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Jack Myers
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Ben Green
This is Ben Green from the Athletic FC Podcast Marketers no matter what pitch you play on, a big win feels the same electric. It's that moment when you read the play before the trend even starts. Beat the clock on a campaign with a little help from AI and connect with customers in real time like you've trained for it your whole career. That's contentful. World class digital experiences built fast, built beautifully create and launch personalized content in an instant across every channel your customers are watching. No chaos, no limits, just open field.
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Tim Spengler
What makes a leader worth following?
Jack Myers
What should you really care about in your job? As technology is changing so quickly, is
Tim Spengler
it just gonna be about machines talking to other machines? I mean, should you quit your job and start something on your own, what would that take?
Jack Myers
What does success and risk look like when we're all at the starting gate together?
Tim Spengler
These are the questions we answer each week on Lead Human with Jack Myers and Tim Spengler.
Jack Myers
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Tim Spengler
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Sarah Lane
These are the daily tech headlines for Saturday, May 30, 2026. I'm Sarah Lane. Let's catch up on the news. Microsoft is facing backlash after threatening legal action against security researcher Nightmare Eclipse, who publicly disclosed unpatched flaws in Microsoft Defender and BitLocker along with exploit code. Microsoft said the disclosures could help attackers and warned its Digital crimes unit could coordinate with law enforcement. Nightmare Eclipse says Microsoft revoked their reporting access and left public disclosure as the only option. Some researchers say Microsoft's threats could discourage independent researchers from reporting vulnerabilities and weaken overall security. Fortune reports that Microsoft may be building a new AI super app to bring together GitHub, Copilot, Copilot Chat, Copilot, Cowork and its new agentic workflow tool Autopilot into one interface. The report also cited Alex Heath's reporting on his sources publication that a leaked screenshot points to a another proactive AI agent scout possibly being included. Led by co pilot chief Jacob Andrew, the app is reportedly meant to simplify Microsoft's fragmented Copilot lineup and improve adoption, with a launch possible in late summer. The Financial Times reports that Amazon has shut down an employee built internal AI leaderboard called Hero Rank after workers began token maxing or using AI for trivial tasks to boost usage scores and climb in the rankings. The company said rising token costs and wasteful AI use drove the decision, echoing similar pullbacks at Meta, Microsoft Salesforce and Doordash. As businesses try to rein in spending and focus on AI tools with clearer returns, AI usage continues to surge. For example, Google said recently that Gemini jumped from 480 trillion to 3.2 quadrillion monthly tokens in a year, driven by heavier use of coding agents and always on AI tools. The information obtained an internal Meta memo highlighting more work on AI wearables, including an AI pendant that can record and transcribe daily conversations, and plans to launch up to four new smart glasses models by the end of this year. Meta's Reality Labs hardware division has lost billions of dollars to date, but the new move could help drive adoption of its AI models and future subscription services like its unreleased Hatch AI Agent and a planned Wearables for Work offering. The plan for upcoming glasses models are set to span consumer and enterprise, with a goal of selling 10 million wearables in the second half of 2026. Dell shares were up nearly 33% Friday for their best day ever after the company reported its fastest revenue growth since returning to public markets and back in 2018, driven by, you guessed it, booming AI server demand. First quarter revenue jumped almost 88% year over year, while AI server sales were up 757% to $16.1 billion and earnings per share came in at $4.86, well above expectations. The results prompted analysts to sharply raise expectations for Dell. The stock is up 234% this year. SpaceX received $6.45 billion in U S Space Force contracts that was announced Friday, including $4.16 billion for satellites for a missile defense system and 2.29 billion for a low Earth orbit communications network. The deals come as SpaceX prepares for an expected IPO next month and underscore its heavy reliance on government contracts, which accounted for about one fifth of its 2025 revenue. SpaceX disclosed in its IPO filing that its government business is subject to shifting policy, funding and regulatory changes. Samsung Electronics and LG Uplus have agreed to develop Integrated Sensing and communication, or ISAC, a 6G related technology that turns mobile base stations into environmental sensors by analyzing reflected wireless signals. The system could let cell towers detect and track things like vehicles, drones and people without separate radar or LIDAR hardware, and improve network efficiency. The companies will test ISAC on existing 5G networks and later in the 7Ghz band. A key candidate spectrum for 6G commercial deployment is not expected until the early 2000-30s, but it is 2026 after all. Back on May 22, an Indian Delhi high court ruling found Google liable for trademark infringem in its keyword advertising System, saying its AdWords platform allowed competitors to bid on the Hindwear trademark to target search traffic. Hindwear makes bathroom appliances. The court rejected Google's claim it was only a passive intermediary and awarded the plaintiff three million rupees in damages. The ruling has been reignited by various other Indian founders who argue Google's practice openly lets competitors divert brand traffic. Google says it prohibits trademark use in ad text and complies with local laws. Students at ETH Zurich are developing an underwater robot that can measure lake ice from beneath the surface, allowing safer data collection in frozen alpine environments. The system is designed to support climate research by improving how scientists monitor ice conditions and track changes in lakes affected by warming temperatures.
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Sarah Lane
More analysis of the tech news of the day and the week. Subscribe to DailyTech News Show.com you can find show notes and links to all these headlines there as well. I'm Sarah Lane. Thank you for listening. Go out there and enjoy your weekend. We'll talk to you Monday.
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Capital One Sponsor
this episode is brought to you by Capital One. Capital One's tech team isn't just talking about multi agentic AI. They already deployed one. It's called Chat Concierge and it's simplifying car shopping using self reflection and layered reasoning with live API checks. It doesn't just help buyers find a car they love. It helps schedule a test drive, get pre approved for financing and estimate trade in value. Advanced, intuitive and deployed. That's how they stack. That's technology at Capital One.
Episode Title: Microsoft Faces Backlash Over Security Researcher Nightmare Eclipse Bug Disclosures
Hosts: Sarah Lane
Summary Prepared by: Podcast Summarizer AI
In this packed edition of Daily Tech Headlines, Sarah Lane covers a series of rapid-fire updates, highlighting the major backlash Microsoft faces over its response to a security researcher, along with top stories spanning AI integrations, corporate maneuvers, global tech policy, and innovative research efforts. The episode delivers concise, essential headlines as always, focusing on actionable tech news.
[02:16 – 03:30]
“Some researchers say Microsoft’s threats could discourage independent researchers from reporting vulnerabilities and weaken overall security.” — Sarah Lane [03:08]
[03:31 – 04:01]
“The app is reportedly meant to simplify Microsoft’s fragmented Copilot lineup and improve adoption, with a launch possible in late summer.” — Sarah Lane [03:57]
[04:02 – 04:46]
[04:47 – 05:20]
[05:21 – 05:53]
[05:54 – 06:30]
[06:31 – 07:01]
[07:02 – 07:31]
[07:32 – 07:59]
On Microsoft’s Threatening Posture:
“Microsoft said the disclosures could help attackers and warned its Digital Crimes Unit could coordinate with law enforcement.” — Sarah Lane [02:32]
On Security Researcher Pushback:
“Nightmare Eclipse says Microsoft revoked their reporting access and left public disclosure as the only option.” — Sarah Lane [02:41]
On Surging AI Use:
“Google said recently that Gemini jumped from 480 trillion to 3.2 quadrillion monthly tokens in a year, driven by heavier use of coding agents and always-on AI tools.” — Sarah Lane [04:36]
On Dell’s Spectacular Quarter:
“First quarter revenue jumped almost 88% year over year, while AI server sales were up 757% to $16.1 billion and earnings per share came in at $4.86, well above expectations.” — Sarah Lane [05:34]
Sarah Lane delivers another brisk, information-rich headline roundup, with a particular focus on the tension between tech giants and independent researchers over vulnerability disclosure, as well as surging developments in AI, wearables, and telecom. For listeners eager to keep pace without the bloat, this episode hits all the high notes in tech that count.