The speech police came for Colbert

The speech police came for Colbert

Once again, FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr and his bad ideas about free speech have rankled a late night host. And once again, Nilay and David talk through what the equal-time rule actually means, why organizations keep caving, and why it's apparently up to people like Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel to fight back. After that, the hosts discuss the facial recognition feature Meta hopes to launch for its smart glasses, plus the gadgets we're likely to see Apple launch in the couple of weeks. In the lightning round, we get some bleak news on Tesla's self-driving skills, a robovac security disaster, and the future of Warner Bros. Further reading: Why CBS Didn't Broadcast Stephen Colbert's Interview With James Talarico Stephen Colbert says CBS banned him from airing this James Talarico interview Why Everyone's Talking About Stephen Colbert, CBS, The FCC And James Talarico Meta reportedly wants to add face recognition to smart glasses while privacy advocates are distracted From the NYT: Meta Plans to Add Facial Recognition Technology to Its Smart Glasses Apple’s doing something on March 4th Apple is reportedly planning to launch AI-powered glasses, a pendant, and AirPods Apple starts testing end-to-end encrypted RCS messages on iPhone Apple’s Podcasts app will let you ‘seamlessly’ switch between audio and video shows Looks like we can expect more AI from the Galaxy S26 camera. | The Verge Google announces dates for I/O 2026 Western Digital says it’s “pretty much soldout” for 2026. Valve’s Steam Deck OLED will be ‘intermittently’ out of stock because of the RAM crisis Switch 2 pricing and next PlayStation release could be impacted by memory shortage Tesla’s robotaxis have crashed 14 times in 9 months. Tesla won’t use the term ‘Autopilot’ in California anymore Why are Epstein’s emails full of equals signs? 4chan’s creator says ‘Epstein had nothing to do’ with creating infamous far-right board /pol/ DJI’s first robovac is an autonomous cleaning drone you can’t trust The DJI Romo robovac had security so poor, this man remotely accessed thousands of them DJI says yes, it will fix its other Romo robovac security hole within weeks Samsung ad confirms rumors of a useful S26 ‘privacy display’ Warner Bros. Discovery gives Paramount one week to present its ‘best and final’ offer WordPress’ new AI assistant will let users edit their sites with prompts Subscribe to The Verge for unlimited access to theverge.com, subscriber-exclusive newsletters, and our ad-free podcast feed.We love hearing from you! Email your questions and thoughts to vergecast@theverge.com or call us at 866-VERGE11. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Episoder(982)

This phone starts fires on purpose

This phone starts fires on purpose

While most phone makers work hard to ensure their products don’t start fires, Oukitel made a phone that starts fires on purpose. This week on The Vergecast, Dominic Preston joins Editor-in-Chief Nilay...

6 Mar 1h 43min

MacBook Neo, iPhone 17e, and iPad Air: The Vergecast Livestream

MacBook Neo, iPhone 17e, and iPad Air: The Vergecast Livestream

Apple released a bunch of new iPhones, iPads, Macs, and Studio Displays this week. The Verge’s Nilay Patel and David Pierce tried them all this morning, and are back to share their thoughts live. Fur...

4 Mar 59min

The 6G, modular, robot phones of the future

The 6G, modular, robot phones of the future

Most mainstream phone options are kind of the same, year in and year out — but that doesn’t mean there’s no innovation to be found. The Verge’s Allison Johnson is at Mobile World Congress, and joins t...

3 Mar 1h 13min

The Galaxy S26 is a photography nightmare

The Galaxy S26 is a photography nightmare

Samsung just launched its newest phones, the Galaxy S26 lineup, and wow is it full of Vergecast stories. There’s the very cool new Privacy Display, which seems genuinely useful; there’s the AI-powered...

27 Feb 1h 35min

How Claude Code Claude Codes

How Claude Code Claude Codes

Few AI products have found the kind of product-market fit we’ve seen from Claude Code. On the eve of the product’s first anniversary, Anthropic’s Boris Cherny explains why Claude Code is so powerful, ...

24 Feb 1h 20min

Your next laptop could be a foldable phone

Your next laptop could be a foldable phone

The Verge's Allison Johnson has recently been doing the unthinkable: she's been leaving her laptop at home. Allison joins the show to explain how she turned her Samsung foldable into a useful computer...

17 Feb 1h 17min

Ring's adorable surveillance hellscape

Ring's adorable surveillance hellscape

Did you see Ring's Super Bowl ad and see happy puppies reunited with their owners? Or did you see the seeds of a complete, always-on surveillance nightmare coming for us all? David and Nilay discuss w...

13 Feb 1h 40min

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