Technology
You could get paid from Google’s Android data lawsuit
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If you use an Android phone, there is a good chance this case affects you. Google has agreed to a $135 million settlement over claims that its Android system used people’s cellular data without permission. The part that caught our attention is when it allegedly happened.
According to the lawsuit, these data transfers could take place in the background, even when your phone was not in use. Most people assume that if their screen is off, nothing is happening. That isn’t always the case.
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The lawsuit claims Android software sent data to Google in the background, even when the phone was not in use. (John Keeble/Getty Images)
What the lawsuit says your Android phone was doing
At the center of this case is how Android handled background activity. The lawsuit claims Android devices were sending information back to Google servers without clear user consent. This reportedly happened over cellular networks, which means it may have used data you were paying for.
That detail matters. If something runs over Wi Fi, most people do not think twice about it. Cellular data is different. It is limited for many users and often tied to monthly costs.
The plaintiffs argue that Google could have restricted these transfers to Wi Fi. Instead, they say the system used cellular connections, which shifted the cost to users. Google has denied wrongdoing but agreed to settle the case.
“We are pleased to resolve this case, which mischaracterized standard industry practices that keep Android safe. We’re providing additional disclosures to give people more information about how our services work,” José Castañeda, a Google spokesperson, told CyberGuy.
Who may be included in the settlement?
This case covers a huge number of people. If you used an Android device on a cellular network at any point after November 12, 2017, there is a good chance you are part of the group. The only major exception is if you are already included in a similar case called Csupo v. Google LLC. Estimates suggest around 100 million users could qualify. That makes this one of the larger consumer tech settlements tied to everyday phone use.
How much you might actually receive
Before you start planning how to spend it, this is likely to be a modest payment. The settlement fund is $135 million. When that is divided across millions of people, the amount per person will depend on how many claims are filed. In most cases like this, payments tend to be small. Think of it as getting reimbursed for something you did not realize was costing you.
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The case focuses on whether those background transfers used cellular data that users were paying for. (Kury “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How to claim your payment
The process is already underway, but it is simpler than most people expect. In many cases, you do not need to file a full claim form to be included. If you qualify, you are already part of the settlement unless you choose to opt out.
That said, there are a few steps worth taking to make sure you actually get paid.
- Start by checking your email or physical mail for a notice about the settlement. Some users are receiving a class member ID or notice code, which makes the process faster.
- Next, visit the official settlement website at federalcellularclassaction.com and confirm your eligibility. This is also where you can enter or update your payment details. You will typically be able to choose how you want to receive your money, including options like direct deposit or popular payment apps.
- If you do nothing, you may still receive a payment automatically, but there is a higher chance of delays or missed payments if your information is outdated. You only need to take extra steps if you did not receive a notice, your contact details have changed, or you want to opt out or object to the settlement.
The timeline you need to know
There are a couple of important dates to keep in mind. The deadline to opt out or object to the settlement is May 29, 2026. The final approval hearing is scheduled for June 23, 2026. If the court approves the deal, payments will follow after that process wraps up.
Why this situation matters beyond the settlement
This case taps into something bigger than one payout. Smartphones are designed to stay connected at all times. That includes background activity that most people never see. While that constant connection powers useful features, it also creates gray areas around consent and cost.
Situations like this raise a simple question. How much do you really know about what your phone is doing behind the scenes? It also puts pressure on companies to be clearer about how data is used and when it is being transmitted.
We reached out to Google for comment, but did not hear back before our deadline.
The $135 million settlement could lead to payments for Android users who used cellular data after 2017. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
What the Android data lawsuit means for you
Even if the payout ends up being small, the takeaway here matters more than the money. Your phone may be using data in ways you do not notice. That includes apps you rarely open and system services running in the background. Taking a few minutes to check your settings can give you more control.
Check which apps are using background data
(Settings may vary depending on device manufacturer)
Samsung/Android: Go to Settings > Connections > Data usage > Mobile data usage > then tap an app to see its data use and background activity.
Limit background data for specific apps
(Settings may vary depending on device manufacturer)
Samsung/Android: Go to Settings > Connections > Data usage > Mobile data usage > tap an app > toggle Allow background data usage off
This stops the app from using cellular data when you are not actively using it.
Reduce data use for updates and backups
(Settings may vary depending on device manufacturer)
Go to Settings > Software update > Auto download > Using Wi-Fi only
For apps, open the Google Play Store > tap your profile > Settings > Network preferences > App download preference > choose Over Wi-Fi only > OK
These small changes can help you avoid using cellular data without realizing it and give you more visibility into what your phone is doing behind the scenes.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
This case is a reminder that the devices we rely on every day are doing more than we see. Most of the time, that works in your favor. Sometimes, it raises questions about transparency and control. Google chose to settle without admitting fault. That leaves room for debate about what really happened. It also highlights how quickly technology can outpace what users expect or understand. As phones become even more connected, these kinds of cases will likely keep coming.
Should companies like Google be allowed to use your cellular data in the background without clear permission, even if it powers features you rely on every day? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at CyberGuy.com
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Technology
Sony’s PlayStation disc factory is already being repurposed
The video game disc is dead, and Sony’s been planning to kill it for some time, according to a report out of Austria. The man who leads Sony’s discmaking operations, Sony DADC president Dietmar Tanzer, told ORF Salzburg that the company’s Thalgau plant produces 600,000 discs every day, half of which are for PlayStation. But since it’ll only be making 10 percent of that volume in 2028, it’s planning to retrain all 300 employees to work on optical microlenses instead.
Thalgau isn’t just one of Sony’s disc plants. It’s where the disc-making division is headquartered, and appears to be its only remaining wholly owned disc manufacturing facility. Sony made discs in the United States for decades, originally in Terre Haute, Indiana and later in New Jersey, but it closed the latter plant in 2011 and moved all manufacturing from Indiana to Thalgau in 2022. Today, the Indiana facility markets itself to automakers who need help packaging and assembling headlights and the like instead.
This transition didn’t happen overnight. A behind-the-scenes video from December 2024 shows that the Thalgau plant was already working on microlenses as of then:
Those lenses, too, are created using discs:
ORF Salzburg writes that Sony has now invested €30 million to manufacture these microlenses, and that mass production may begin “as early as next year.”
Microlenses are theoretically used in all kinds of emerging applications where you might want to bend light, including headsets, but it appears that Sony may cater to automakers here, too. The head of Sony’s micro optics division gave ORF Salzburg the example of “a car turn signal that is projected onto asphalt.”
All of this is to say: Sony didn’t make this decision in a hurry, and it isn’t likely to change its mind despite the predictable backlash. It’s been winding down disc manufacturing for decades, and it’s ripping off one last band-aid with PlayStation.
According to Sony DADC’s website, it has produced over 26.4 billion discs to date — the vast majority, 23 billion of them, were made between 1983 and 2022 in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Technology
New sodium-ion battery could reshape grid storage
This is how light can be used to transmit data
At Coherent’s Sherman, Texas facility, CEO Jim Anderson and NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang detail how their plant is at the forefront of AI innovation. They describe using light to efficiently transmit data for AI data centers, explaining the technology to Will Cain. Coherent is set to quadruple its output by next year, demonstrating rapid growth.
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A new sodium-ion battery from Chinese battery giant CATL could eventually affect something much closer to home: the power grid that keeps your lights on. CATL has introduced its TENER Sodium Energy Storage System. The company says it is the world’s first field-validated sodium-ion energy storage system ready for commercial use.
Think big energy project, not phone upgrade. This battery is built for large storage sites that can support the grid. That kind of storage is getting more attention as electricity demand rises. AI data centers use a lot of power. Heat waves can strain local grids. Solar and wind power also need storage so electricity is available when people need it.
However, CATL has not announced a specific U.S. launch for this system. So, this is more about where grid storage may be headed than what your local utility will install tomorrow.
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CATL unveiled its TENER Sodium Energy Storage System in Munich as sodium-ion batteries move closer to commercial grid storage. (CATL)
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New sodium-ion battery targets grid storage
CATL just launched the TENER Sodium Energy Storage System in Munich, Germany. The company says cumulative shipments should reach 1 gigawatt-hour by the end of 2026. Deliveries in China are expected to start in September 2026. Global deliveries are scheduled to begin in June 2027.
That timeline shows sodium-ion batteries are moving closer to commercial use. The system is designed for stationary storage. In other words, it could help store electricity from solar farms, wind projects or other power sources for later use.
That becomes important when demand jumps during hot afternoons or renewable power drops later in the day.
Sodium-ion battery storage could ease lithium pressure
Most large battery storage projects today use lithium-based systems. Lithium works well, but supply chains can be tight. Prices can also move when demand climbs. CATL says sodium is more than 1,000 times more common than lithium. The company also says sodium is widely distributed around the world.
That could make sodium-ion batteries attractive for grid storage. These batteries do not need to be tiny enough for a phone or light enough for an electric car.
CATL isn’t saying sodium will replace lithium overnight. Instead, the company says sodium and lithium could work together in future energy storage systems.
For you, the larger point is choice. More battery options could help energy companies reduce their dependence on a single material.
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CATL says the battery fits existing systems
One of CATL’s bigger claims is that TENER Sodium can fit into existing lithium iron phosphate energy storage platforms. CATL says the system shares the same physical footprint as LFP systems. That could help developers avoid changing enclosures, redesigning projects or repeating certification steps.
The system delivers more than 30 megawatt-hours of rated capacity. CATL says each module weighs about 42 metric tons, or about 46 U.S. tons. The company says only 34 units are needed for a 1-gigawatt-hour storage site. The modular design also supports flexible storage durations of 1, 2, 4, 6 and 8 hours. That gives developers more room to tailor projects based on local power needs.
Sodium-ion battery design can handle tough conditions
The TENER Sodium system is built for large energy projects, not home use, with modules designed to store power for the grid. (CATL)
Battery storage has to work in places that get brutally hot or freezing cold. CATL says TENER Sodium is designed for better extreme-temperature performance, enhanced safety and lower operating costs. The company also says its battery management system gives the sodium-ion system an additional 20 percent safety margin compared with lithium-ion batteries.
The system also uses a top-discharge airflow design that CATL says reduces heat generation by nearly 30 percent compared with conventional systems. CATL says auxiliary power consumption drops from the industry average of 2 percent to 1 percent.
That could be useful for large grid storage projects, especially in places where heat, storms or heavy power demand can strain local systems. CATL also says TENER Sodium operates at only 65 decibels, which is 10 decibels lower than conventional systems. That could help address local concerns when battery storage sites are built closer to where power is needed.
Sodium-ion battery shipments signal commercial momentum
CATL says TENER Sodium has reached full commercial maturity across technology, production capacity and supply chain readiness. The company says it has worked on sodium-ion battery research and development since 2016. CATL also says it has invested about $1.4 billion, depending on exchange rates, over the past decade.
CATL has expanded sodium-ion production lines at its Fuding base in China. The company says that adds 40 gigawatt-hours of annual capacity. Another planned base in Jining, Shandong, could support 160 gigawatt-hours of sodium-ion battery production capacity. CATL also says it signed a three-year, 60-gigawatt-hour sodium-ion energy storage order with HyperStrong in April 2026. The company described it as the world’s largest sodium-ion commercial contract.
Those numbers show CATL is treating sodium-ion storage as a serious commercial product. That said, U.S. adoption is a separate question. American utilities, regulators and developers would still need to weigh cost, performance, supply chain risk and security concerns.
What this means to you
This sodium-ion battery system may never be something you buy directly. However, the technology behind it could still affect how electricity gets stored and delivered. If sodium-ion storage proves reliable, it could give energy companies another way to support the grid. That may become more important as AI data centers increase electricity demand.
Better storage can help utilities use power more efficiently. It can also help balance supply when demand rises quickly. Still, there are limits. A new battery chemistry will not fix old transmission lines, slow permitting or local grid bottlenecks by itself.
The real takeaway is that sodium-ion batteries could become part of the grid storage mix. They are not a magic fix, but they could help energy companies build more flexible storage projects.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
CATL’s new sodium-ion battery may sound like a faraway energy story, especially since there is no announced U.S. rollout yet. Still, it is important because the grid is under growing pressure from AI data centers, extreme weather and the need to store more renewable power. What stands out is the use of sodium, which CATL says is far more common than lithium. If this technology proves reliable in major energy projects, it could give utilities another way to store power and keep the grid steadier when demand spikes.
Would you be comfortable with Chinese-made battery systems supporting part of the U.S. electric grid if they helped make power more reliable? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com.
CATL says sodium is far more common than lithium, which could give energy companies another storage option as electricity demand rises. (CATL)
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Technology
Tesla driver faces manslaughter charges over Texas crash that killed a woman inside her home
On the video, I saw BUTLER’s Tesla continue to increase in speed, and saw the amount of pressure being applied to the accelerator pedal also increase in speed. In about six (6) seconds, the accelerator pedal was pressed all the way down to 100%, “pedal to the metal,” and the vehicle reached a speed of 73 miles per hour, more than double the speed limit on that residential street. The Tesla continued straight towards the middle of the cul-de-sac, struck the curb of the complainant’s driveway, and went airborne towards the front of the home… I noted that the brake pedal was never pressed in the final minute before the crash.”
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