
How will Apple change under ‘product guy’ John Ternus?
How Ternus responds to challenges facing Apple will go a long way to deciding the tech giant’s future, writes Zoe Kleinman.
WEDNESDAY, 03 JUNE 2026, 09:14

How Ternus responds to challenges facing Apple will go a long way to deciding the tech giant’s future, writes Zoe Kleinman.

Whether the tech billionaire will attend the interview requested by Paris prosecutors remains to be seen.

President Donald Trump previously railed against the company for rejecting broad government demands.

The tech aims to identify people’s irises and stop the rise of fake accounts and malicious scams.

The company’s claim the AI tool can outperform humans at some hacking and cyber-security tasks has sparked fears in the financial world.

The travel platform said it had changed Pins to protect customers but would not say how many were affected.

The tech giant said it will punish sites that block back button navigation from June.

NHS guidance that all hospitals should be using Palantir software from this month has sparked a backlash.

The company says it will create only 100 of its Project Nightingale in its Goodwood headquarters.

The incident marks the second time the games giant has been hacked by young, English-speaking hackers.

With 144m daily users, the gaming company is extending its tech to introduce two age‑specific accounts.

San Francisco police have arrested a 20-year-old suspect after a perimeter gate was set alight.

The Facebook owner recently lost a landmark social media addiction trial in California

Breanna Olson said the tech was able to re-establish the expression and connection her ALS had eroded.

The gambling platforms have grown in popularity, with some users making wagers on conflicts.

The project was part of a package of tech investment promising the UK could become an AI superpower.

Sir Sadiq Khan claims London is being targeted with disinformation portraying it as a city “in decline”.

The move means owners of Kindles released before 2013 will be unable to download new e-books.

The British computer scientist and entrepreneur has denied being the man who the New York Times identified at Satoshi Nakamoto.

The former employee was fired from Meta after being suspected of downloading 30,000 photos, the company said.

The ChatGPT-maker said its early policy ideas aim to prompt discussions about action needed as AI systems become more capable.