5 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Creators

YouTube, Instagram, SoundCloud, and other online platforms are changing the way people create and consume media. The Verge’s Creators section covers the people using these platforms, what they’re making, and how those platforms are changing (for better and worse) in response to the vloggers, influencers, podcasters, photographers, musicians, educators, designers, and more who are using them.

The Verge’s Creators section also looks at the way creators are able to turn their projects into careers — from Patreons and merch sales, to ads and Kickstarters — and the ways they’re forced to adapt to changing circumstances as platforms crack down on bad actors and respond to pressure from users and advertisers. New platforms are constantly emerging, and existing ones are ever-changing — what creators have to do to succeed is always going to look different from one year to the next.

TikTok USA is brokenTikTok USA is broken
Dominic Preston
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
TikTok is breaking down.

Whether this is just a regular outage or a result of this week’s changes in management, reports tracked on Downdetector and Reddit confirm many people are having trouble loading TikTok right now.

If the mobile app loads, it’s not consistently showing comments or other features, and the algorithm managing the For You page doesn’t feel like it’s working correctly.

Update, January 26th: TikTok is still having problems in the US, which it says are connected to a data center power outage.

Graph showing reports of an outage on TikTok spiking on Downdetector.
Screenshot: Downdetector
Lauren Feiner
Lauren Feiner
Lawmakers want to give creators a way to find out if their work was used to train AI.

A pair of bipartisan lawmakers introduced the Transparency and Responsibility for Artificial Intelligence Networks (TRAIN) Act in the House, letting copyright holders see if AI models were trained on their work. It’s already been introduced in the Senate, and counts the Recording Industry Association of America and SAG-AFTRA among its endorsers.

Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O'Brien
The TikTok deal could finally close this week.

It’s been a long, confusing, and at times tiresome saga, but according to Semafor, the Chinese and U.S. governments have given the green light for ByteDance to sell TikTok’s American arm. The target closing date set back in December was today, January 22nd, 2026.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Comic-Con boots AI from its art show.

The San Diego convention previously allowed AI images to be displayed under certain conditions, but has now banned any partially or wholly AI-generated materials entirely, following backlash from artists. The policy change has been welcomed, but without reliable AI-detection methods, enforcement may prove challenging.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
More K-beauty is coming to stores near you.

Sephora is partnering with Korean beauty retailers Olive Young to bring more K-beauty products to international consumers in-store and online. In the last decade, K-beauty has had a meteoric rise outside of Korea; the industry has especially thrived in the TikTok social media era, where new products and releases are used to relentlessly drive beauty trends. Now US retailers are in an “arms race” to cash in on the popularity.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Scott Belsky says weird things about AI.

Move aside Ben Affleck, Adobe’s former product chief is also musing on how AI will impact human jobs:

“We must cultivate our sources of taste, override the ancestral ‘logic’ that has restrained us since the dawn of humanity, and learn to be jazz partners with thinking technologies.”

Uh, sure, Belsky. How did those NFT predictions turn out?

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Ben Affleck says smart things about AI.

In a Joe Rogan interview on Friday, Affleck spoke for several minutes about how he believes generative AI will (or won’t) impact creative industries, saying it’s “going to be a tool, just like visual effects.”

”I don’t think it’s very likely that it’s gonna be able to write anything meaningful, or that it’s going to be making movies from whole cloth, like Tilly Norwood. That’s bullshit.”

Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
TikTok is taking a closer look at European users’ accounts with a new wave of age checks.

TikTok will roll out new age detection technology in Europe that uses profile information, posts, and “behavioral signals” to guess if a user is under 13, then flags suspected accounts for moderators to review, reports Reuters.

Google/YouTube announced similar age-estimating tech last year, amid lawsuits and an expanding push to “age-gate” the internet.

I saw the future of retail, and it’s all AI

From window shopping and browsing to reviews and recommendations, retailers and tech companies envision a future filled with artificial intelligence — whether shoppers want it or not.

Mia Sato
Stevie Bonifield
Stevie Bonifield
YouTube is easing up its ad policy for videos covering ‘controversial issues.’

Videos that include topics like reproductive rights, self-harm, suicide, and abuse will be able to earn more revenue now as long as they don’t include graphic scenes or descriptions, as spotted by Tubefilter.

Previously, videos that even mentioned potentially controversial topics would often be demonetized.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Bluesky advertises a solution to X’s Grok undressing people.

The solution is using Bluesky, of course. Naturally, a user with a blue check next to their name told Grok to put a bikini on the butterfly and the AI did — which seems like an even stronger advertisement for Bluesky than the one Bluesky itself posted.

Dominic Preston
Dominic Preston
Lightroom or bust.

Apple’s new Creator Studio subscription is pitched as an Adobe alternative, but a lot of Verge commenters made it clear: without a decent equivalent to Lightroom, it won’t work for most photographers.

Nevpaurion:

For the love of god make a lightroom alternative so i can stop giving adobe my money.

Get the day’s best comment and more in my free newsletter, The Verge Daily.

Jay Peters
Jay Peters
Parts of the World Cup will stream on TikTok.

As part of a partnership between TikTok and FIFA, select media partners can livestream “parts of” World Cup matches as well as “post more curated clips and access special content produced by FIFA for TikTok.”

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
MegaLag has returned a year later with part two of his video series investigating the Honey extension.

Beyond part one’s exposure of affiliate revenue hijacking, MegaLag digs into Honey’s “extortion” by adding limited-use “friends and family” type discounts and lying to the store owners about never removing codes for unaffiliated businesses while trying to sign them up as partners.

Other misdeeds described include marketing Honey’s for-adult-use-only browser extension to kids in partnership with channels like Mr Beast, who encouraged kids to install it everywhere they could, while collecting data on everyone who installed its extension, even if they never signed up. And despite a cease-and-desist from PayPal’s lawyers, this series isn’t over yet.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
White House “investigating” after a YouTube livestream popped up on its website.

On Thursday night, the White House Live News section featured YouTuber @RealMattMoney, for reasons that remain unclear. According to Bloomberg, “The White House is aware of the incident and looking into the matter, a White House official said on the condition of anonymity.”

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
TikTok is “turning into a Chinese super app.”

During Semafor’s Mixed Signals podcast, Instagram head Adam Mosseri said TikTok is “very much applying lessons they’ve learned in China to the rest of the world:”

Super apps, which are very popular in China, are not popular in the same way outside of China, and I think they’re turning into a Chinese super app — and that may or may not work outside of China.

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
YouTube shut down two AI slop channels that pumped out fake movie trailers.

The Screen Culture and KH Studio YouTube pages have suddenly disappeared, taking their fake clips with them, reports Deadline. An earlier Deadline investigation showed how they operated, mixing official movie footage with AI-generated images, which some movie studios were profiting from by claiming the ad revenue they brought in.

YouTube spokesperson Jack Malon provided this statement to The Verge:

After their initial suspension, these channels made the necessary corrections in order to be readmitted into the YouTube Partner Program. However, once monetizing again, they reverted to clear violations of our spam and misleading metadata policies, and as a result, they have been terminated from the platform.

Nathan Edwards
Nathan Edwards
1,100 phones in a warehouse generating TikTok influencer slop.

Emanuel Maiberg at 404 Media reports that a hacker has gained access to a server farm stuffed with phones churning out AI influencer ads. It’s owned by a startup called Doublespeed, which advertises “bulk content creation” and just got a million bucks from Andreessen Horowitz. Neat.

A vague study on Nazi bots created chaos in the Taylor Swift fan universe

An analysis of social media posts following Swift’s album release found “inauthentic” activity online. The Taylor Swift media ecosystem is divided over what it means.

Mia Sato
Sen. Ed Markey wants media to fight for the First Amendment
Play

“Grow up, Mr. President. Grow up, Brendan Carr.”

Nilay Patel