Hackers Drive Robot Mower Over Reporter, iOS 27 Leaks, Canvas Mystery, BlackBerry Comeback
A security researcher took remote control of thousands of internet-connected robotic lawn mowers, then drove one over a reporter to prove the point. This week, John and Logan break down the Yarbo hack and what it means when cybersecurity gets physical, the iOS 27 leaks that suggest Apple is scrambling to fix Siri, the strange silence after the Canvas breach, and Chrome quietly downloading a 4GB AI model onto people's machines without asking.
Stories in this episode:
The strange silence after the Canvas breach. ShinyHunters allegedly got the Instructure data, started contacting school districts directly instead of the vendor, then the breach quietly vanished from the leak site. No dump, no countdown, just gone. The lesson: the absence of a leak does not mean the absence of damage.
iOS 27 and the Siri redemption. After a $250 million settlement over delayed Siri AI promises, Apple is reportedly rebuilding Siri into a real assistant, possibly letting models like Gemini or Claude plug into iOS. The bigger story is Apple competing against AI ecosystems, not phones.
The BlackBerry comeback. Startups like Clicks are betting people are exhausted by engagement-maximizing glass slabs. The kicker: about 45 percent of Clicks customers have never used a keyboard phone, so this is not nostalgia. It is people actively seeking less distraction.
Chrome's quiet 4GB AI download. Google has been dropping Gemini Nano into Chrome profile folders without clear consent, and reinstalling it if you delete it. The backlash is about consent and ownership, not the AI.
Plus the Yarbo story in full, where the emergency stop could potentially be overridden remotely, and why the Internet of Things just became the Internet of Blades.
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