
All eyes on Samsung's thin new foldable
This week on The Vergecast, Vee Song and Allison Johnson join me to talk all about Samsung's new foldables and smartwatches. Then, we dive into corporate shake-ups across the tech world. One of Tim Cook's possible successors is on his way out, Mark Zuckerberg is buying Meta a new AI team, X's CEO has departed (and, remind me, did anything notable happen with Grok this week?).
And finally, some big news about the Lightning Round: I've had enough of it. Instead, we've got something bold, something new, something altogether original and unheard of: the Thunder Round. And yes, we have sound effects. Lots to discuss: AI web browsers, Lorde's see-through CD, and HBO Max finally does the thing we've all been waiting for.
If you want to know more about the stories we discuss in the episode, you can check out a whole bunch of our coverage below:

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5 Ways Trump Signing the GENIUS Act Could Impact Retirees
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A New Email Scam Is Shockingly Realistic, Here's Everything You Need To Know About Protecting Yourself
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'The scammer threatened to release the video if I didn't pay them via Bitcoin.' If you get a similar email, here are the steps you can take to figure out if it's a scam so you protect yourself: Confirm the house and street imagery on Google Maps. Related: Many phishing emails are often riddled with grammatical errors and poor formatting, which make them easier to identify. However, this scam, which includes images of people's homes, is a newer, darker twist. You might be asking yourself, how exactly was the scammer able to identify your house address? According to Al Iverson, a cyber expert and industry research and community engagement lead at the software company Valimail, the sender likely found your address from a prior data breach that leaked personal data, and then used a Google Maps photo to put together an email. Beckland was able to confirm this is a scam by comparing the image in the PDF to the Google Maps street view of his house. 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