Coros’ Nomad is marketed as a “go-anywhere, do-anything” adventure watch. It’s got GPS and offline maps and will track a lot of activities, from yoga to bouldering. There’s an “Adventure Journal,” which the marketing copy promises will help you record “every step, catch, and summit.” While it doesn’t have some of the bells and whistles of a more expensive competitor like Garmin, it’s a product seemingly aimed at campers, backpackers, and other outdoorsy types who aren’t satisfied with something all-purpose like an Apple Watch. So when my colleague Victoria Song flagged the Nomad to me, I took Coros at its word — and, as The Verge’s resident dirtbag, took the Nomad on the Tahoe Rim Trail.
Technology
Is the Coros Nomad really an adventure watch?
Outdoor recreation is a growing market. Notably, the market can afford smartwatches — the number of participants who make more than $100,000 a year is increasing, according to the Outdoor Industry Association. Hiking is the most popular activity.
Why aren’t hikers and trail runners demanding more from these products?
And backpackers, especially weight-obsessed thru-hikers, are absolutely deranged gearheads. Gear was the most common subject of discussion among hikers when I was on the Appalachian Trail earlier this year. Go to any backpacker forum and you’ll see the same thing. A really well-designed device isn’t going to need much marketing — word of mouth was enough to get me to try out the Haribo Mini Power Bank, the lightest 20,000mAh battery on the market and possibly also the cutest. There’s also lots of room to beat the price of Garmin smartwatches — the high-end models cost more than a grand. The Instinct 3, a comparable Garmin watch, is $399 at the absolute cheapest, even though you can’t download maps for navigation on that watch like you can with the Nomad. I haven’t owned a Garmin watch in about 10 years, largely because I just didn’t find the watches to be worth the price tag.
Photo by Liz Lopatto / The Verge
I used the Coros Nomad, which costs $349, on my hike and for a month of training beforehand. I am about to identify a bunch of limitations for my specific very outdoors sports, but before I do that, I want to be clear: this is a good watch at a great price. But I got the sense it was designed by and for weekend warriors (or maybe just suburban distance runners?).
There’s a world where someone delivers everything the Nomad promises — but the Nomad itself doesn’t. This is a failure of marketing, obviously, but it got me thinking. Why aren’t hikers and trail runners demanding more from these products? Even the most “outdoorsy” ones are still primarily meant for road runners.
Let’s just get it out of the way: the battery life kicks ass, especially in comparison to my Apple Watch Series 6. (Unlike some of our reviews team, I am a technology normal and use things until they break, pretty much.) The Tahoe Rim Trail is officially 165 miles, though the FarOut map I used for navigation put it at 174. I created — and mostly stuck to — an 11-day itinerary. I charged the Coros Nomad before I left, then wore it nonstop for the entirety of the hike. It ran out of battery once, near the end of day 6, at mile 19 of 25, after more than 40 hours of actively tracking my hikes. After a recharge, I didn’t need to charge it again for the rest of the hike. Not bad.
But my first clue that the Nomad hadn’t really been designed for me happened as soon as I opened the Coros app. The defaults on that app give you a sense of who it’s for, and the third section down, after the “Today” data and the training calendar, is a prompt for creating a personalized marathon plan. Coros’ displays are admirably customizable, so removing the marathon plan section was easy, but I had nothing comparable to replace it with. In fact, while the watch has a lot of features for road and track runners, they don’t tend to generalize to people who hike, backpack, or even do trail running — a major missed opportunity.
The outdoorsiest runners aren’t getting the same kinds of training insights as their road runner brethren.
The app had a prompt for a running fitness test, but it only works in “run” or “track run” mode, suggesting it’s not really geared toward trail runners. Road and track running are primarily about pace. Trail running generally involves dodging obstacles, dealing with uneven or loose ground, and longer, steeper climbs. That makes pace less of a priority, partly because of the increases in agility, balance, and strength demands. My guess, based on the fact that trail running, as a specific activity, is excluded from running fitness tests, is that Coros knows the “fitness test” won’t be accurate for trail runners. That’s frustrating in an “outdoors” watch — it means the outdoorsiest runners aren’t getting the same kinds of training insights as their road runner brethren.
Likewise, while there is an “auto pause” feature available for runners, it doesn’t work for hiking and walking — which is weird. My Apple Watch doesn’t have a problem noticing when I’m not moving. (There is a “resume later” mode if you want to track multiday activities in one track; I didn’t use it because breaking my hike into segments by day made more sense to me.)
I also found myself frustrated by the training calendar. While I could enter my strength routine and my trail runs, I couldn’t add hikes. The upside of the training calendar was that I could summon a specific workout on the Nomad as I did it — so if I was doing an interval run, the watch would notify me when each interval was over. For road and track runners, there are even preloaded workouts you can add, rather than painstakingly programming your own. Sadly, there wasn’t anything comparable for trail runners.

Photo by Liz Lopatto / The Verge
The watch did well at tracking walks and runs, of course. Both the distance and the altimeter seemed accurate when I tested them against my Apple Watch — I got roughly the same readings. But the default watch display on hiking was five screens of data. On the first page, it gave distance and speed, with the amount of time spent doing the hike in a bar near the bottom. The second page contained my heart rate and the time of day. The third page was Coros metrics — training load, as well as how efficient it felt my aerobic and anaerobic training was. The fourth page was lap (which in this case just meant mile) time, how far I’d gone until the next mile, and my speed. The final screen was the grade, my elevation gain and loss.
This is nonsense. I am simply not going to scroll though that many screens on a hike. That Coros’ made-up metrics take precedence over elevation and speed seems like a crucial error of judgment.
If the watch can’t contact a satellite on its own, it’s no good in the wilderness as an SOS device
On any given day I’m on trail, I need to know roughly what my overall per-mile pace is, what my current pace is, how many miles I’ve traveled, and when the sun is going to go down. (It’s nice but not necessary to know my overall elevation gain — when combined with information from mapping apps, it can tell me how close I am to being done with climbing for the day without me pulling out my phone.) So I consolidated the screens of data to two useful ones. But the tradeoff for easily changeable widgets is that the watch isn’t designed to be readable at a glance. Maybe it’s just my middle-aged eyes, but the combination of the display and the relatively small fonts meant I was squinting at the watch more often than I should have been — especially given that it was taking up so much real estate on my wrist. A less modular display might have created room for more readable design.
But perhaps the most damning thing about the Nomad and the Coros app is how much they rely on being connected to the internet. The biggest failure is that the Nomad marketing copy advertises safety alerts that allow the watch owner to send an SOS — but without cellular data, they don’t work. If the watch can’t contact a satellite on its own, it’s no good in the wilderness as an SOS device. (Most watches can’t connect directly to satellites, though some new models will.) My problem here is the marketing: if you are promising that the watch is for going anywhere, the safety alert feature you’re advertising had better go anywhere, too.
In the Sierras, there are often afternoon thunderstorms, and while I was on the Tahoe Rim Trail, I had five straight days of them. (On the first one, I even got hailed on.) I had a 25-mile day not because I meant to walk 25 miles, but because I’d gotten most of the way up to the highest point on the trail, Relay Peak, when a thunderstorm began. I looked around at trees near me that had obviously been struck by lightning at some point in the past, decided that discretion was the better part of valor, and began heading back down.

I’d gotten most of the way down when the thunderstorm passed, and then I had a decision to make: was I going to try to get over the mountain again? This wasn’t really a decision the Nomad could help me with. My Garmin InReach Mini 2 had helpfully informed me that there was, indeed, another thunderstorm on the way — it will work as long as it has a view of the sky, though a weather report will cost you one of your expensive text messages. The Nomad, on the other hand, pulls most of its data from Apple’s Weatherkit API, which means it only works if your mobile phone has service, so if you’ve put your phone in airplane mode to conserve battery or you don’t have service at all, you’re out of luck. So if you’re trying to stay safe by planning for the weather, the Nomad doesn’t really cut it in the backcountry.
I did make it up and over Relay Peak before the next storm began, a deluge that soaked me to the skin despite my rain gear. But I had plenty of time on the down slope to wonder, soggily, if it would have been helpful to have gotten a storm alert before the first thunderstorm started. I found out after I got back to civilization that it was, in fact, possible to get a storm alert — the Nomad has a built-in barometer. Unfortunately, it was buried in a menu I hadn’t explored, and the storm alert defaulted to off.
I know that a lot of people enjoy fooling around with every menu and setting on their gadgets, but personally, I’d rather hike
I don’t expect Coros to entirely retool its app to prioritize backpackers. But it might have been helpful to get some of these details in a one-sheet with the Nomad quick-start guide: how to turn on weather alerts, how to test for altitude acclimation, that the SOS service and weather require cellular data. I know that a lot of people enjoy fooling around with every menu and setting on their gadgets, but personally, I’d rather hike. Pointing me at what might be useful would help me with that goal.
If the company wanted to invest more in training plans for trail runners, hikers, and backpackers — or, at minimum, allow people to add planned hikes to their workout calendar — that would be great. But there are other ways the Nomad fails the outdoors athlete.
As I was getting ready for the trail, I brought the watch to all my workouts, which is unusual. Generally I reserve activity tracking for cardio activity, because watches are pretty good at tracking that, and pretty bad at most everything else. But with its training load metrics, its recovery timer, and its sleep focus, the Coros app suggests the company’s devices can be used to foresee a person’s needs doing fairly complicated activities.
Unfortunately, these activities are pretty idiosyncratic.

The Coros app is somewhat successful at estimating training load for cardio, but the limitations around how it handles other activities make the “insights” suspect. The training load is based on duration and heart rate — which means for non-cardio activities, it’ll skew low. This data is then used to set a recovery timer, which is supposed to tell you how long it’ll take before you’re back at 100 percent. Because the training load isn’t based on reliable data for non-cardio activities, the recovery timer isn’t trustworthy either.
These problems aren’t unique to the Nomad; the Apple Watch (and pretty much every wearable fitness tracker) sucks at tracking this stuff, too. But it doesn’t try to give me recovery metrics or in-depth training insights.
Like most sports watches, the Nomad wasn’t very good at handling my strength training or yoga. The bouldering settings struck me as more useful. The watch will cue you to handle your first problem; when you’re finished, you click one of its buttons, and can then enter how you tackled the climb, using the sport’s specialized jargon. Afterward, you can see your total ascent, how long you rested between problems, and the grade you climbed at — as well as some less useful data, like heart rate. But with all three sports, the watch had trouble telling how much I’d exerted myself.
On trail, the Coros recovery timer wasn’t much better. After the first day, according to the watch, I was fatigued and needed to rest. The recovery timer stayed there throughout the duration of the trip. There were days I woke up feeling fresh and ready to go, and then glanced at the Coros app, which told me I was at 0 percent of my capacity. That felt silly, especially when I’d then knock out 15 miles.
And despite all the workout modes the Nomad offered, there was an important one missing: rucking, or walking with weight. That’s the key feature of backpacking. The Apple Watch doesn’t offer rucking, either. Whoop also has a rucking mode, but doesn’t track weight. Coros’ direct competitor Garmin introduced a rucking mode earlier this year, allowing users to track their pack weight, and while its features leave some things to be desired, it’s a start.
The promised personalized training programs Coros’ app offers simply don’t fit anything I’m doing
It’s weird that rucking is so thoroughly ignored. Bro influencers, from Andrew Huberman to Peter Attia, have been singing its praises; GQ named it “the workout of 2024.” Axios notes it’s on the rise among women, too; Women’s Health highlighted its beneficial effects on bone density. Even Tom’s Guide has called it a “game changer.” Look, I consider myself a backpacker rather than a rucker, but whatever you call it, this is an underserved market.
The promised personalized training programs Coros’ app offers simply don’t fit anything I’m doing. To train for a thru-hike, I typically do trail runs and rucks using my actual backpack. On most workdays, I’m not going to be able to get in even a 10-mile hike, so running is important for my cardio capacity. As for rucking, that’s partly to get my feet used to the demands of the extra weight. The goal is to ruck with either my maximum pack weight or more for the month before my hike.
I will spare you the details of hiker math, but here’s the bare outline: I knew my gear alone would be 16.2 pounds; that I’d need to carry about 5 liters, or about 10 pounds, of water at maximum; and that water carry would be when I was also carrying four days’ worth of food, or about 8 pounds. My pack, at its absolute heaviest, would weigh about 32 pounds.
That meant when I did training hikes, I loaded up my backpack until it weighed 35 pounds. Those hikes were largely vibe-based — I usually climbed a minimum of 2,000 feet over 10 miles as quickly as I could. But while I was training, I had plenty of time to fantasize about how a backpacker-oriented fitness watch could make my life easier. Here’s what I came up with:
- Separate VO2 max to let me track my improvements
- Field to let me enter how much I’m carrying
- Suggestions for when I might be able to go up in weight safely
- Suggestions for when I might be able to add mileage safely
- The ability to generate a training plan for an end goal — for instance, automating the backpacker math I just did, and then generating a plan for getting from a user’s current level of fitness to, say, hiking 20 miles with 35 pounds of weight, with 3,000 feet of elevation gain. Ideally this would involve a mix of rucks and runs.
Sure, there are a limited number of thru-hikers who are going to be doing this particular style of training — but it will also benefit the much larger number of people who ruck for fitness. And who knows? If a smartwatch came up with a good couch-to-thru-hike app, it might catch on just like couch-to-5K.
On both the Nomad and the Apple Watch, I tracked my hikes as “walks” and my hikes with weight as “hikes.” That helped me separate the activities at a glance. But there were still some annoyances. On the Apple Watch, both my hikes and walks counted toward my estimated VO2 max, which is an indicator of aerobic fitness that is particularly important to endurance athletes — and while the actual value is kind of a bullshit metric that will vary pretty wildly between watches, the trend line is what I’m watching. When I’m hiking with weight in preparation for a backpacking trip or on the trip itself, my VO2 max takes a hit. When I stop hiking with weight after the trip, my VO2 max shoots up. Garmin gets around this problem by disabling the VO2 max when its watches are in rucking mode.
The Nomad’s VO2 max is buried in the “Running Fitness” menu, a feature I didn’t click on for a very long time because, well, it turns out there’s no data available for me since I’m not a road or track runner. Neither walks nor hikes count toward that score — and neither do trail runs.

I understand the Nomad added offline street names to its GPS navigating capabilities, which was basically meaningless to me — there aren’t a lot of streets where I go. The watch’s screen wasn’t big enough to be my main source of navigation; FarOut is pretty tough to beat, not least because it can do things like tell you if a water source is still running even if you don’t have service. It’s also difficult to get lost on the Tahoe Rim Trail, which is well groomed and clearly signed. Perhaps if I had made camp and gone for a day hike, it would have been more useful in retracing my steps back to camp. Still, I didn’t see any obvious flaws using it, and I was impressed by the lack of lag.
The map the Nomad generates can be used as the backbone of its Adventure Journal function. This is the distinguishing feature of the Nomad, which lets you add photos and voice notes made on the Nomad watch — it’s got a built-in microphone — to your recorded activity.
Sadly, it, too, does not work unless you are connected to the internet. This limits its on-trail usefulness.
Like many other Coros features, it’s not exactly easy to find the voice note function from the activity screen

For ultralight types, keeping notes in your phone is good enough. I carry a notebook and pen — luxury items, but fairly flexible ones. I keep a trail journal on the days I don’t immediately fall asleep as soon as I lie down in my tent. (It’s a nice way to wind down.) I also use it to sketch out my intended route, make shopping lists for my resupply runs, and, in a pinch, leave a note on the dashboard of my car saying when I expect to be back from my trip. For the kind of hiker who doesn’t want to bring a pen (0.3oz) and notebook (5.4oz), it might serve as an upgrade over trying to type on a phone.
Writing in my journal is a habit; making voice notes is not. So while I was hiking the TRT, I did not use the microphone, because it simply did not occur to me. To be honest, I’m not sure what notes I’d make on a thru-hike that need to be coordinated to a specific point on trail. The voice notes feature is probably most useful for people who hunt and fish, or birdwatchers. Like many other Coros features, it’s not exactly easy to find the voice note function from the activity screen — but once I located it, it worked well enough.
The photo feature was more intuitive. You can take photos in the Coros app, though I didn’t; I find it easier to take photos without unlocking my phone. Because I went so long without an internet connection, I was dreading dealing with the backlog, but uploading the images to my activities was fairly effortless — and when I sent some of my travelogue to my friend Rusty, he didn’t have any trouble seeing both my route and my photos.
The real question around the Adventure Journal was how much it locks your notes into the Coros system, and the answer is: at least a little. I was able to export the data from my last day, and then upload a GPX of the hike to CalTopo, one of my favorite mapping programs. Though the data included my pins — the spots where I’d taken pictures — the pictures themselves were not included.

I agree with a lot of straightforward hardware reviews about the Coros Nomad — the battery life is fantastic, the watch itself is relatively light and can take a beating, the offline navigation works very well (for a watch — screen limitations are always going to matter), and it’s appealingly cheap. It’s a tremendous upgrade over my current watch in those respects. While a flashlight or solar charging would be nice, they’re not necessities. No, it’s the software I have beef with.
As far as I know, there hasn’t yet been a truly great backpacker watch, and the Nomad definitely isn’t it. The Adventure Journal is a neat toy, but not much more. The software fixes that could get the Nomad over the line might include training programs for trail runners and backpackers, a rucking mode (ideally with better support for rucking than the relatively paltry offerings by its competitors), and a more considered recovery program. Even simpler fixes — highlighting the capabilities that the Nomad does have but are buried in a non-intuitive menu, an easier-to-read design in activity modes, an app that does more when it’s offline — would be improvements.

But let’s dream for a minute, because the Nomad really got me thinking about what an ideal outdoor watch could do. Obviously, the battery life and GPS navigation are nonnegotiable. But the one hardware modification that could really change the game is satellite connectivity. I know it’s possible to connect to a satellite via a watch because the Apple Watch Ultra 3 offers it — but that watch only has an estimated 72 hours of battery life in low-power mode, and it’s $800. The new Garmin Fenix 8 Pro also offers it along with roughly 27 days of battery life, but it requires a subscription on top of its absurd starting price of $1,200.
A watch that lets me drop the Garmin InReach Mini (3.5oz) has benefits beyond the weight savings and letting me cancel an expensive subscription: I am less likely to lose my watch in a fall than I am to lose the Garmin device, even if it’s clipped to my belt loop. A watch that lets users send a real SOS — as well as check-in notifications — is going to be much more of a game changer than solar charging, flashlights, music, or wallets. Add alerts for severe weather, and you’ve got a winner. That’s safety gear, and no one in their right mind skimps on that in the backcountry. People are going to buy Garmin’s Fenix 8 Pro, despite the eye-watering price and subscription, for exactly this reason. Shit, I might be one of them when I need to replace my InReach — even though the Fenix 8 Pro is stuffed with features I don’t want or need, like speakers, a voice assistant, preloaded golf course maps, and dive functionality. I’d love a better, cheaper alternative.
A watch that lets me drop the Garmin InReach Mini (3.5oz) has benefits beyond the weight savings and letting me cancel an expensive subscription
When I am on a solo hike, people are consistently surprised that I — I’m openly female — feel safe enough to hike alone. Thru-hiking is pretty male-dominated, and a lot of effort goes into assuring women that we are fairly safe outdoors. I wonder how many other women might try their first solo hike if they knew they could easily summon help by pressing a button on their watch. Probably a lot! And I bet there are a lot of women road runners out there, especially in rural areas, who would benefit from knowing they can summon help without cell service too.
This is maybe a prime example of how designing gear for the most intense users also expands the market. That’s the norm for this sport. Ray Jardine pretty much revolutionized backpacking by cutting weight and kicked off the ultralight movement. Ultralight gear made the sport more accessible to women, older people, and people with injuries, increasing backpacking’s popularity. Thinking about thru-hikers and trail runners — especially ones who are training for the more maniacal races, such as 100Ks — is like making basketball shoes for LeBron James. Ideal gear will matter more to LeBron, but the average high school player stands to benefit too.
So: is the Nomad a good watch? Yes, in some ways, if you’re comparing it to current offerings from Apple or Garmin — especially in its price range. But it doesn’t live up to its marketing campaign of letting you go anywhere and do anything. The reasonably affordable watch that will do that for the world’s most deranged gearheads doesn’t exist. At least, not yet.
Technology
Google just leaked a first look at Android for PC in action
We’ve been waiting months for our first look at Android running on a PC in Google’s upcoming ChromeOS / Android hybrid platform, codenamed Aluminium OS. Now we’ve seen it in action, and have Google to thank for the leak.
9to5Google spotted a bug report related to Chrome Incognito tabs published to the Google Issue Tracker yesterday, including two screen recordings taken from a device running Aluminium OS. Google has now restricted access to the report, but 9to5Google managed to pull the videos first. The site also reports that the bug tracker mentioned an ALOS software version — already confirmed to be the initialism for Aluminium OS — and that the recordings came from an HP Elite Dragonfly 13.5 Chromebook.
The videos themselves — shared to YouTube by Android Authority — add further confirmation that this is Aluminium OS, listing the OS as Android 16, with a build number that matches the ALOS one mentioned in the bug report. It certainly looks like this is an existing Chromebook being used to test the upcoming ALOS experience, which Android head Sameer Samat previously said we should expect to see more from this year.
As for what we see of Aluminium, it’s very much the mashup you’d expect. The taskbar resembles ChromeOS’s, but moves the start button into the center, à la Android. There’s a status bar at the top, more like Android than ChromeOS, with familiar Android icons for battery, Wi-Fi connection, and so on. The video gives us a brief look at the Play Store, along with some split-screen multitasking, but it’s hardly a deep dive of the new OS. We might need to wait for Google to release a video on purpose for that.
Technology
Uber unveils a new robotaxi with no driver behind the wheel
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Uber is getting closer to offering rides with no one behind the wheel.
The company recently unveiled a new robotaxi and confirmed that autonomous testing is already underway on public roads in the San Francisco Bay Area. While the vehicle first appeared earlier this month at the Consumer Electronics Show 2026, the bigger story now is what is happening after the show.
These robotaxis are no longer confined to presentations or closed courses. They are driving in real traffic as Uber prepares for a public launch later this year.
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PRIVATE AUTONOMOUS PODS COULD REDEFINE RIDE-SHARING
Uber’s new robotaxi operates on public roads in the San Francisco Bay Area as the company moves closer to offering fully driverless rides later this year. (Klaudia Radecka/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Who is behind Uber’s robotaxi
Uber is the name most riders recognize. However, two partners handle the technology behind the scenes. Lucid Group builds the all-electric vehicle. It is based on the Lucid Gravity SUV, which was designed for long-range efficiency and passenger comfort. Nuro provides the self-driving system. Nuro also leads testing and safety validation. Together, the three companies are developing a robotaxi service that will be available only through Uber.
Uber’s robotaxi is already driving itself
Autonomous on-road testing began last month in the Bay Area. These tests take place on public streets rather than private test tracks. Nuro runs the testing program using trained safety operators who supervise each trip. The focus is on everyday driving situations such as intersections, lane changes, traffic lights and pedestrians. This stage is critical. It allows engineers to evaluate how the system behaves in real conditions before opening rides to the public.
What makes Uber’s robotaxi different
Uber’s robotaxi was designed from the start to operate without a driver. It combines electric vehicle engineering with visible autonomy features that riders can understand.
Key features include:
- A multi-sensor system using cameras, lidar and radar for full awareness
- A low-profile roof-mounted Halo module integrated into the vehicle
- Exterior LED displays that show rider initials and trip status
- In-cabin screens for climate, music and support access
- Real-time visuals that show what the vehicle sees and plans to do
- Seating for up to six passengers with room for luggage
The robotaxi runs on high-performance computing powered by NVIDIA DRIVE AGX Thor. This system handles the real-time AI processing required for autonomous driving.
A robotaxi ride that explains itself
One standout feature is transparency. Riders can see how the robotaxi perceives the road and plans its next move. The display shows lane changes, yielding behavior, slowing at traffic lights and the planned drop-off point. This helps riders understand what the vehicle is doing instead of guessing. Inside the cabin, passengers can adjust heated seats, climate controls and music. They can also contact support or request the vehicle to pull over if needed.
CAN AUTONOMOUS TRUCKS REALLY MAKE HIGHWAYS SAFER?
The all-electric Uber robotaxi, built with partners Lucid and Nuro, is now navigating real traffic without a human driver. (INA FASSBENDER / AFP via Getty Images)
Uber plans to scale robotaxis across the U.S. and global markets
Uber plans to deploy 20,000 or more robotaxis over the next six years. These vehicles will operate in dozens of U.S. and international markets. Lucid will integrate all required hardware directly on the production line at its Casa Grande, Arizona factory. Uber will own and operate the vehicles along with third-party fleet partners. Every robotaxi ride will be booked through the Uber app, just like a standard Uber trip.
How Uber is handling robotaxi safety and regulation
Safety sits at the center of this rollout. Nuro’s validation process combines simulation, closed-course testing and supervised on-road driving. The system relies on an end-to-end AI foundation model paired with clear safety logic. The goal is predictable, comfortable driving across a wide range of conditions. Uber and its partners are also working with regulators, policymakers and local governments to ensure the service aligns with public safety standards and city planning goals.
When Uber’s driverless rides are expected to launch
Uber says the first autonomous rides will launch in a major U.S. city later in 2026. The service will be available exclusively through the Uber app. Production of the robotaxi is expected to begin later this year, pending final validation.
What this means to you
If you use Uber, driverless rides may soon appear as an option. These vehicles could offer quieter trips, more consistent driving and improved availability during peak times. For cities, a shared electric robotaxi fleet could help reduce emissions and congestion. For riders, seeing how the vehicle thinks and reacts may make autonomous travel feel less intimidating.
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CES 2026 SHOWSTOPPERS: 10 GADGETS YOU HAVE TO SEE
Uber confirms autonomous testing is underway after unveiling its robotaxi at CES 2026, marking a major step toward a public launch. (INA FASSBENDER / AFP via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaways
Uber’s robotaxi effort feels more grounded than many past autonomous promises. It combines a known ride-hailing platform a purpose-built electric vehicle and a self-driving system already operating on public roads. If testing continues to progress, driverless Uber rides could move from something new to something normal sooner than many expect.
Would you get into an Uber if there was no driver sitting in the front seat? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
Grubhub confirms data breach amid extortion claims
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Food delivery platform Grubhub has confirmed a recent data breach after unauthorized actors accessed parts of its internal systems.
The disclosure comes as sources tell BleepingComputer the company is now facing extortion demands linked to stolen data.
In a statement to BleepingComputer, Grubhub said it detected and stopped the activity quickly.
“We’re aware of unauthorized individuals who recently downloaded data from certain Grubhub systems,” the company said. “We quickly investigated, stopped the activity, and are taking steps to further increase our security posture.”
Grubhub added that sensitive information, such as financial details or order history, was not affected. However, the company declined to answer follow-up questions about when the breach occurred, whether customer data was involved or if it is actively being extorted.
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RANSOMWARE ATTACK EXPOSES SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS AT MAJOR GAS STATION CHAIN
Grubhub confirmed a data breach after unauthorized actors accessed parts of its internal systems, prompting an investigation and heightened security measures. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
What Grubhub has confirmed so far
While details remain limited, Grubhub confirmed several key points. It has brought in a third-party cybersecurity firm and notified law enforcement. Beyond that, the company has stayed largely silent. That lack of detail has raised concern, especially given Grubhub’s recent security history. Just last month, the company was linked to scam emails sent from its own b.grubhub.com subdomain. Those messages promoted a cryptocurrency scam promising large returns on Bitcoin payments. Grubhub said it contained the incident and blocked further unauthorized emails. It did not clarify whether the two events are related.
Sources link the breach to ShinyHunters extortion
According to multiple sources cited by BleepingComputer, the ShinyHunters hacking group is behind the extortion attempt. The group has not publicly commented on the claims and declined to respond when contacted. Sources say the attackers are demanding a Bitcoin payment to prevent the release of stolen data. That data reportedly includes older Salesforce records from a February 2025 breach and newer Zendesk data taken during the most recent intrusion. Grubhub uses Zendesk to run its online customer support system. That platform handles order issues, account access and billing questions, making it a valuable target for attackers.
How stolen credentials may have enabled the attack
Investigators believe the breach may be tied to credentials stolen during earlier Salesloft Drift attacks. In August 2025, threat actors used stolen OAuth tokens from Salesloft’s Salesforce integration to access sensitive systems over a 10-day period. According to a report from Google Threat Intelligence Group, also known as Mandiant, attackers used that stolen data to launch follow-up attacks across multiple platforms. “GTIG observed UNC6395 targeting sensitive credentials such as AWS access keys, passwords and Snowflake-related access tokens,” Google reported. ShinyHunters previously claimed responsibility for that campaign, stating it stole roughly 1.5 billion records from Salesforce environments tied to hundreds of companies.
Why this breach still matters
Even if payment data and order history were not affected, support systems often contain personal details. Names, email addresses and account notes can be enough to fuel phishing attacks or identity scams. More importantly, this incident highlights how older breaches can continue to cause damage long after the initial attack. Stolen credentials that are never rotated remain a powerful entry point for threat actors.
Ways to stay safe after the Grubhub data breach
If you use Grubhub or any online delivery service, a few smart steps can reduce your risk after a breach.
1) Update your password and stop re-use
Start by changing your Grubhub password right away. Make sure you do not reuse that password anywhere else. Reused passwords give attackers an easy path into other accounts. A password manager can help here. It creates strong, unique logins and stores them securely so you do not have to remember them all.
Next, see if your email has been exposed in past breaches. Our No. 1 password manager pick includes a built-in breach scanner that checks whether your email address or passwords have appeared in known leaks. If you discover a match, immediately change any reused passwords and secure those accounts with new, unique credentials.
Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com.
ILLINOIS DHS DATA BREACH EXPOSES 700K RESIDENTS’ RECORDS
The food delivery platform says it quickly stopped the intrusion but has not disclosed when the breach occurred or whether customers were targeted. (Leonardo Munoz/VIEWpress)
2) Turn on two-factor authentication
If two-factor authentication (2FA) is available, enable it. This adds a second step when you sign in, such as a code sent to your phone or app. Even if a hacker steals your password, two-factor authentication can stop them from getting in.
3) Watch closely for phishing attempts and use strong antivirus software
Be alert for emails or texts that mention orders, refunds or support issues. Attackers often use stolen support data to make messages feel urgent and real. Do not click links or open attachments unless you are certain they are legitimate. Strong antivirus software can also help block malicious links and downloads before they cause harm.
The best way to safeguard yourself from malicious links that install malware, potentially accessing your private information, is to have strong antivirus software installed on all your devices. This protection can also alert you to phishing emails and ransomware scams, keeping your personal information and digital assets safe.
Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.
4) Remove your data from people-search sites
Consider using a data removal service to reduce your online footprint. These services help remove your personal details from data broker sites that attackers often use to build profiles. Less exposed data means fewer tools for scammers to exploit.
While no service can guarantee the complete removal of your data from the internet, a data removal service is really a smart choice. They aren’t cheap, and neither is your privacy. These services do all the work for you by actively monitoring and systematically erasing your personal information from hundreds of websites. It’s what gives me peace of mind and has proven to be the most effective way to erase your personal data from the internet. By limiting the information available, you reduce the risk of scammers cross-referencing data from breaches with information they might find on the dark web, making it harder for them to target you.
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.
Get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web: Cyberguy.com.
5) Ignore crypto messages using trusted brands
Be skeptical of any cryptocurrency offers tied to familiar companies. Grubhub was previously linked to scam emails promoting crypto schemes, which shows how often attackers abuse trusted names. Legitimate companies do not promise fast returns or pressure you to act immediately.
6) Monitor your Grubhub account and email activity
Check your Grubhub account for anything that looks unfamiliar. Watch for unexpected password reset emails, order confirmations or support messages you did not request. Attackers often test stolen data quietly before making bigger moves.
7) Secure the email linked to your Grubhub account
Your email account is the key to password resets. Change that password and enable two-factor authentication if it is not already on. If attackers control your email, they can regain access even after you change other passwords.
8) Stay alert for delayed scams tied to the breach
Breach data is often reused weeks or months later. Phishing attempts may appear long after headlines fade. Treat any future messages claiming to reference Grubhub support, refunds or account issues with extra caution.
These steps will not undo a breach, but they can limit how attackers exploit stolen information and reduce your risk going forward.
FIBER BROADBAND GIANT INVESTIGATES BREACH AFFECTING 1M USERS
Sources tell BleepingComputer the Grubhub breach is tied to extortion demands involving allegedly stolen customer support data. (Gabby Jones/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaways
Grubhub’s confirmation puts an official stamp on what sources have warned about for weeks. While the company says sensitive data was not affected, unanswered questions remain. As extortion-driven breaches rise, transparency and rapid credential rotation matter more than ever. What stands out most is how past compromises continue to create new risks. When access tokens live too long, attackers do not need to break in again. They simply walk back through an open door.
If companies stay quiet after breaches, how can customers know when it is time to protect themselves? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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