If you thought tech news slowed down for the weekend, think again. This past week delivered everything from regulatory showdowns to semiconductor strategy shifts, with a side of geopolitical intrigue thrown in for good measure.
The action spanned continents and industries: Italy's competition watchdog is squaring off against Meta over WhatsApp, Samsung is making a bold move into in-house GPU development, the AI gold rush has created a new class of billionaires, TikTok's ownership structure just got a major overhaul, and somewhere in orbit, Starlink satellites might have a Russian-made problem heading their way.
Here's what you need to know.
Italy Goes After Meta's WhatsApp AI Terms
Italy's competition authority, AGCM, isn't messing around. The regulator has ordered Meta to immediately suspend certain WhatsApp terms that could potentially lock out competing AI chatbot providers. This is all part of an ongoing investigation into whether Meta is abusing its dominant position through WhatsApp, which happens to be one of the planet's most popular messaging platforms.
The concern? That Meta could be using WhatsApp's massive user base to give its own AI features an unfair advantage while making life difficult for rival chatbot services trying to reach the same audience.
Samsung Finally Builds Its Own Mobile GPU
Samsung is preparing to launch its first in-house mobile graphics processing unit, marking a meaningful pivot in its semiconductor strategy. The new GPU will be built into Samsung's next-generation Exynos 2600 mobile application processor, which is expected to power some models in the upcoming Galaxy S26 smartphone lineup.
This is a big deal for Samsung. Building your own GPU instead of licensing one from someone else gives you more control over performance, power efficiency, and how tightly the graphics chip integrates with the rest of your system. It's also a sign that Samsung is serious about competing at the highest levels of mobile chip design.
AI Boom Mints 50+ New Billionaires
The artificial intelligence sector didn't just create wealth in 2025—it manufactured it at scale. More than 50 new billionaires emerged from the AI boom as investors channeled historic sums into the space. According to Crunchbase data, AI startups pulled in $202.3 billion in funding, which represented a staggering 50% of all global investment. That's up 16% from 2024's already impressive numbers.
When half of all venture capital and private equity flows into a single sector, you know something fundamental has shifted in how investors think about the future.
ByteDance Hands TikTok's U.S. Operations To Oracle Group
In a move designed to head off a potential ban, ByteDance has transferred control of TikTok's U.S. operations to an investor group led by Oracle. The restructuring is ByteDance's latest attempt to address national security concerns that have dogged TikTok in Washington for years.
China, for its part, has called for cooperation and fair treatment, expressing hope that the companies involved in the transaction can find solutions that comply with Chinese laws and regulations while balancing everyone's interests. Translation: this is complicated, and Beijing is watching closely.
Russia May Be Building An Anti-Starlink Weapon
Two NATO-member intelligence services have raised red flags about Russia potentially developing an anti-satellite weapon specifically designed to disrupt Elon Musk's Starlink constellation. The suspected weapon uses a "zone-effect" approach that could flood Starlink orbits with hundreds of thousands of dense pellets, potentially knocking out multiple satellites at once.
If the intelligence is accurate, this represents a serious escalation in the militarization of space. Starlink has become critical infrastructure not just for internet connectivity but also for military communications in conflict zones, particularly in Ukraine.




