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  • Apple is holding its iPhone 17 event on September 9

    Apple is holding its iPhone 17 event on September 9

    Apple said today that it is holding its event for the iPhone 17 on Tuesday, September 9 — just like last year. The company has started sending invites for the event, which will be held at the Steve Jobs theatre in Cupertino and will start at 10 a.m. PT/ 1 p.m. ET.

    While the company is expected to release one regular and two Pro phones, it could replace the Plus with a new and slim iPhone 17 Air model. The device could reportedly have a thickness of 5.5 mm with a 6.6-inch screen. This would make the new iPhone 17 Air 0.08 inches thinner than the current-gen models.

    The base iPhone 17 is reported to have a new and bigger 6.3-inch screen with a 120Hz refresh rate instead of 60Hz as in previous years.

    Along with the iPhones, Apple will likely have updated the Apple Watch Series 11, Ultra 3, and SE 3. The Apple Watch Ultra 3 would be a notable update amid the trio, with a bigger screen and faster charging support.

    The company might also announce AirPods Pro 3, three years after the previous generation of Pro AirPods were released. The new buds would have a more compact design, a new chip for better noise cancellation and audio processing, and touch-sensitive controls.

    Techcrunch event

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise.

    San Francisco
    |
    October 27-29, 2025

    REGISTER NOW

  • Roku launches Howdy, a $2.99 ad-free streaming service

    Howdy, a New Roku Streaming Sprint

    Roku’s latest splash in the streaming pool is Howdy— an ad‑free, subscription‑based service that launches at just $2.99 a month. Think of it as a cozy corner in your living room where you can binge a whopping almost 10,000 hours of films and shows, hand‑picked from partners like Lionsgate, Warner Bros. Discovery, and FilmRise, plus a few of Roku’s own originals.

    What’s on the Menu?

    • Action to be chilled in with “Mad Max: Fury Road.”
    • Drama hearts warmed by “The Blind Side.”
    • Comedy vibes from “Weeds” and “Kids in the Hall.”
    • Rom‑couple movies, medical dramas, and those nostalgic ‘90s sitcoms.

    Why It’s a Sweet Deal

    Anthony Wood — the founder and CEO at Roku — says the big selling point is that Howdy is ad‑free and super‑friendly, meant to add rather than replace the premium streaming fares. No interruptions while you’re deep‑in‑the‑action or screaming for a laugh.

    The Bigger Picture

    Just two months back, Roku splashed out $185 million to snag Frndly TV, an online live‑TV, on‑demand, and cloud DVR lib. Howdy now sits alongside its older, free Fast‑Ad‑Supported Roku Channel. In fact, a recent study highlighted that The Roku Channel tops competitors like Tubi or Pluto TV, engaging over 125 million daily users.

    Growth Pulse

    Roku is riding a good wave right now. They boasted a 90 million‑strong streaming household base, and Q2 revenue grew 15% (higher than many expected). The platform logged a record 35.4 billion streaming hours—up 5.2 billion from the year before.

    So, grab your popcorn and tell your friends: You’ve got a brand‑new, ad‑free Pad right in your living room, courtesy of Roku’s Howdy service. Happy streaming!

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise.

    Get Your Backpack (and Your Appetite) Ready!

    Hey, San Francisco! Mark your calendars for October 27–29, 2025—a weekend that promises more excitement than a coffee shop on a Monday morning.

    What’s on the Lineup?

    • Tech Festival – Dive into the latest gadgets, try out VR, and maybe get a robot to do your laundry.
    • Food Truck Fiesta – Tacos, sushi, and that one mystery burger you’ve been dreaming about. Bring your taste buds.
    • Live Music & Comedy – From indie bands to stand‑up comedians who’ll have you laughing till your side splits.
    • Outdoor Activities – Guided hikes, park clean‑ups, and the chance to spot a stray drone.

    Why You Shouldn’t Miss It

    Because it’s a once‑in‑a‑blue‑sky occasion to:

    • Meet people who actually know what a “cloud” is.
    • Grab the first preorder for that gadget that’s still a rumor.
    • Snap the most epic Instagram backdrops of your life.

    REGISTER NOW and secure your spot before the tickets vanish faster than a Wi‑Fi signal at a cable‑free zone. Don’t let FOMO be the only thing you miss!

  • Payment platform Lava raises $5.8M to build digital wallets for the 'agent-native economy'

    A new startup, Lava Payments, aims to take on payment giants by building a solution for the modern web where AI agents now handle transactions for their customers. The idea came to founder Mitchell Jones after he left his earlier Y Combinator-backed fintech startup, Lendtable, as he began to experiment with AI.

    He saw the potential to build out a system that would make using AI and agent payments simpler and more developer-friendly. While experimenting with an AI app and trying to build what he thought was something simple, he realized he quickly spent more than $400 trying to build a basic form-filling agent.

    “I kept running into the same issue,” he told TechCrunch. “I was using the same underlying models and tools again and again, but through different wrappers or platforms.” And each time, he had to start a new subscription, re-authenticate, and pay separately, “even though I was already paying for access to the core model.”

    “That felt fundamentally broken,” he continued. “I didn’t want to keep rebuying access to the same thing under a different wrapper. What I wanted was a single wallet, one set of credits, and the ability to move between tools and providers without starting over every time so I could pay for what I was using.”

    He decided to launch Lava Payments as a solution.

    Lava is a digital wallet that lets merchants use usage credits to facilitate transactions.

    The idea is that one set of credits working across merchants and services makes it easier for autonomous agents to make payments without needing human intervention. It works like this: A merchant can enable the Lava wallet for their customers to use and upload (credits) money to. Once a customer does that, they can take that money and use it at any merchant that also accepts Lava and any of the foundational models, like GPT and Claude, on a “pay as you go basis,” Jones said.

    So, rather than having to pay for each tool, a user buys a one-time usage credit that AI agents can simply charge as they perform various tasks. No more asking the user to approve transaction after transaction.

    “Without Lava, agents can’t move smoothly through the internet because they constantly get blocked when it comes time to pay,” he said. He used Google as an example, saying every time a person opens Google Maps, they don’t have to pay Google for that map, as they’ve already paid Verizon and AT&T to access the internet. 

    On Wednesday, the startup announced a $5.8 million seed round led by Lerer Hippeau. 

    Others in this space include startups like Metronome. 

    “We see the world as very interconnected,” Jones said about what makes his product different. “What we’re really focused on is building [for the] agent-native economy.” 

    Born to a working family in Dayton, Ohio, Jones said his parents always told him the best way to get ahead was to work hard, save money, and get a good education.

    “You know, a lot of the things that most people are told,” he recalled, when speaking with TechCrunch. 

    Jones took that advice to heart. He got a good education (Yale), held some good jobs (Goldman, Meta), and then founded some companies (the fintechs Parable and Lendtable, the latter of which was YC S20). 

    Jones said he met his lead investors for Lava because he went to high school with Will McKelvey, now an investor at Lerer Hippeau. He said McKelvey has been following his career for a while and always wanted to work together someday, and Lava Payments was that someday.

    Others in the round included Harlem Capital, Streamlined Ventures, and Westbound. The fresh capital will be used for hiring, building products, and developing go-to-market strategies. 

    Overall, Jones is ready for Lava to be the “invisible layer that kind of powers the AI web,” he says, especially as AI agents find themselves more and more in the checkout line.  

    “We should be enabling agents to move, transact, and build without friction,” he said.

    “We want to make sure that AI is something that can be used by every single person, even a kid from Dayton, like myself.” 

    The title of this piece was updated to properly reflect what the company does.

  • Exclusive: Frontier buys M worth of antacids for the ocean

    Exclusive: Frontier buys $31M worth of antacids for the ocean

    Frontier, the carbon removal clearinghouse founded by Google, Stripe, Shopify, and others, announced today that it is buying 115,211 metric tons of carbon removal credits from geoengineering startup Planetary in a deal worth $31.3 million. 

    Where most Frontier deals to date have bought carbon from startups specializing in direct air capture, enhanced weathering, or bioenergy with carbon capture, the organization’s agreement with Planetary is its first to do so by enhancing ocean alkalinity.

    The deal effectively prices each metric ton of carbon at $270, though Planetary says it has a plan to eventually remove carbon for less than $100 per metric ton. At full tilt, ocean alkalinity enhancement could remove over 1 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide annually.

    For decades, the oceans have been dampening the effects of climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. That has slowed the pace of global warming, but it also endangers a host of marine organisms, including coral and shellfish, which depend on alkaline waters to help build and maintain their calcareous shells and skeletons.

    The world’s oceans are naturally a little bit alkaline. Historically, they had a pH of 8.2, but since the industrial revolution began, it has fallen to 8.1. That might not sound like much, but pH’s logarithmic scale means the oceans are now 30% more acidic than in the early 1800s. When carbon dioxide reacts with water, it forms carbonic acid.

    Planetary currently uses magnesium hydroxide to boost alkalinity, the same substance used in over-the-counter antacids. The company adds it at wastewater treatment facilities and power plants, sites that are already discharging water into the ocean. That helps minimize disruption to the coasts, and it helps Planetary keep costs down.

    The startup currently has two projects, one in Nova Scotia and the other in Virginia.

    Techcrunch event

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital, Elad Gil — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $600+ before prices rise.

    Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda

    Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They’re here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don’t miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise.

    San Francisco
    |
    October 27-29, 2025

    REGISTER NOW

    Correction: Frontier revised its figures for the size of the deal after the article was published. They were originally $31.2 million and 115,208 metric tons.

  • TeaOnHer App Leaks User Personal Data and Driver Licenses

    When Apps Go Rogue: The Curious Case of TeaOnHer

    Picture this: you’ve just downloaded a trendy new app, TeaOnHer, promising a fresh twist on the original Tea craze, built for men to brag about the women they’ve supposedly dated. Instead of a harmless social platform, you discover a bonafide vault of personal data, ready for the wrong hands.

    What’s in the Hack Closet?

    • Government IDs & driver’s licenses – those are usually for passports, not dating apps.
    • Selfies that look as if someone tried to prove they’re not a hologram.
    • Randomly left open public URLs that let anyone click and view anyone’s ID photo.
    • Emails and user names, ta‑da! Guess what… don’t (or do?) say it out loud.

    The Parallel Troll‑War

    Remember the original Tea app, the one where women post about the men they date? It’s topped with a “women’s safety” badge and a splashy 6 million‑user count. The fans fought back at TeaOnHer by creating a mirror‑image platform, only to copy the same questionable slogans and let the same problems show up in a fresh coat. The developers clearly didn’t keep a diary of better security practices.

    Viral Chaos and Data Disaster

    After 404 Media exposed a data dump saturated with 72,000+ images – from selfies to IDs – cyber‑enthusiasts waddled on the internet, sharing a million private messages that Tea had to shutter its messenger. The fallout? An app that was supposed to mean “girls are safe” became a personal data dispenser.

    Security Blunders in the Spotlight

    • Access with a single click – Any web visitor can pull up a user’s full profile, complete with email and location, purely by tumbling through the link list.
    • Admin credentials exposed – The founder’s email and plain password are sitting on the server side, unlocking the “admin” panel for anyone who can guess or resembles a random email address.
    • Guest view hypocrisy – You can get a “guest” glimpse without logging in, and teensy‑weens of the app reveal graphic or spam material (like repetitive nude images, defaming tags “easy”) riding the same data stream.
    • Estimated 53,000 users over exposed, a number that hints about how many “miracle” matches are actually absorptive social media consumption.

    Who’s Running the Ship?

    Newville Media Corporation slotted the app in the Apple store—right on the “Lifestyle” shelf, where you’d expect to find fitness trackers or travel journals. The CEO, Xavier Lampkin, tries to rate his credentials but gets caught in the loop of leaving his email as a marketing splash.

    Takeaways & Where to Crood‑waft

    Never underestimate the importance of data hygiene. If you’re a developer, put a lock on your app before publishing it into the wild. If you’re a user, set expectations that each app is not a passport office. And for the record, TeaOnHer is playing a hotter chess battle than Netflix or Instagram when you look at how it’s scored in the free-app arena.

  • Russian State Hackers Allegedly Targeted US Federal Court Filing System, Report Claims

    Russian Eye on U.S. Court Files? It Looks Like They’re Trying!

    The New York Times just dropped a bomb shell: the Russian folks—oh yeah, some part of that sprawling government—may have been the brains behind the hack that stole data from the U.S. federal court filing system, PACER. The headline says “at least in part responsible.” No one actually says who in the Kremlin is pulling the strings.

    What the Hackers Were Looking For

    • Midgrade criminal cases in New York City and beyond.
    • Also chased a few “Russian” or Eastern European surnames.
    • Could be looking for handy clues to inch closer to their targets.

    Just last week, Politico tipped that the breach also tossed a wrench in the Official case filing system—imagine that: secret informants might be turning up in the hack’s data, putting them smack‑in the face of the very criminals they’re helping bring in. Just think about that.

    Stolen Data: A Treasure Trove of Secrets

    The stolen haul may include:

    • Sealed dockets, indictments, and arrest warrants.
    • Other documents that haven’t even hit the public docket yet.
    • Stuff that might never see the light of day at all.

    Quick Fixes by the U.S. Courts

    On August 7, the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts stomped on the scene. They said:

    “We’re boosting security, blocking future attacks, and making sure folks who are litigating aren’t hit hard by this mess.”

    This was a follow‑up to a memo that stirred up the Justice Department and its higher-ups with a warning that the threat is urgent and requires immediate action.

    Back to Russia’s Playbook

    That’s not the first time the Russian cyber squad has slipped into pockets of the U.S. federal system. In 2020, they launched a long‑running SolarWinds operation: by slipping a poisoned software patch into the mainstream, they opened backdoors into everything from tech giants to government agencies. And yes, PACER was part of that crime wave, so the court documents were up for grabs.

    Bottom Line: Stay Alert

    While the U.S. Courts are putting a lot of effort into patching up the system, the universe of cyber intrusions leaves a hard lesson: never assume your digital life is safe from a well‑armed hacker—especially one that might be hiding in plain view at the Kremlin.

  • After selling to Spotify, Anchor's co-founders are back with Oboe, an AI-powered app for learning

    After selling to Spotify, Anchor's co-founders are back with Oboe, an AI-powered app for learning

    The co-founders who sold their last startup Anchor to Spotify are launching their next project: Oboe, an AI-powered educational app that enables anyone to create lightweight, flexible learning courses on nearly any topic they choose, simply by entering a prompt.

    These courses can span a variety of verticals, including topics like science, history, foreign language, news, pop culture, preparing for life changes, and more. At launch, Oboe — a name inspired by the root of the Japanese word meaning “to learn” — will offer nine different course formats. These allow users to learn in the way they prefer, Oboe co-founder Nir Zicherman explained to TechCrunch.

    Zicherman founded the company along with Anchor co-founder Michael Mignano after leaving Spotify in October 2023 and taking a brief period to recharge. Zicherman said he was inspired to work on an AI educational product after working to scale Spotify’s audiobooks business, which made it easier for people to gain access to high-quality and educational content, as it was bundled with their music subscription.

    Unlike AI chatbots, you don’t have to engage in back-and-forth conversations to learn with Oboe. Instead, you can opt for text and visuals, audio courses, games, interactive tests, and more.

    For those who want to learn on the go, Oboe offers two audio formats. One feels more like listening to a university-style lecture, while the other is akin to Google’s podcast-like NotebookLM, as it features two hosts talking in depth about the topic.a pair of screenshots showing the Oboe appImage Credits:Oboe

    “The real magic here comes from an internal architecture that we’ve built that I would describe as a complex, multi-agent architecture that we built from scratch, each part of which is orchestrated to run in parallel as we generate a course,” Zicherman says.

    “The challenge is, how do you create courses that are both high quality, entirely personalized to what the user wants to see, and also get generated extremely quickly? This all happens within seconds,” he says.

    “We have agents that, in parallel, are responsible for everything from developing the course architecture to developing and verifying the base material that’s being taught, writing the script for the podcast, pulling in real images from the internet — not AI-generated images, but real images and visuals into the reading formats that we offer,” he added.

    Some of Oboe’s agents audit the content to ensure the courses are accurate, high-quality, and personalized to what the user wants to learn.another pair of screenshots showing a deep dive and podcast episode in the Oboe app.Image Credits:Oboe

    The courses are meant to be lightweight, engaging, and fun. Plus, Oboe’s team is working on a recommendation engine that will help you continually go deeper on a topic, if you prefer. That leaves it up to the user as to whether they want to gain some surface-level knowledge about a new topic or whether they want to get more in-depth.

    This, combined with the variety of formats, will help Oboe appeal to a broader audience, the team believes.

    “To me, education conjures up images of more formal academic settings and the types of prescriptive curricula that students are used to as they grow up,” Zicherman tells TechCrunch. “But the truth is, we are all lifelong learners … So much of the time that we spend on the internet these days is spent trying to better understand things, but the truth is that the internet was built to grab our attention, not to teach effectively.”

    “We’re very excited to build a platform that is intended to be the one-stop shop to serve that intrinsic thirst for knowledge that exists in every person,” he said.

    At launch, users can consume any course created by others for free and can create up to five free courses per month. After that, there are two paid tiers: Oboe Plus, which offers 30 additional courses for $15 per month, and Oboe Pro, which offers 100 courses for $40 per month.

    The service will first be available on the web (and mobile web), but native apps for iOS and Android are on the way.

    Oboe is a team of five full-time, including Zicherman. Mignano remains a full-time partner at VC firm Lightspeed but sits on Oboe’s board and shares the co-founder title.

    The startup’s $4 million seed round was led by Eniac Ventures, the VC firm that led Anchor’s seed. The round also includes investment from Haystack, Factorial Capital, Homebrew, Offline Ventures, Scott Belsky, Kayvon Beykpour, Nikita Bier, Tim Ferriss, and Matt Lieber.