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Adi Robertson

Adi Robertson

Senior Reporter

Adi Robertson has been covering the intersection of technology, culture, and policy at The Verge since 2011. Her work includes writing about DIY biohacking, survival horror games, virtual and augmented reality, online free expression, and the history of computing. She also makes very short video games. You have probably seen her in a VR headset.

Generative AI is coming for the Barbie collectors.

If you like showing off dolls in their original packaging, you might soon be showcasing work from Adobe’s Firefly AI tools. Mattel and Adobe claim AI-generated (and human-refined) backdrops have “greatly shortened the time it takes to get toys into stores” by cutting out parts of the design process, and the results will hit stores soon.


A holiday-themed Barbie doll against a picture frame backdrop and a sports-themed doll against an image of a basketball court.
Do you really need AI to make a picture of a basketball court?
Image: Mattel
What happens when a business steals your voice with AI?

A gadget maker used what sounds like an imperfect but passable AI imitation of Marques Brownlee to promote its products on Instagram. (We’ve reached out to the company but haven’t heard back.) Fake influencer endorsements seem like an inevitable use of AI tools — if you’ve seen anything similar, I’d love to hear about it.


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Donald Trump’s campaign is allegedly getting sandbagged by bad internet.

A bandwidth-hungry tracking app is apparently kicking users with slow internet into a barely functional offline mode. Maybe rural broadband access matters after all:

The Trump campaign and America Pac then have little way to know whether canvassers are actually knocking on doors or whether they are cheating – for instance, by “speed-running” routes where they literally throw campaign materials at doors as they drive past.


US v. Google: all the news from the search antitrust showdown

One of the biggest tech antitrust trials since the US took on Microsoft.

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Copyright is the only functional law of the internet, deepfake nudes edition.

A preprint study confirms a widely held understanding: thanks to unusually harsh US laws for hosting pirated content, reporting nonconsensual sexual imagery as copyright infringement gets results.

All the images reported as copyright violations were removed within 25 hours, and the accounts that posted them received temporary suspensions. All images reported as non-consensual nudity were not removed from the site even after three weeks, and the accounts that posted them faced no consequences nor received any notifications from X. 


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The Verge
Gavin Newsom has four days left to make a call on California’s AI safety bill.

The deadline for signing SB 1047 is September 30th. Kylie Robison laid out the stakes earlier this month:

Critics have painted a nearly apocalyptic picture of its impact, calling it a threat to startups, open source developers, and academics. Supporters call it a necessary guardrail for a potentially dangerous technology — and a corrective to years of under-regulation.


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Another voting machine disinformation settlement.

This time it’s Smartmatic settling with Newsmax, which it sued for libel after the 2020 election, for an undisclosed amount. As The Guardian notes, a Smartmatic suit against Fox is still in progress — though the network cut a huge surprise settlement deal with another voting company, Dominion, last year.


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Sorry, I don’t think John Carpenter is reviewing his own movies on Letterboxd.

Whoever’s been cosplaying him is fairly funny, but Carpenter’s latest tweet clinches that it’s almost certainly not real. They’ve still got Scorsese over there, though.