.”

The products, which include Hormel Fire Braised Meats chicken thigh and breast meat, as well as boneless chicken breast with rib meat, may contain metal.

“The problem was discovered after the establishment received multiple complaints from foodservice customers finding metal in their frozen chicken breast and chicken thigh products,” the recall notice states.

“Hormel Foods determined that the metal originated from the conveyor belt used in production,” the notice continues, adding that there have been no confirmed reports of injury from consuming the products.

Federal agents are concerned the product may be in the freezers of hotels, restaurants and institutions. Those who have the products are encouraged to throw them away and not serve the product.

For the full list of contaminated products, click here.

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June Lockhart, who portrayed the mother in ‘Lassie,’ dies : NPR

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June Lockhart, right, played the character of Ruth Martin, mother of Timmy Martin, played by Jon Provost, left, during the classic series "Lassie." The two are seen with Lassie, 9th generation, during a 2003 CBS anniversary celebration in New York.

June Lockhart, right, played the character of Ruth Martin, mother of Timmy Martin, played by Jon Provost, left, during the classic series “Lassie.” The two are seen with Lassie, 9th generation, during a 2003 CBS anniversary celebration in New York.

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LOS ANGELES — June Lockhart, who became a mother figure for a generation of television viewers whether at home in “Lassie” or up in the stratosphere in “Lost In Space,” has died. She was 100.

Lockhart died Thursday of natural causes at her home in Santa Monica, family spokesman Lyle Gregory, a friend of 40 years, said Saturday.

“She was very happy up until the very end, reading the New York Times and LA Times everyday,” he said. “It was very important to her to stay focused on the news of the day.”

The daughter of prolific character actor Gene Lockhart, Lockhart was cast frequently in ingenue roles as a young film actor. Television made her a star.

From 1958 to 1964, she portrayed Ruth Martin, who raised the orphaned Timmy (Jon Provost), in the popular CBS series “Lassie.” From 1965 to 1968, she traveled aboard the spaceship Jupiter II as mother to the Robinson family in the campy CBS adventure “Lost in Space.”

Her portrayals of warm, compassionate mothers endeared her to young viewers, and decades later baby boomers flocked to nostalgia conventions to meet Lockhart and buy her autographed photos.

Offscreen, Lockhart insisted, she was nothing like the women she portrayed.

“I must quote Dan Rather,” she said in a 1994 interview. “I can control my reputation, but not my image, because my image is how you see me.

“I love rock ‘n’ roll and going to the concerts. I have driven Army tanks and flown in hot air balloons. And I go plane-gliding — the ones with no motors. I do a lot of things that don’t go with my image.”

Early in her career, Lockhart appeared in numerous films. Among them: “All This and Heaven Too,” “Adam Had Four Sons,” “Sergeant York,” “Miss Annie Rooney,” “Forever and a Day” and “Meet Me in St. Louis.”

She also made “Son of Lassie,” the 1945 sequel to “Lassie, Come Home,” playing the grown-up version of the role created by Elizabeth Taylor.

New life on television

When her movie career as an adult faltered, Lockhart shifted to television, appearing in live drama from New York and game and talk shows. She was the third actress to play the female lead in “Lassie” on TV, following Jan Clayton and Cloris Leachman. (Provost had replaced the show’s original child star, Tommy Rettig, in 1957.)

Lockhart spoke frankly about her canine co-star. In the first place, she said in 1989, Lassie was a laddie, because male collies “are bigger, the ruff is bigger, they’re more imposing looking.”

She added: “I worked with four Lassies. There was only one main Lassie at a time. Then there was a dog that did the running, a dog that did the fighting, and a dog that was a stand-in, because only humans can work 14 hours a day without needing a nap.

“Lassie was not especially friendly with anybody. Lassie was wholly concentrated on the trainers.”

After six years in the rural setting of “Lassie,” Lockhart moved to outer space, embarking on the role of Maureen Robinson, the wise, reassuring mother of a family that departs on a five-year flight to a faraway planet in “Lost in Space.”

After their mission is sabotaged by a fellow passenger, the nefarious Dr. Zachary Smith (Jonathan Harris), the party bounces from planet to planet, encountering weird creatures and near-disasters that required viewers to tune in the following week to learn of the escape. Throughout the three-year run, Mrs. Robinson offered consolation and a slice of her “space pie.”

As with “Lassie,” Lockhart enjoyed working on “Lost in Space”: “It was like going to work at Disneyland every day.”

In 1968, Lockhart joined the cast of “Petticoat Junction” for the rural comedy’s last two seasons, playing Dr. Janet Craig. The original star, Bea Benaderet, had been diagnosed with cancer and died, also in 1968.

A little bit of everything

Lockhart remained active long after “Lost in Space,” appearing often in episodic television as well as in recurring roles in the daytime soap opera “General Hospital” and nighttime soaps, “Knots Landing” and “The Colbys.” Her film credits included “The Remake” and the animated “Bongee Bear and the Kingdom of Rhythm,” for which she provided the voice for Mindy the Owl.

She also used her own media pass to attend presidential news conferences, narrated beauty pageants and holiday parades, appeared in B pictures and toured in the plays “Steel Magnolias,” “Bedroom Farce” and “Once More with Feeling.”

“Her true passion was journalism,” Gregory said. “She loved going to the White House briefing rooms.”

Lockhart liked to tell the story of how her parents met, saying they were hired separately for a touring production sponsored by inventor Thomas A. Edison and decided on marriage during a stop at Lake Louise, Alberta.

Their daughter was born June 25, 1925, in New York City. The family moved to Hollywood 10 years later, and Gene Lockhart worked steadily as a character actor, usually in avuncular roles, sometimes as a villain. His wife, Kathleen, often appeared with him.

Young June made her stage debut at 8, dancing in a children’s ballet at the Metropolitan Opera House. Her first film appearance was a small role in the 1938 “A Christmas Carol,” playing the daughter of Bob Cratchit and his wife, who were played by her parents.

She was married and divorced twice: to John Maloney, a physician, father of her daughters Anne Kathleen and June Elizabeth; and architect John C. Lindsay.

Throughout her later career, Lockhart was connected in the public mind with “Lassie.”

Even though she sometimes mocked the show, she conceded: “How wonderful that in a career there is one role for which you are known. Many actors work all their lives and never have one part that is really theirs.”



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OpenAI reportedly developing new generative music tool

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OpenAI is working on a new tool that would generate music based on text and audio prompts, according to a report in The Information.

Such a tool could be used to add music to existing videos, or to add guitar accompaniment to an existing vocal track, sources said. It’s not clear when OpenAI plans to launch such a tool or whether it would be available as a standalone product (as opposed to integrating with OpenAI’s ChatGPT and video app Sora).

One source told The Information that OpenAI is working with some students from the Juilliard School to annotate scores as a way to provide training data.

While OpenAI has launched generative music models in the past, they predate the launch of ChatGPT; more recently, the company has been developing audio models focused on text-to-speech and speech-to-text. Other companies with generative music models include Google and Suno.

TechCrunch has reached out to OpenAI for comment.



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How to cancel your Spotify subscription

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Spotify recently came under fire for running recruitment ads for ICE, which ask users to “join the mission to protect America” and to “fulfill [their] mission,” in the US. Despite music labels calling on the streaming service to stop serving ICE recruitment ads, Spotify doubled down. A spokesperson for the company told The Independent that the ads are “part of a broad campaign” by the US government running across different channels and that they do not violate its policies. The spokesperson advised users to just mark ads with a thumbs up or down so that the app can learn their preferences.

In addition, several artists have pulled their music from Spotify recently over its CEO’s, Daniel EK’s, investments in European defense tech firm Helsing. The defense company builds drones, aircraft and submarines, and it also sells AI software that can analyze sensor and weapons data from battlefields. Spotify has been facing backlash for its payout rates, which artists argue are unfair and lower than what other services pay, over the past few years as well.

So if you want to cancel Spotify, whether for any those reasons or another one altogether, you can follow the instructions below.

How to cancel via web:

1. Log into your Spotify account in your browser.

2. Go to Account in the dropdown menu that shows up when you click on your Profile.

3. Find Cancel Subscription under the Subscription section.

4. Spotify will tell you that you’ll hear ads every 15 minutes on a free account, along with the date when your premium access will end. Click “Continue to cancel” at the bottom of the screen.

If you’re on mobile, make sure to request the desktop site after you log into your account on your mobile browser. Take note that if you’re part of a Spotify Family or Duo plan, only the plan manager will be able to cancel your subscription altogether. If you follow the same steps above as a member, you’ll only remove your account from the plan, but the manager will continue paying for it.

How to cancel via third-party provider:

If you pay for your subscription through third-party providers, you can follow these instructions instead.

Cancel via Google

1. Fire up the Google Play app and tap on the icon for the account you use.

2. Go to Payments & subscriptions.

3. Tap on Subscriptions.

4. Find Spotify among your subscriptions and tap on it.

5. Tap on Cancel Subscription at the bottom of the screen, select a reason for cancellation and confirm it.

Cancel via Apple

1. Go to Settings in your iPhone or iPad.

2. Tap on your name and go to Subscriptions.

3. Find Spotify and go through the cancellation process.

Cancel via carrier

Instructions for this may vary, depending on your carrier. Generally, however, you can follow these steps.

1. Log into your carrier account on its website.

2. Find the option to manage your subscriptions under your account.

3. Find Spotify and go through the cancellation process.

What happens after you cancel

You’ll still have access to Spotify’s premium features until your next billing cycle begins. That means you still won’t encounter ads and will have access to offline downloads, as well as unlimited skips and higher audio quality. You’ll be able to access your Spotify library even with a free account, but if you want to find another streaming service to pay for, you can check Engadget’s list of best music streaming services in 2025.



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Is Android XR a vision into the future?

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Welcome to episode 75 of Pixelated, a podcast by 9to5Google. This week, we dive into the long-awaited launch of Galaxy XR, the realized name for Project Moohan and our first glimpse at a real Android XR product. But what spot can Google and Samsung claim in a market that hasn’t shown much demand yet for premium hardware? And is the future of Android XR other third-party headsets, or is this a stopgap on the way to glasses? Abner, Damien, and Will try to make sense for this vision of wearable computing.

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Drop us a line at gtips@9to5g.com, leave a comment on the post, or reach out to our producer.

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Police identify 18-year-old who died in Plymouth car crash that injured 2 others

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The 18-year-old teenager who died after being involved in a head-on crash that injured two others in Plymouth Friday morning, was identified as Matthew Wilson, Plymouth County District Attorney Timothy J Cruz’s office announced.

Police, firefighters and EMS personnel responded to 129 State Road at around 8:29 a.m. after receiving a 911 call reporting a “serious motor vehicle crash” involving two vehicles, the district attorney’s office wrote.

While on scene, officials found a 2025 white Honda Civic driven by Wilson, that had collided head-on with a 2020 gray Jeep Grand Cherokee, statement reads.

A preliminary investigation determined that Wilson lost control of his Honda, crossed the solid double line and struck the Jeep head-on.

Wilson was unresponsive and trapped in the driver’s seat of his car. He was extracted by firefighters and driven to Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital in Plymouth, where he died, Cruz’s office said.

A 16-year-old riding as passenger in the Honda and the woman driving the Jeep were injured and driven to South Shore Hospital for treatment.

The crash is under investigation by Massachusetts State Police detectives assigned to the Plymouth County District Attorney’s Office, the state police Collision Analysis & Reconstruction Section (CARS) and Plymouth police.

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Musk’s ad chief at X departs after just 10 months

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John Nitti has left his position as X’s advertising chief after just ten months, reports the Financial Times.

Nitti, who joined as global head of revenue operations and advertising innovation, was considered a potential successor to former CEO Linda Yaccarino, who resigned in July. His exit adds to a string of high-level departures from Elon Musk’s increasingly turbulent executive suite. Among others, X’s CFO Mahmoud Reza Banki left in October after less than a year, while xAI’s CFO and general counsel both departed over the summer.

The revolving door reportedly reflects deeper tensions. Sources tell the FT that execs have grown frustrated with Musk’s abrupt strategy shifts and unilateral decision-making, including banning hashtags from advertising without discussing the move first with his own advertising team.

The pressure on advertising leadership has grown as Musk funnels billions into AI development to compete with OpenAI and DeepMind. While some brands have returned after being told by Musk in late 2023 to “go fuck yourself” and xAI has secured partnerships with companies like Disney, others privately complain of feeling forced to advertise after X sued brands including Shell and Pinterest for alleged boycotts.

Before joining X, Nitti had spent roughly nine years with Verizon and another long stretch with American Express.



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