Snabbit Secures $56M in Fresh Funding

Snabbit, an Indian on-demand home services startup, has raised $56 million in a new funding round, reinforcing growing investor confidence ...
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Crowded Pet Food Market Meets a New Entrant

The pet food industry is more competitive than ever, which initially made Hilary Coles skeptical about launching yet another brand. ...
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AI Notetaker Apps Expand Beyond Transcription

AI meeting notetaker platforms are evolving as simple transcription and summary features are no longer enough to sustain growth or ...
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Red Hat Engineer Launches Tank OS for OpenClaw

Red Hat principal software engineer Sally O’Malley has introduced a new open source tool called Tank OS, designed to simplify ...
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BCI Technology Moves From Sci-Fi to Reality

Brain-computer interface (BCI) technology, once considered futuristic, is now becoming a fast-growing segment of the tech industry. This innovation allows ...
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YouTube Introduces AI-Powered Interactive Search Feature
YouTube is rolling out a new AI-driven tool designed to improve how users search for content, especially for topics like ...
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Snapchat Rolls Out AI-Powered Sponsored Snaps

Snapchat has introduced a new ad format called “AI Sponsored Snaps,” enabling users to directly interact with brands through AI ...
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Lawsuit Follows Startup Sale

After selling his scholarship platform Scholly to Sallie Mae in 2023, founder Chris Gray is now taking legal action against ...
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Apple’s tighter enforcement around so-called vibe-coding apps hasn’t slowed down Lovable, which has just launched its no-code AI app builder as a mobile app on both Apple’s App Store and Google Play.

Lovable’s new app is designed for people who want to create apps quickly using AI prompts—either by typing or speaking. ...
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Australia is moving ahead with a stronger push to make major tech companies financially support journalism. On Tuesday, the government introduced draft legislation that would require platforms such as Meta, Google, and TikTok to pay news organizations for the content they distribute—or face a tax on their Australian earnings.

Communications Minister Anika Wells noted that many people now consume news directly through platforms like Facebook, TikTok, and Google, highlighting ...
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