UK fines Reddit for not checking user ages aggressively enoughArs Technica• February 24, 2026 at 07:53 PMShareUK agency alleges "Reddit failed to apply any robust age assurance mechanism."Read Full ArticleRelated ArticlesBitcoin falls back below $67,000, rapidly giving back Wednesday's gainsThe declines are coming as the Nasdaq tumbles nearly 2%, led by a post-earnings selloff in Nvidia.CoinDesk• Feb 26, 2026, 03:37 PMThe Protocol: Blockchain sleuth ZachXBT alleges Axiom employee conducted insider tradingAlso: Ethereum’s “strawmap”, Robinhood chain update and OpenAI + smart contractsCoinDesk• Feb 26, 2026, 03:34 PMSenate hearing for U.S. bank regulators thrusts crypto into starring roleBefore the Senate Banking Committee gaveled its banking-oversight hearing to a start, crypto claimed much of the oxygen, including in an OCC policy push.CoinDesk• Feb 26, 2026, 03:22 PMGoogle might reshuffle search results to try to dodge fines in the EUGoogle is planning to test changes to how it displays search results for certain topics, nearly a year after it was charged with violating antitrust rules in the European Union, Reuters reports. The shift will show top-ranked rival services for hotels, flights, restaurants, and transportation higher up in results, rather than prioritizing Google's own services like Google Flights. It will be rolling out soon "across Europe," starting with results for lodgings, with "flights and other services" following later. This update could address one of the core issues the European Commission highlighted when it ruled last year that Google was in vio … Read the full story at The Verge.The Verge• Feb 26, 2026, 03:18 PMAI agents are fast, loose, and out of control, MIT study findsThe majority of agentic AI systems disclose nothing about what safety testing, and many systems have no documented way to shut down a rogue bot, a study by MIT found.ZDNET AI• Feb 26, 2026, 03:17 PMAI agents are fast, loose, and out of control, MIT study findsThe majority of agentic AI systems disclose nothing about what safety testing, and many systems have no documented way to shut down a rogue bot, a study by MIT found.ZDNET Security• Feb 26, 2026, 03:17 PM