Technology
The app that lets you have a live conversation in any language even if you don’t speak a word of it
Anyone who’s traveled abroad knows how frustrating and limiting language barriers can be. But what if you could break those barriers with a simple app?
That’s where a revolutionary augmented reality app called Navi, which is built for Apple Vision Pro, comes in.
It allows you to translate conversations from a foreign language in real-time. It also floats subtitles and translations next to people in the “real” world so you can understand anyone, anywhere, anytime.
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How does Navi work?
With the Navi app, you can see live captions of what people around you are saying through the built-in microphone of Apple Vision Pro. When you connect to other iOS devices running Navi, you can enable live translation from more than 30 languages.
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The other person or persons can speak in their native language, and you will see their captions in your own language. You can also turn on the spoken translations feature to hear the translated captions.
Navi helps overcome language barriers. (Navi)
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What are the benefits of Navi?
Navi is not just a cool app. Here are some of the four benefits of using Navi.
1) Navi can help you overcome language barriers and connect with people from different cultures and backgrounds. You can have meaningful conversations, exchange ideas, share experiences and learn from each other.
2) Navi can help you learn new languages. By seeing and hearing the captions and translations, you can improve your vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation and comprehension. You can also practice speaking with native speakers and get instant feedback. Navi can make language learning fun and easy.
3) With Navi, you can watch movies, shows, news, podcasts and more in any language and understand them in your own language. You can also explore the rich and diverse content that the world has to offer and expand your knowledge and perspective.
4) You can discover new words, expressions, idioms, jokes and stories that enrich your communication and understanding. You can also celebrate the differences and similarities that make us human.
Navi can be used for movies, TV shows and podcasts. (Navi)
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How much does Navi cost?
Navi was made to help people communicate more easily, which is why the regular captions feature is free to use in your native language. To enable the live translation feature, you can choose a flexible subscription plan that provides unlimited translations. These are priced at $3.99 for a weekly subscription or $8.99 for a monthly subscription.
To use the translation feature, you will need to connect to another iOS device running Navi. To access the translation feature, both users require an active subscription, ensuring uninterrupted and high-quality translation services.
The Navi app requires an active subscription. (Navi)
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What languages does the Navi App support?
Navi’s live translation feature supports an extensive range of languages, including Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
The Navi app can translate numerous languages, including Bulgarian, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German and Greek. (Navi)
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How to get started using the Navi app
Navi is easy to use and works on all platforms. Here are the steps to get started:
- Download Navi for free on the App Store. Navi is available on visionOS, iOS and macOS.
- Launch Navi on your Apple Vision Pro device. You will see a floating window that displays the captions for what you hear. You can adjust the size, position and color of the window as you like.
- To enable the live translation feature, you will need to connect to another iOS device running Navi. You can do this by scanning a QR code or using Bluetooth. Once connected, you can choose your language and the language of the other person. You will see the translated captions in your window and the original captions in theirs.
- If you prefer listening, you can also turn on the spoken translations feature. Navi will vocalize the translated captions, making the interactions feel more natural and effortless, especially in multilingual settings.
- You can also link up with up to three people simultaneously, with each person getting their own customizable caption window. This way, you can have group conversations with people from different languages and backgrounds.
The Navi app can be launched on the Apple Vision Pro device. (Navi)
Kurt’s key takeaways
For those of us who have been frustrated trying to communicate with someone in another language, the Navi app seems like it is definitely a game changer. Of course, you have to have the Apple Vision Pro and another Apple device like an iPhone, but if you do, it could be the bridge between different languages. What I think is cool is that the Navi app can help you communicate with anyone, anywhere and anytime. So, there’s virtually no one you can’t talk to.
What do you think of the Navi app? Would you use it to break language barriers and connect with people who speak a different language? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.
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Technology
Anker’s last-gen sleep buds are nearly 40 percent off ahead of daylight saving time
Bad news: most Americans are about to lose an hour of sleep next week. Good news: if you have trouble falling (or staying asleep), Newegg is currently selling Anker’s Soundcore Sleep A20 earbuds for $113.99 ($66 off) when you use coupon code MMSF88 at checkout, which drops them to just $6 shy of their lowest price to date.
A couple of us here at The Verge are fans of Anker’s last-gen sleep buds, which do a good job of muffling disruptive noises (including snoring). They’re lightweight and comfortable enough to wear overnight, even while sleeping on your side, with multiple ear tips and wings for a personalized fit. In fact, in his review, my colleague Thomas Ricker said that they improved his average sleep time by nearly 30 minutes within a two-week period.
What’s even more convenient is that they offer a variety of sleep-focused features to help you rest better. For example, you can use them to play a range of relaxing sounds, from meditation exercises and nature clips to white noise. You can use them as a regular pair of Bluetooth earbuds, too, just in case you prefer to listen to audiobooks or your own curated sleep playlist. They even come with adjustable EQ as well, though we wouldn’t recommend using them as your primary earbuds for music, given that they can’t match the audio quality you’d get from a pair of midrange earbuds from Apple, Sony, or Bose.
In addition, the Sleep A20 offer up to 14 hours of battery life and sleep tracking, providing insights into how long and how well you’ve slept via a companion app that also details your sleep positions and movements. The newer Soundcore Sleep A30 feature active noise cancellation, which is more effective at masking sounds than the A20’s passive isolation, but Anker’s last-gen earbuds remain a decent, budget-friendly option that can help you comfortably tune out most nighttime distractions for nearly half the price.
Technology
Figure data breach exposes nearly 1M accounts
Cyber expert shares tips to avoid AI phishing scams
Kurt ‘The CyberGuy’ Knutsson shares practical ways to avoid falling victim to AI-generated phishing scams and discusses a report that North Korean agents are posing as I.T. workers to funnel money into the country’s nuclear program.
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If you have applied for a loan online, you probably shared more than you realized. Your name. Your email. Your date of birth. Maybe even your home address and phone number. Now imagine all of that sitting on a dark web forum.
That is the reality for nearly 1 million people after hackers breached Figure Technology Solutions, a blockchain-focused fintech lender.
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What happened in the Figure data breach
Figure Technology Solutions, founded in 2018, uses the Provenance blockchain for lending, borrowing and securities trading. The company says it has unlocked more than $22 billion in home equity through partnerships with banks, credit unions, fintechs and home improvement companies. However, behind the scenes, attackers were working on a very different angle.
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Nearly 1 million accounts were exposed after hackers breached fintech lender Figure Technology Solutions in a social engineering attack. (Felix Zahn/Photothek via Getty Images)
According to breach notification data shared by Have I Been Pwned, information from 967,200 accounts was exposed. The leaked data included more than 900,000 unique email addresses along with names, phone numbers, physical addresses and dates of birth. That is a gold mine for identity thieves. Figure says the incident stemmed from a social engineering attack. What that means in simple terms is that someone inside the company was tricked into handing over access.
“We recently identified that an employee was socially engineered, and that allowed an actor to download a limited number of files through their account,” a Figure Technology Solutions spokesperson told CyberGuy in a statement. “We acted quickly to block the activity and retained a forensic firm to investigate what files were affected. We understand the importance of these matters and are communicating with partners and those impacted as appropriate. We are also implementing additional safeguards and training to further strengthen our defenses. We are offering complimentary credit monitoring to all individuals who receive a notice. We continuously monitor accounts and have strong safeguards in place to protect customers’ funds and accounts.”
Social engineering is the real weapon
When people hear the word blockchain, they think secure and untouchable. But attackers did not break cryptography. They targeted a human being. Groups like ShinyHunters specialize in this playbook. They reportedly claimed responsibility for the breach and, according to BleepingComputer, posted 2.5GB of data allegedly tied to thousands of loan applicants.
In recent weeks, the same group has claimed breaches involving companies like Canada Goose, Panera Bread and SoundCloud. Not every case is connected. Still, security researchers have observed a troubling pattern. Attackers impersonate IT support. They call employees. They create urgency. Then they direct victims to fake login portals that look nearly identical to real ones.
Once employees enter credentials and even multi-factor authentication codes, attackers gain access to single sign-on systems tied to major platforms like Microsoft and Google. From there, one compromised account can unlock a web of connected tools and internal systems.
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Security researchers say the Figure data leak underscores how social engineering bypasses even blockchain-based platforms. (Maxim Konankov/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Why this matters to you
If your information was part of the Figure data breach, criminals now have enough detail to craft convincing phishing emails or phone scams. They can reference your real name. They can cite your address. They can pretend to be a lender or bank calling about your application.
Even if you never applied for a loan with Figure, this incident highlights something bigger. No platform is immune to human error. And social engineering works because it targets trust, not technology.
The bigger lesson about blockchain and trust
Figure markets itself as blockchain native. Blockchain can provide transparency and strong cryptographic security. However, none of that protects against a well-crafted phone call.
Security failures often happen at the human layer. That is where attackers focus their energy. As more financial services move online, the attack surface grows. Loan applications, identity verification tools and cloud-based systems create convenience. They also create new targets.
How to protect yourself after the Figure data breach
You cannot control how companies secure their systems. You can control how you respond. Start by checking whether your email address appears in the exposed dataset, then take the steps below to lock down your accounts.
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Figure says an employee was tricked into granting access, allowing attackers to download sensitive customer data. (Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Check if your email was exposed
To see if your email address was affected, visit https://haveibeenpwned.com/. Enter your email address to find out whether your information appears in the leak. When finished, return here and begin Step 1 below.
Take these steps immediately
- Change any exposed passwords right away. Do not leave a known leaked password in place. Update it everywhere you used it. Use a password manager to create strong, unique passwords for every account. Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com
- Turn on multi-factor authentication wherever possible.
- Never share login codes with anyone, even if they claim to be IT support.
- Install strong antivirus software to help block phishing links, malicious downloads and ransomware that often follow major breaches. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.
- Consider a data removal service to reduce your personal information on data broker sites, which scammers often combine with breached data. Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com.
- Place a free fraud alert or credit freeze with the major credit bureaus.
- Monitor your bank and credit card statements weekly for suspicious activity.
Also, be cautious of unexpected calls about your accounts. If someone pressures you to act immediately, hang up and call the company directly using a number from its official website.
Kurt’s key takeaways
The Figure data breach is a reminder that technology alone cannot protect sensitive information. A single employee tricked into revealing credentials can expose hundreds of thousands of people. That is not a blockchain failure. It is a trust failure. If your data was involved, take action now. Even if it was not, treat this as a wake-up call. Your personal information has value. Criminals know it. Companies should know it too.
If one phone call can unlock nearly a million records, are companies investing enough in training people, or are they still betting everything on technology alone? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
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Technology
Apple’s website leaks MacBook ‘Neo,’ which could be its new cheaper laptop
During Apple’s week-long product launch event on Tuesday, a listing for the “MacBook Neo (Model A3404)” appeared on a regulatory compliance page on Apple’s website under its line-up of 2026 MacBooks. First spotted by MacRumors, the listing appears to be an accident and has since been removed, but may have been a leaked reference to a rumored entry-level MacBook. Unfortunately, it didn’t include any additional details beyond the device’s name and model number.
The lower price and an “entirely new design” could help the new MacBook appeal to students and casual users, competing with Chromebooks and low-cost Windows laptops. A more affordable MacBook could be especially appealing after Apple announced the M5 MacBook Air on Tuesday, which has a higher starting price than last year’s Air.
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