Technology
23andMe files for bankruptcy as CEO steps down

DNA testing firm 23andMe has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to help the company sell itself after years of financial difficulties. Anne Wojcicki, 23andMe’s co-founder and CEO, announced on X that she has resigned with immediate effect to become an independent bidder for the company, with chief financial and accounting officer Joe Selsavage stepping in as interim CEO.
“After a thorough evaluation of strategic alternatives, we have determined that a court-supervised sale process is the best path forward to maximize the value of the business,” Mark Jensen, chair and member of the Special Committee of the Board of Directors, said in a statement. “We expect the court-supervised process will advance our efforts to address the operational and financial challenges we face, including further cost reductions and the resolution of legal and leasehold liabilities.”
23andMe says that it intends to “continue operating its business” throughout the bankruptcy proceedings and that customer’s access to data and subscriptions won’t be affected.
“We have had many successes but I equally take accountability for the challenges we have today,” Wojcicki said. “There is no doubt that the challenges faced by 23andMe through an evolving business model have been real, but my belief in the company and its future is unwavering.”

Technology
Porsche’s next Taycan gets an infotainment upgrade — but no new CarPlay

Porsche is upgrading the infotainment in the upcoming 2026 model year Taycan, 911, Panamera, and Cayenne with “more responsive” software and features such as an Alexa personal assistant.
The 2026 Porsche Communication Management (PCM) will get the Porsche App Center introduced in the Macan Electric. It provides “direct access to a large number of apps” and a “wide range of services” that can run on the touchscreen. In an email with The Verge, Porsche spokesperson Calvin Kim said these new models run on the MIB3 architecture, first launched in 2022, and not Google’s Android Automotive OS like in the Macan Electric.
Porsche’s in-car apps could reduce the need of phone mirroring services like Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Many EV makers like Tesla, Rivian and GM don’t even include the ability to mirror your device and require you to subscribe to connectivity services inside the car.
Porsche will include 10 years of Porsche Connect service standard in each of these new vehicles to “optimize the digital user experience.” Part of that experience also includes Amazon Alexa, which in addition to Porsche’s Voice Pilot, can be used as the drivers’ digital voice assistant. Alexa can play music and podcasts, open your garage door, edit to-do and shopping lists and more. Porsche doesn’t say if this is the revamped AI-powered Alexa Plus that Amazon announced in February.
Porsche is also adding Dolby Atmos support with the new PCM system in models with premium audio equipment like Bose that can give occupants an immersive, spatial sound experience. 2026 Porsches can be ordered now and will arrive at US stores in “late summer 2025.”
Technology
Scary AI-powered swarm robots team up to build cars faster than ever

The automotive industry is undergoing a seismic shift driven by the integration of AI-powered humanoid robots into production lines. UBTech Robotics, in collaboration with Zeekr, has pioneered a groundbreaking initiative where swarm robots work together to build cars faster and more efficiently than ever before. But is this technological advancement a leap toward innovation or a step closer to human replacement?
Stay protected & informed! Get security alerts & expert tech tips – sign up for Kurt’s The CyberGuy Report now.
UBTech’s Walker S1 robots operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory (UBTech Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
The rise of swarm intelligence in manufacturing
Swarm Intelligence, inspired by collective behaviors in nature, is now being applied to robotics, enabling multiple humanoid robots to collaborate seamlessly on complex tasks. UBTech’s Walker S1 robots are at the forefront of this revolution, operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory. These robots are not just individual agents but part of a networked system that communicates and works in unison.

UBTech’s Walker S1 robots operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory (UBTech Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
CREEPY HUMANOID ROBOT MOVES USING 1,000 EERIE ARTIFICIAL MUSCLES
How it works
BrainNet framework: UBTech’s proprietary BrainNet software links cloud-based and on-device intelligence to form a “super brain” for high-level decision-making and a “sub-brain” for localized control.
Multimodal reasoning model: This AI engine allows robots to analyze, schedule and coordinate tasks autonomously, adapting to dynamic industrial environments.
Collaborative capabilities: From sorting and handling heavy loads to precision assembly, these robots excel in tasks requiring dexterity and real-time decision-making.
MALWARE STEALS BANK CARDS AND PASSWORDS FROM MILLIONS OF DEVICES

UBTech’s Walker S1 robots operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory (UBTech Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
CHINESE HUMANOID ROBOT LANDS WORLD’S FIRST FRONT FLIP
Applications in automotive production
These AI-powered robots are revolutionizing car manufacturing in several key areas. Let’s take a closer look at how they’re changing the game.
Collaborative sorting
Using advanced vision-based perception and hybrid decision-making systems, Walker S1 robots optimize sorting tasks by dynamically tracking targets and sharing intelligence across the swarm.
Handling heavy loads
Robots face challenges like uneven load distribution and complex trajectories. UBTech’s joint planning system ensures stability and efficiency by enabling robots to adjust posture and force dynamically.
Precision assembly
In delicate tasks like handling deformable materials, Walker S1 robots utilize tactile sensing and adaptive control to ensure precision without damaging components. These capabilities have already been deployed in Zeekr’s factory for tasks ranging from quality inspection to vehicle assembly, showcasing unparalleled efficiency and accuracy.

UBTech’s Walker S1 robots operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory (UBTech Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
CHINA LAUNCHES FACILITY TO TRAIN 100-PLUS HUMANOID ROBOTS SIMULTANEOUSLY
Swarm intelligence: A game-changer
Swarm Intelligence is not just limited to automotive manufacturing. Its applications span logistics, healthcare, agriculture and more. By decentralizing decision-making and optimizing resource allocation, swarm systems promise increased scalability and adaptability across industries.

UBTech’s Walker S1 robots operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory (UBTech Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
The human factor: Innovation or replacement?
While the integration of humanoid robots offers numerous benefits, such as addressing labor shortages and enhancing production efficiency, it also raises concerns about job displacement. The question remains: How do we balance technological advancement with societal impact?
Experts argue that these innovations could complement human workers rather than replace them entirely. Robots can take over repetitive or hazardous tasks, allowing humans to focus on more creative and strategic roles. However, careful planning is essential to ensure a constructive transition.
SUBSCRIBE TO KURT’S YOUTUBE CHANNEL FOR QUICK VIDEO TIPS ON HOW TO WORK ALL OF YOUR TECH DEVICES

UBTech’s Walker S1 robots operating in Zeekr’s 5G-enabled smart factory (UBTech Robotics) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Kurt’s key takeaways
The automotive industry is really changing, with AI-powered robots taking center stage. UBTech and Zeekr are showing us how these robots can work together to make manufacturing faster and smarter. But as we get excited about these advancements, we also need to think about how they’ll affect people’s jobs. Let’s hope we can find a way to make robots and humans work together seamlessly, rather than one replacing the other.
As AI-powered robots increasingly take on complex tasks in car manufacturing, do you think the benefits of efficiency and precision outweigh the potential risks of job displacement, or are we trading human ingenuity for machine speed? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.
For more of my tech tips and security alerts, subscribe to my free CyberGuy Report Newsletter by heading to Cyberguy.com/Newsletter.
Alert: Malware steals bank cards and passwords from millions of devices.
Ask Kurt a question or let us know what stories you’d like us to cover.
Follow Kurt on his social channels:
Answers to the most-asked CyberGuy questions:
New from Kurt:
Copyright 2025 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
Google says its new ‘reasoning’ Gemini AI models are the best ones yet

After delivering a new “open” AI model with better performance on a single GPU, Google has now introduced an update to the AI models for its products with Gemini 2.5, which combines “a significantly enhanced base model with improved post-training” for better overall performance. It’s claiming that the first release, Gemini 2.5 Pro experimental, leads competition from OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, and DeepSeek on common AI benchmarks that measure understanding, mathematics, coding, and other capabilities. The new model is available to access in Google AI Studio or for Gemini Advanced subscribers in the app’s model dropdown menu.
The company is also touting Gemini’s native multimodality as an advantage, as it’s able to interpret not just text, but also audio, still images, video, and code, and says that a 2 million token context window is “coming soon” to help it process more data. Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis called Gemini 2.5 Pro “an awesome state-of-the-art model, no.1 on LMArena by a whopping +39 ELO points, with significant improvements across the board in multimodal reasoning, coding & STEM,” in a post on X.
Google says it’s jumped forward in quality because Gemini models are now “reasoning” models that process tasks step-by-step and make more informed decisions, which they say results in better answers and responses for complex prompts. Now, the blog post reads, “…we’re building these thinking capabilities directly into all of our models, so they can handle more complex problems and support even more capable, context-aware agents.”
One demo video shows 2.5 Pro using those reasoning capabilities to program a video game based on a single prompt:
-
News1 week ago
Vance to Lead G.O.P. Fund-Raising, an Apparent First for a Vice President
-
News1 week ago
Trump Administration Ends Tracking of Kidnapped Ukrainian Children in Russia
-
Technology1 week ago
The head of a Biden program that could help rural broadband has left
-
Business1 week ago
Egg Prices Have Dropped, Though You May Not Have Noticed
-
Technology1 week ago
Dude Perfect and Mark Rober may be the next YouTubers to get big streaming deals
-
World7 days ago
Commission warns Alphabet and Apple they're breaking EU digital rules
-
News7 days ago
Trump’s Ending of Hunter Biden’s Security Detail Raises Questions About Who Gets Protection
-
News1 week ago
U.S. to Withdraw From Group Investigating Responsibility for Ukraine Invasion