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Home » Week in Review: WWDC 2025 recap

Week in Review: WWDC 2025 recap

GTBy GTJune 15, 2025 TechCrunch No Comments4 Mins Read
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Welcome back to Week in Review! We have lots for you this week, including what came out of WWDC 2025; The Browser Company’s AI browser; OpenAI’s partnership with Mattel; and updates to your iPad. Have a great weekend!

The Apple experience: We kicked the week off with WWDC 2025, Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, where the company showed off a newly designed iOS 26, new features across its products, and much more. There was considerable pressure on Apple this year to build on its promises and to make amends to developers as it lags behind in AI and faces continued legal challenges over its App Store.

Snack hack: U.S. grocery distribution giant United Natural Foods (UNFI) was hit by a cyberattack, the company confirmed Tuesday. Much of UNFI’s external-facing systems were offline, including web systems used by suppliers and customers, as well as the company’s VPN products. Whole Foods was one of the victims, and it told staff that the cyberattack was affecting UNFI’s “ability to select and ship products from their warehouses” and that this will “impact our normal delivery schedules and product availability.” 

Public debut: Chime’s much-anticipated public debut finally arrived, with the company raising $864 million in its IPO. Iconiq was one of Chime’s many backers taking a victory lap at its graduation to become a public company.

This is TechCrunch’s Week in Review, where we recap the week’s biggest news. Want this delivered as a newsletter to your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here.

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Image Credits:Google

Not to be outdone: Google rolled out Android 16 to Pixel phones, adding group chat to RCS, AI-powered edit suggestions to Google Photos, and support for corporate badges in Google Wallet.

Cabs are here: Elon Musk has spent years claiming that Teslas would be able to drive themselves. Apparently the time has come — maybe? Musk said this week that Tesla will start offering public rides in driverless vehicles in Austin, Texas, on June 22. 

An AI browser: The Browser Company said last year that it’s going to stop supporting and developing its Arc browser, which, although popular, was never able to reach scale. The startup has since been busy developing an AI-first browser called Dia. 

And another one: OpenAI released o3-pro, which is a version of o3, a reasoning model that the startup launched earlier this year. As opposed to conventional AI models, reasoning models work through problems step by step, allowing them to perform more reliably in domains like physics, math, and coding. In other news, Sam Altman posted on X to say that his company’s first open model in years will be delayed until later this summer.

Desperately seeking: Now that people can ask a chatbot for answers — sometimes generated from news content taken without a publisher’s knowledge — there’s no need to click on Google’s blue links. And that’s hurting publishers.

Cool? Mattel and OpenAI are teaming up to create an “AI-powered product,” whatever that is. As part of the deal, Mattel employees will also get access to OpenAI tools like ChatGPT Enterprise to “enhance product development and creative ideation.”

“A privacy disaster”: Reporter Amanda Silberling tried out the Meta AI app and found that it’s publicly sharing people’s queries. “Meta does not indicate to users what their privacy settings are as they post, or where they are even posting to. So, if you log into Meta AI with Instagram, and your Instagram account is public, then so too are your searches about how to meet ‘big booty women,’” she writes. 

iPad for work: iPadOS 26 will bring new features to the 15-year-old device that might actually make it usable for a full day of work. 

Analysis

Bluesky logo
Image Credits:Jaque Silva/NurPhoto (opens in a new window) / Getty Images

A wave of recent headlines and posts has raised questions about Bluesky, from concerns about slowing growth to claims that the platform is turning into a left-leaning echo chamber and that its users are too serious. While those critiques capture part of the conversation, they don’t reflect the full picture of what Bluesky is working toward. But if left unchecked, those perceptions could pose a real challenge to the platform’s future growth.



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