
IDC: Apple playing it safe on software
Francisco Jeronimo, VP, Data and Analytics from IDC EMEA, joins CNBC's Dan Murphy on Access Middle East to discuss key takeaways from Apple's WWDC 2025.

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New York Times
43 minutes ago
- New York Times
Big Tech Is Finally Losing
It's easy to miss it amid the nonstop avalanche of news, but we are on the cusp of a technology revolution — one that could usher in an entirely new information landscape. After 30 years of shockingly few regulatory restraints, America's tech giants were beginning to operate almost like wrecking balls, slamming their weight into industry after industry and taking them out one after another. Boom. Uber crushed the taxi limousine business. Boom. Facebook toppled the news business. Boom. Amazon wiped out numerous small retailers. Finally, our courts are beginning to push back. In the past two months, courts have forced Apple to end its usurious tax on purchases made through apps on its phones, ruled that Google had abused its online ad monopoly and considered what consequences to impose on Google for what they concluded was an illegal dominance of the search market. A court has heard arguments about why Meta, which runs Facebook, should be forced to spin off popular rivals Instagram and WhatsApp, and allowed a case to proceed that alleges Amazon has abused its monopoly. Reining in Big Tech appears to be one of the few bipartisan policies that has spanned the Biden and Trump administrations, despite the tech titans' attempts to curry favor with the new president. Taken together, these developments could end years of stagnation and usher in more competition, smaller companies and better services. I personally can't wait for competition in the search market — as Google results have been getting worse, by many estimates, including my own. I'm tired of sifting through Google's increasingly cluttered and irrelevant search results, searching in vain for the latest news and instead finding only Reddit posts. I want a search engine for shopping that trawls the web for the best merchandise rather than just pulling from the sites that list items with Google. I want a search engine that doesn't allow ads to masquerade as reviews. I want a search engine that lets me control the amount of artificial intelligence summaries in my results. And there are probably even cooler search products that a new generation of search entrepreneurs will dream up. Google argues that A.I. search engines like Perplexity are already providing competition in the market. That is a mirage. As the judge in the Google antitrust case has described, none of Google's rivals can compete with it, given how much Google knows about what websites users click and stay on versus those they click and bounce from. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
Apple Warns Looters With Stolen iPhones: We Will Track You
Apple Store looted in LA In the aftermath of the looting that followed LA's anti-ICE riots this week, there's a nasty surprise for those that saw the opportunity to steal iPhones from Apple's store. As seen some years ago when Apple was also targeted, that's a dangerous mistake. iPhones on display in Apple's stores are locked and protected. Looters are greeted with an on-screen warning: 'Please return to Apple Tower Theatre. This device has been disabled and is being tracked. Local authorities will be alerted.' We saw the same in 2020, when looters also took the opportunity to get hold of iPhones at a surprising 100% discount — it doesn't work as planned. But as one poster on X suggested, there might be another way. 'When the news broke they were looting Apple stores, my immediate reaction was, 'Good luck activating those.' But actually warning them that they're being tracked is dumb. Just do it.' As Mario Nawfal posted on X: 'Looters ransacked the Apple Store at Tower Theatre during downtown LA protests. They smashed glass, grabbed phones, laptops, and whatever else wasn't nailed down. But Apple doesn't play.' The display models just display that warning. 'Translation: Congratulations, you've stolen a brick that tattles.' As I reported when iPhones were looted in the cross-state U.S. riots in 2020, 'Apple operates some form of proximity software that disables a device when it is taken illegally from a store.' That mysterious threat was outed then, with the same warning. As I said at that time, 'for users who lose iPhones, Apple provides useful tips as to what to do next. But for those considering stealing one from its stores, the advice is much more simple—don't. It will not work and may lead to an unwelcome knock on the door.' You have been warned.


CNBC
an hour ago
- CNBC
If all the AI developers are in China, the China stack is going to win, Nvidia CEO tells CNBC
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang discusses the AI technology battle with CNBC's Arjun Kharpal, saying the U.S. risks losing out to China if it cuts off access to Chinese AI researchers.