3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Lauren Feiner

Lauren Feiner

Senior Policy Reporter

Senior Policy Reporter

    More From Lauren Feiner

    Lauren Feiner
    Lauren Feiner
    Texas AG sues Discord for allegedly deceiving users about its safety.

    Republican Ken Paxton is seeking to require Discord to implement age verification, maximum default safety settings, and pay penalties for allegedly designing its platform in a way that facilitated teen exploitation. It echoes lawsuits against major social media platforms that have gone to trial this year. “The lawsuit’s characterization of Discord does not reflect the platform we have built or the investments we have made in user safety,” Discord spokesperson Michelle Kramer said in a statement.

    Update: Added statement from Discord.

    Lauren Feiner
    Lauren Feiner
    Live Nation-Ticketmaster asks judge to override jury verdict or let it have a new trial.

    The company asked the judge to rule that, as a matter of law, it could not be found an illegal monopolist, despite the jury issuing a verdict against it. If that fails, it’s asked the court to grant it a new trial altogether.

    Lauren Feiner
    Lauren Feiner
    Two people were arrested and criminally charged under the Take It Down Act.

    A Brooklyn courthouse unsealed criminal complaints against two men who allegedly posted “thousands” of nonconsensual intimate AI deepfakes, according to the US Attorney’s Office. The Take It Down Act’s criminal prohibitions have been in place for a year, but platforms’ obligation to remove such deepfakes just came into force yesterday.

    Lauren Feiner
    Lauren Feiner
    Minnesota is battling the Trump administration over prediction markets.

    The state became the first to enact a ban on prediction markets, but a lawsuit from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission is trying to keep it from taking effect, arguing it’s the domain of the federal government, NPR reports.

    Lauren Feiner
    Lauren Feiner
    A new government website lets you report platforms that fail to remove nonconsensual images in 48 hours.

    The Federal Trade Commission launched a new website for consumers to report alleged failures to comply with the Take It Down Act, which went into full force today. Critics fear the law will be used to censor online speech, but the website also has resources for domestic violence survivors.