SSPAI Morning Brief: Samsung Unveils 2026 Odyssey Series Monitors, and More

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少数派编辑部

Morning Brief

  1. Samsung unveils 2026 Odyssey series monitors
  2. Spotify bans accounts linked to Anna’s Archive
  3. FCC bans all foreign drones from entering the U.S. market
  4. Paramount steps up its bid for Warner Bros.
  5. DingTalk releases AI DingTalk 1.1 “Mulan”
  6. 007: First Light release delayed
  7. Rumors You Can Just Glance At

Samsung Unveils 2026 Odyssey Series Monitors

On December 24, Samsung announced the launch of five 2026 Odyssey series gaming monitors, including the Odyssey G6, Odyssey 3D, and Odyssey G8.

Among them, the 32-inch, 6K-resolution Odyssey 3D (model G90XH) supports glasses-free 3D and features real-time eye tracking, adjusting visual depth and angles based on the viewer’s eye position. It offers dual refresh-rate modes of 165Hz and 330Hz, with a 1ms GtG response time. The first batch of games optimized for its glasses-free 3D experience includes The First Berserker: Khazan, Stellar Blade, and Lies of P: Overture.

Odyssey 3D

The 27-inch Odyssey G6 (model G60H) supports dual refresh-rate modes, offering QHD resolution at 600Hz and HD resolution at 1040Hz. The 32-inch Odyssey G8 (model G80HS) operates in dual modes of 6K resolution at 165Hz and 3K resolution at 330Hz. The 27-inch Odyssey G8 (model G80H) supports dual modes of 5K resolution at 180Hz and QHD resolution at 360Hz.

The 32-inch Odyssey OLED G8 (model G80SH) features a 4K-resolution QD-OLED panel with a 240Hz refresh rate and 300 nits of brightness. It carries VESA DisplayHDR™ True Black 500 certification and, via the DP 2.1 (UHBR20) standard, supports video transmission bandwidths of up to 80Gbps. All models are compatible with both AMD FreeSync Premium and NVIDIA G-Sync, and will be showcased at CES 2026 in Las Vegas in January 2026. Source


Spotify bans accounts linked to Anna’s Archive

On December 22, Spotify confirmed that it has disabled user accounts associated with the piracy organization Anna’s Archive. The group claimed over the weekend that it had scraped approximately 86 million audio files and metadata for 256 million tracks from Spotify, stating that the data represents more than 99.6% of Spotify’s listening activity and describing the action as the creation of an “open music archive.” Source


FCC bans all foreign drones from entering the U.S. market

On Monday, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) added all foreign-manufactured drones and key components to its “Covered List” of untrusted suppliers, deeming these unmanned aircraft systems to pose an “unacceptable risk to U.S. national security.” The move effectively blocks drone products from non-U.S. manufacturers—including DJI—from entering the U.S. market.

The measure took effect immediately on December 22, 2025, one day ahead of the deadline previously set by Congress for a national security determination on Chinese-made drones. After the ban came into force, new drone models and related components on the list can no longer obtain the FCC equipment authorization required for import and sale. Drone models that were already imported, authorized, and sold are not affected and may continue to be used. In a statement, DJI said that “the administration has not disclosed the information on which it based its decision.” Source

On December 23, a spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Commerce said the country firmly opposes the move, arguing that the U.S. is overstretching the concept of national security and using state power to suppress foreign companies, including Chinese enterprises—calling it a典型 example of market distortion and unilateral bullying. The spokesperson urged the U.S. to stop its erroneous practices and immediately withdraw the measures. Source


Paramount steps up its bid for Warner Bros.

After Warner Bros. Discovery announced a deal with Netflix and rejected a hostile takeover bid from Paramount, Paramount has shifted to making a direct offer to shareholders in an effort to further optimize its proposal and push the transaction forward.

Paramount, led by David Ellison, said that his father—Oracle founder and billionaire Larry Ellison—will provide an irrevocable personal guarantee valued at $40.4 billion. Paramount stated that its revised proposal offers Warner Bros. Discovery greater flexibility in debt refinancing arrangements, representations, and interim operating covenants. To demonstrate the Ellison family’s ability to fund the $40.4 billion portion of the all-cash $108 billion acquisition offer, the new proposal also disclosed records showing that the Ellison family trust holds 1.16 billion shares of Oracle stock.

Paramount also announced that if the deal is blocked during regulatory review, the breakup fee it would pay to Warner Bros. Discovery would be increased from the previous $5 billion to $5.8 billion, matching the level offered by Netflix. Source


DingTalk releases AI DingTalk 1.1 “Mulan”

On December 23, DingTalk held the AI DingTalk 1.1 product launch and ecosystem conference in Hangzhou, announcing its upgrade from a traditional mobile internet application to an AI-native operating system (Agent OS). At the event, DingTalk unveiled multiple new products, including DingTalk Real, a new terminal designed for enterprise agents that offers real-time data access, permission-controlled execution, and process monitoring—providing a trusted runtime environment for enterprise-grade agents. It also introduced Enterprise Agent OS and the agent orchestration platform “Wukong,” which can coordinate multimodal models, enterprise systems, and various agents to enable cross-business automated collaboration.

In addition, DingTalk rolled out a range of industry-specific intelligent agents such as AI Printing, AI Recruitment, and AI Travel, and showcased real-world applications including order recognition and quality inspection in manufacturing. AI Sheets, AI Meeting Notes, and the collaborative translation tool DingTalk A1 also received multimodal upgrades. DingTalk further announced plans to launch a dual-version strategy—separate China and overseas editions of DingTalk—to meet global business needs and strengthen compliance capabilities. Source


007: First Light release delayed

IO Interactive has announced that its upcoming title 007: First Light has been delayed to May 27, 2026. The game was originally scheduled for release in March 2026. IO Interactive said that while the game is already highly playable, the team wants to use the additional two months for final polishing and optimization, and promised to share more information in early 2026.

007: First Light is the first game based on the James Bond IP in nearly a decade. Developed by the studio behind the Hitman series, it focuses on the origin story of James Bond before he earns the 007 designation and becomes a legendary agent. Source


Rumors You Can Just Glance At

On Tuesday, the U.S. Department of Justice released nearly 30,000 pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, including an email from a prosecutor that reveals former U.S. President Donald Trump flew on Epstein’s private jet eight times in the 1990s—contradicting Trump’s claim on social media in 2024 that he had “never flown on Epstein’s plane.”

According to three sources familiar with the matter, NVIDIA has informed Chinese customers that it plans to begin shipping its H200 AI chips in mid-February 2026, ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday. Separately, MLex reports that Alibaba is also considering purchasing between 40,000 and 50,000 MI308 AI chips from AMD. The MI308 is designed specifically for the Chinese market, aiming to comply with U.S. export regulations while still supporting large-scale AI training and inference workloads.

Marvel Studios officially released the first trailer for Avengers: Doomsday on December 23, confirming that Chris Evans will return as Steve Rogers. Back in January, Evans had said in an interview that he had happily bid farewell to Marvel Studios and dismissed rumors of a return.

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