Tech News Digest: Sunday, 28 June 2026
Today in tech, we’re looking at a major security breach hitting a British automotive icon and the growing influence of AI agents on our daily productivity. From high-level talent shifts in Silicon Valley to the shifting landscape of AI model rollouts, there’s plenty to unpack this Sunday.
Russian hackers linked to £2B Jaguar Land Rover breach
Reports have emerged linking Russian hackers to a massive $2.5 billion (£2 billion) breach of Jaguar Land Rover, marking one of the most damaging cyberattacks in recent years. For UK readers, this is a stark reminder of the vulnerabilities facing our major home-grown industries and the escalating stakes of international cyber warfare.
Apple Vision Pro lead jumps ship to OpenAI
Paul Meade, the Apple vice president who led the Vision Pro headset project, is reportedly leaving the tech giant to join OpenAI’s hardware team. This move suggests OpenAI is getting incredibly serious about building its own physical devices, potentially challenging the very hardware giants it currently relies on to deliver its software.
OpenAI limits GPT-5.6 rollout following government requests
OpenAI is currently restricting the rollout of its latest GPT-5.6 model at the behest of the government, a move the company warns shouldn't become the "long-term default." It’s a fascinating glimpse into the ongoing tension between rapid AI innovation and the state’s desire for closer oversight and safety testing before public release.
Notion pivots away from email as AI agents take over
Notion is shutting down its Skiff-influenced email app, citing a major shift where users are increasingly favouring AI agents over traditional manual email interfaces. This is a significant moment for productivity enthusiasts, signaling that the era of managing your own inbox might finally be coming to an end in favour of automated assistance.
OpenAI and SpaceX look to break Nvidia’s chip monopoly
In a bid to reduce costs and increase efficiency, major players like OpenAI and SpaceX are now developing their own custom AI chips to compete with Nvidia. This shift toward bespoke hardware could eventually lead to cheaper AI services for consumers as the industry moves away from a total dependence on a single supplier.
Thanks for joining us for today’s digest; have a brilliant Sunday and we’ll see you tomorrow!
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