YouTube is moving AI disclosure labels into more visible positions on Shorts and long-form videos.
The platform will automatically apply labels to some AI-generated videos even if creators fail to disclose AI use.
The changes arrive as Google expands Gemini Omni-powered editing and remix features across YouTube Shorts.
YouTube is expanding its AI disclosure system as the platform rolls out more AI-powered video editing and remixing tools for creators and viewers alike.
In a blog post on Wednesday, YouTube said it will make labels for AI-generated or “meaningfully altered” videos more prominent. Under the updated system, labels on long-form videos will appear directly below the player, while labels on Shorts will appear as overlays on the video itself.
“By moving these labels on to the main stage, viewers get the context they need at a glance,” YouTube wrote. “This is now the single label format for all photorealistic and meaningfully AI altered or generated content on YouTube.”
We’re making AI disclosures simpler for creators and clearer for viewers. Here’s what’s coming:
🏷️ Labels for realistic AI-generated content will appear on the video player for both long-form videos and on Shorts.
🔍 We’re introducing automatic AI detection to help creators… pic.twitter.com/2F3pXIvESI
— Updates From YouTube (@UpdatesFromYT) May 27, 2026
YouTube said it will start using its own systems to spot AI-generated videos and add labels to them, even if creators do not say AI was used.
“If a creator doesn’t specify whether or not they used AI, but our systems detect significant photorealistic AI use, we will now automatically apply a label,” YouTube wrote.
Creators can dispute incorrect labels through YouTube Studio, although disclosures will remain permanent for videos made with YouTube AI tools, as well as content that includes metadata identifying it as AI-generated.
The update comes as Google expands its AI-generated media tools across YouTube and its Gemini AI model.
At Google I/O 2026 earlier this month, Google introduced Gemini Omni, a multimodal AI model that combines Gemini with the company’s media-generation tools, including Veo, Nano Banana, and Genie, and allows users to create and edit videos using text, images, audio, and existing footage.
The company also introduced new AI tools for Shorts, including the ability to let users use AI to restyle videos, insert themselves into clips, and create new versions of other creators’ content.
According to YouTube, the new changes are designed to balance transparency with creator control, and do not change how a video is recommended or whether it can be monetized.
“In a world where AI is changing what’s possible, our goal is simple: make it as easy as possible for creators and viewers to have the right information,” the company said.
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Strictly stars Karen Hauer and Nadiya Bychkova are joining Nikita Kuzmin on his upcoming UK tour following their departure from the show.
In March, Karen announced she was the first pro dancer to leave the hit BBC programme this year. Having joined in 2012, she was the show’s longest-serving pro dancer at the time.
Just days later, Nadiya announced she was also leaving. The pair join Gorka Marquez, Luba Mushtuk, and Michelle Tsiakkas as the five pro dancers who won’t be returning for the upcoming 2026 series.
Karen was Strictly’s longest-serving pro dancer (Credit: BBC)
Strictly stars Karen Hauer and Nadiya Bychkova join Nikita Kuzmin on tour
However, their dance careers still prove to be in demand. From June, Nikita Kuzmin will star in his “explosive new dance spectacular” show named Supernova.
It Takes Two host Janette Manrara was initially announced as one of the show’s guests. But now, in another announcement, Karen and Nadiya will also feature as guests during selected dates.
“Due to phenomenal demand, we’re excited to announce that Karen Hauer & Nadiya Bychkova will now join Nikita for additional dates on the SUPERNOVA Tour!!” Nikita wrote on Instagram.
“We’re thrilled to be bringing Karen & Nadiya to more cities for what is going to be a special show.”
‘So excited!’
Fans expressed their immediate excitement following the news, and some have already booked tickets!
“So Excited! Cannot wait to see and feel all the Energy coming with Supernova! Got my Tix for Brighton, Wimbledon and Guildford!” one user wrote.
“Fabulous to see you have some lovely ladies to dance with Nikita! You are one very popular guy,” another person shared.
“Can’t wait to see @karenhauer in Manchester,” a third remarked.
“Got my meet and greet,” a fourth said.
“Got my tickets to see Nikita and my favourite female dancer, Karen,” a fifth added.
Read now: Strictly star Karen Hauer supported as she celebrates ‘beautiful’ relationship update following show exit: ‘You look so happy!
What do you think of this story? Let us know by leaving a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix. We want to hear your thoughts!
Kraken’s Bitcoin Vault launch coincided with a significant drop in DeFi confidence due to security concerns.
The product’s release was fueled by user demand for simple, safe ways to earn bitcoin without manually managing assets.
DeFi infrastructure vulnerabilities were highlighted by a prominent developer, citing asymmetric security risks and recent protocol exploits.
Kraken launched Bitcoin Vault on Wednesday, a new yield product within its Kraken Earn suite that allows long-term BTC holders to earn bitcoin-denominated rewards through DeFi lending strategies without selling, wrapping, or manually managing assets across protocols.
The vault is powered by DeFi infrastructure provider Veda and operated by Sentora, a risk management firm. Customer assets are deployed across established onchain lending protocols including Aave, Morpho, and Tydro.
“Many bitcoin holders on Kraken have made it clear they want simple, safe ways to earn on the bitcoin they already plan to hold,” said John Zettler, GM of Payward Services and head of Kraken Earn Products. “Bitcoin Vault is built for that mindset.”
The product is integrated into both the Kraken and Krak apps and is available in eligible jurisdictions. Kraken’s broader DeFi Earn offering has surpassed $240 million in assets under management since launching in January 2026, with the company attributing growth to organic adoption rather than token incentives.
The Timing
The launch landed on what may be the single worst day for DeFi confidence in 2026.
Hours before Kraken’s announcement, OpenZeppelin co-founder Manuel Aráoz posted that he now considers “all of DeFi” unsafe. “Coding agents are superhuman at finding vulnerabilities, and smart contract security is too asymmetric: defenders need to fix every bug while attackers need just one exploit to steal funds,” he wrote. He said he had advised friends and family to exit DeFi entirely — including blue-chip protocols like Aave, MakerDAO, and Compound.
On the same day, Stake DAO was exploited after an attacker compromised the protocol’s deployer private key, reconfigured the LayerZero v2 OFT peer on the vsdCRV token contract, and minted 5.4 trillion tokens with a nominal value of $763 billion. Thin DEX liquidity limited actual extraction to approximately $91,000, but the mechanics — a single compromised key enabling unbounded minting — are identical to the attack pattern that has defined 2026’s costliest exploits.
Why the Juxtaposition Matters
The protocols Kraken is routing customer bitcoin into have not been immune to this year’s security crisis.
Aave, which is one of the three protocols Bitcoin Vault deploys into, absorbed roughly $196 million in bad debt from the $292 million Kelp DAO exploit in April. When the attacker used forged rsETH as collateral to borrow massive amounts of WETH, Aave’s TVL dropped from approximately $48.5 billion to $30.7 billion in a single day as depositors rushed to withdraw. The AAVE token fell over 18%. Aave froze rsETH and WETH reserves across Ethereum, Arbitrum, Base, Mantle, and Linea. The protocol’s Umbrella safety module was initially cited as sufficient to offset any bad debt, but Aave later revised that position.
Morpho, also named as a Bitcoin Vault deployment target, fared significantly better during the same event. Its isolated market architecture limited exposure to approximately $1 million across two markets, with other vaults entirely unaffected. Morpho subsequently absorbed roughly $8 billion in deposits rotating from Aave without triggering a bank run — a structural validation of its design. But isolation does not mean invulnerability, and Morpho has not been tested by a direct exploit of its own core contracts at this scale.
Tydro, the third protocol listed, is newer and has a smaller track record for comparison.
What Protects Bitcoin Vault Depositors?
Kraken has emphasized that Bitcoin Vault’s yield is sourced from real borrower demand on overcollateralized lending markets—not token incentives, subsidies, or rehypothecation. This is a fundamentally different architecture from the Celsius/Voyager/BlockFi models that collapsed in 2022, where customer deposits were lent out in opaque, undercollateralized structures with no onchain transparency.
The risk management layer is also explicit. Sentora operates the vault, Chaos Labs provides risk monitoring, and Veda handles strategy execution. Kraken has stated that users are shown offered rates, applicable fees, and potential risks before depositing, and that withdrawals are typically instant except during periods of constrained liquidity.
But the Kelp DAO incident demonstrated exactly how constrained liquidity can materialize. When Aave froze WETH reserves across multiple chains in April, utilization rates spiked to 100%, and some depositors could not withdraw. The freeze was a protective measure — but it also meant that capital was temporarily locked. Whether similar conditions could affect Bitcoin Vault depositors during a comparable event is a question Kraken’s press materials do not explicitly address.
The Broader Context
Kraken’s Bitcoin Vault is part of a 2026 yield arms race across exchanges. Bybit’s Mantle Vault hit $200 million in AUM within 94 days. Morpho’s curated vault system holds roughly $5.8 billion in TVL. Bitwise launched a Morpho USDC vault targeting 6% yield alongside Kraken’s DeFi Earn debut in January. Kraken itself launched Babylon-powered native BTC staking in June 2025, a Bitwise covered call strategy for institutional clients in February, and AVAX staking last week.
Long-term BTC holders represent one of the largest pools of idle capital in crypto, and exchanges that can convert holders into yield earners stand to gain significant retention and revenue advantages. Kraken’s Fed master account, Krak debit card, and now Bitcoin Vault collectively position the company as a full-stack financial platform rather than a pure-play exchange.
But the demand does not erase the risk surface. DeFi has lost over $1 billion to exploits in 2026. April was the worst month for crypto hacks in history by incident count. May has continued the trend. The man who literally co-founded the industry’s most trusted smart contract security library told the world today that the entire sector is unsafe.
Kraken’s Bitcoin Vault may be well-constructed, well-managed, and well-timed for user demand. Whether it is well-timed for DeFi’s current security environment is a different question — and one that each depositor will have to answer for themselves.
Disclaimer: The information researched and reported by The Crypto Times is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional financial advice. Investing in crypto assets involves significant risk due to market volatility. Always Do Your Own Research (DYOR) and consult with a qualified Financial Advisor before making any investment decisions.
Dragon Quest XII: Beyond Dreams is going to take longer than expected to come out. How long exactly? Square Enix didn’t say on a 40th Anniversary livestream for the franchise, but producer Yosuke Saito did confirm that the development team decided to reboot the RPG project and “start from scratch.”
He said that the development team has been reshuffled and that while things are now progressing more smoothly, it’s going to take longer than expected to deliver Dragon Quest XII, a game fans have been waiting on since the last entry in the series arrived back in 2017.
Base, the Coinbase-backed Ethereum Layer-2 network, has introduced a new infrastructure layer that allows AI assistants to interact directly with users’ crypto wallets — marking a significant step toward AI-driven financial autonomy in the decentralized finance space.
Coinbase‘s Base network moved to bridge the gap between artificial intelligence and decentralized finance on May 26 with the launch of Base MCP — a gateway that lets AI agents like Claude, ChatGPT, and Cursor carry out on-chain transactions through plain-language prompts, while keeping users firmly in control of the final approval.
The system is built on the Model Context Protocol (MCP), an open-source standard introduced by Anthropic in November 2024 that allows AI systems to interface with external tools and data sources through a unified framework. Base MCP repurposes that standard for crypto, turning it into a secure conduit between AI clients and users’ blockchain wallets.
What Base MCP Actually Does
In practical terms, Base MCP means a user can open Claude or ChatGPT and type something like “swap 0.5 ETH for USDC on Uniswap” or “lend my USDC on Morpho” — and the AI will prepare the transaction, route it through the MCP gateway, and hold it as a pending request in the user’s Base Account for approval. The user reviews the details and decides whether to sign.
That last step — mandatory human approval — is not optional. Every transaction requires explicit confirmation through the Base Account interface. The MCP server itself never touches users’ private keys, making the design fully non-custodial. Authentication runs through OAuth 2.1, the same protocol underpinning “Sign in with Google” and similar login systems across the modern web.
The result is a system that preserves the convenience of AI-assisted action while stopping short of handing agents full financial autonomy — a line many users, and regulators, would not want crossed.
Base Introduces MCP Gateway
A DeFi Ecosystem From Day One
Base MCP is not launching as a blank canvas. The platform arrives with a curated set of integrations across the DeFi stack, delivered through what Base calls “skill plugins” — modular, callable functions that AI clients can invoke when a user requests a specific on-chain action.
Launch partners span a wide range of DeFi activity:
Uniswap for token swapsMorpho and Moonwell for lendingAerodrome for liquidity infrastructureAvantis for perpetual tradingBankr for portfolio managementVirtuals for AI agent tokenization
The skill plugin architecture is a deliberate design choice. Rather than Base building and maintaining every protocol integration internally, third-party developers can create their own plugins for any application that wants to be accessible through the MCP standard. The ecosystem can therefore expand organically as more protocols opt in — without requiring a central team to manage every new connection.
Reducing Phishing Risk — With Caveats
One of the more notable security claims in the Base MCP announcement concerns phishing. Many of the most damaging crypto wallet exploits in recent years have involved users being directed to fake or compromised front-end websites that generate malicious transaction requests. Because Base MCP constructs transaction calls locally within the agent framework — rather than pulling them from an external website that could be spoofed or hijacked — Base argues the attack surface for this class of exploit is meaningfully reduced.
It is a legitimate point, though the company is careful not to overstate it. Users must still review transaction details before signing, particularly when dealing with volatile tokens, leveraged positions, or unfamiliar DeFi protocols. The security model also depends on how well each AI client and individual skill plugin is implemented — variables Base does not fully control.
OAuth 2.1 is a battle-tested protocol in traditional web applications, but its deployment within a crypto-native MCP framework is new territory. Edge cases and unforeseen attack vectors in this kind of combined environment are a real possibility, and early adopters should treat the system accordingly.
Base MCP
The Friction Trade-Off
Perhaps the subtler tension in the Base MCP design is between security and usability. The mandatory approval step for every transaction is sensible protection when a user is making one or two deliberate moves. But DeFi strategies often involve cascading micro-transactions — rebalancing positions, harvesting yield, executing arbitrage — where requiring a manual signature at each stage could become an obstacle.
Whether Base and its partners address this with batched approvals, tiered permissions, or some other mechanism will be worth watching. The answer will likely determine how much of Base MCP’s theoretical capability translates into routine daily use.
Where This Fits in a Broader Trend
Base MCP arrives at a moment when the crypto and AI industries are actively exploring convergence. Payment protocols, trading agents, and wallet infrastructure have all seen AI integrations in recent months, but most have been bespoke, fragmented, and incompatible with one another.
By anchoring its gateway to the MCP standard — an open protocol with growing adoption across AI development tools — Base is betting on interoperability as the organizing principle. Any AI client that supports MCP can, in theory, plug into the Base ecosystem without custom engineering. That is a potentially powerful multiplier for adoption.
For users, the immediate value proposition is simpler: common crypto actions become as easy as typing a sentence. The complexity of navigating multiple DeFi applications, manually constructing transactions, and tracking positions across protocols could be handled by an AI layer — with the user retaining the final say on every move.
Whether that convenience is enough to bring new users into DeFi, or primarily serves as a productivity tool for existing participants, remains to be seen. What is clear is that Base has staked out an early and thoughtful position in what is likely to be a crowded and competitive infrastructure category.
On-chain data shows BlackRock’s IBIT fund moved roughly $1.01 billion in Bitcoin between May 18–22, 2026 — the largest weekly redemption wave of the year, triggering widespread alarm that analysts say was largely misread.
What the Data Shows
Between May 18 and May 22, 2026, BlackRock moved roughly 13,000 to 15,000 BTC out of custody wallets through daily transactions, according to on-chain data tracked by Arkham Intelligence. The transfers were directed to Coinbase Prime, the institutional trading desk BlackRock uses to settle redemptions from its iShares Bitcoin Trust, known as IBIT. Totalled across five consecutive sessions, the movements came to approximately $1.01 billion.
On-chain tracker Arkham posted that BlackRock had sold Bitcoin every single day last week and ended with the line that circulated widely: “If BlackRock is selling, who’s buying?” The post spread rapidly across crypto social media, triggering concern that the world’s largest asset manager had turned against the asset it had spent years building products around. What the post did not make explicit is that BlackRock selling Bitcoin through Coinbase Prime to settle investor redemptions looks identical on-chain to a strategic exit — but is operationally something else entirely.
BlackRock Sells 13,000 BTC, Still Holds Over 800,000 Coins (Source: Official Trust Data)
How ETF Redemptions Work
When an investor buys a share of IBIT, BlackRock purchases and holds an equivalent amount of Bitcoin in custody on that investor’s behalf. When the investor exits, the process reverses. When investors redeem ETF shares, the fund sells underlying Bitcoin to cover the exit — making the $1.01 billion figure a measure of client withdrawals, not a directional bet by BlackRock.
Arkham uses on-chain analytics to label and monitor blockchain addresses associated with BlackRock’s IBIT fund and tracks their movements to exchange deposit addresses such as Coinbase Prime. Each daily tranche corresponded to the volume of redemption requests received that session. The regularity of the transfers — each roughly equal in size, spread evenly across five sessions — is consistent with systematic operational settlement rather than a coordinated exit.
The SEC has since approved in-kind redemptions for IBIT, under which investors receive Bitcoin directly for returned shares rather than cash — a structure that eliminates the need for a forced open-market Bitcoin sale going forward. Under the cash-redemption model in place during the week in question, the on-chain selling was a structural inevitability tied to investor exits, not a choice made by BlackRock.
The Broader ETF Market That Week
IBIT’s outflows did not occur in isolation. The week of May 18 to 22 saw $1.26 billion in total U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF outflows — the heaviest week of 2026 — capping a six-day losing streak, with the worst single day on May 18 when $648 million was pulled from the market. BlackRock accounted for the largest share, consistent with its dominant position by assets under management, but outflows were recorded across multiple funds including Fidelity’s FBTC and Ark Invest’s ARKB.
The figure marked BlackRock’s largest weekly Bitcoin ETF outflow since November 2025. The scale of the combined withdrawal indicated that the redemption pressure was not specific to IBIT but reflected a broader pullback from Bitcoin exposure during the period across the entire U.S. spot ETF market.
Bitcoin ETF Heatmap (Source: Coinglass)
Market Conditions During the Period
Geopolitical tensions, persistent doubts about the trajectory of Federal Reserve interest rates, and Bitcoin’s inability to convincingly reclaim its all-time highs created an environment in which even investors with established positions were reassessing their exposure. Treasury yields remained elevated throughout, keeping the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets high. Broader risk appetite across equities was also compressed, and Bitcoin remained firmly in the risk-asset category for most portfolio managers making allocation decisions under those conditions.
Bitcoin fell to a low near $74,300 during the week before recovering to around $77,000 by the close of the period, though that recovery was driven by short-term futures traders rather than long-term buyers, and even that demand showed signs of fading.
Bitcoin absorbed over $1 billion in selling pressure and closed the week above $76,000, suggesting some sustained demand at those levels, though analysts noted it may also reflect accumulated tension that has yet to find a resolution. The absence of a sharper drawdown points to genuine buyer interest absorbing the ETF-driven supply, though the identity and conviction of those buyers is not determinable from market data alone.
BlackRock Bitcoin ETF Records Over $1 Billion in Outflows in a Single Week
BlackRock’s Wider Position on Digital Assets
The reaction to Arkham’s post stood in contrast to other developments at BlackRock that same week. While IBIT was settling those redemptions, BlackRock filed a second tokenized fund with the SEC — an expansion of its digital asset product suite rather than a contraction. The filing received minimal coverage compared to the redemption story, despite being a more direct signal of the firm’s strategic direction.
Some analysts regarded the widely circulated headlines as misleading, particularly given that Bitcoin’s price showed little reaction to the selling and continued trading near recent highs. IBIT still holds one of the largest BTC stockpiles globally, a position built during its record inflow streaks earlier in the year. A viral clip of BlackRock CEO Larry Fink praising crypto also recirculated alongside the Arkham data. The clip in which Fink called crypto “not a bad asset” with “a role” alongside gold came from a CBS 60 Minutes segment that aired in October 2025 — months before the outflow week.
Context: Where Flows Stood Before the Selloff
Just weeks prior, April 2026 had been the strongest month of the year for spot Bitcoin ETFs, pulling in $1.97 billion in net inflows. The sharp reversal in May reflected a change in market conditions rather than a sustained structural shift in institutional appetite.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs collectively still hold around 1.3 million BTC, and the selling throughout the redemption period remained orderly. No significant market dislocation was reported at Coinbase Prime, and the supply released by the IBIT redemptions was absorbed without triggering a broader cascade in spot markets. Whether BlackRock’s customers were reducing Bitcoin exposure due to a genuine reassessment of the asset, or simply rebalancing in response to short-term macro conditions, is not fully determinable from on-chain data alone. A single difficult week following a strong April is more consistent with cyclical repositioning than a structural exit from Bitcoin.
When it comes to Swiss fancy timepieces, few match-ups are as valued as Breitling and Omega. Both names have years of watch-making skill, well-known styles and devoted fans around the globe. Whether you’re getting your first fancy watch or adding to a big collection, choosing between Breitling vs Omega can be tough because both brands give great work, accuracy and history.
The talk about “Breitling and Omega” is now more important in 2026 as the fancy watch market grows worldwide. Omega is known for its links to NASA, the Olympics and James Bond; while Breitling is praised for its flight-themed watches and strong styles. Even if both brands are in the same high-end group, their designs, ideas, movements, looks and who they aim at are really different.
Omega is seen as a more flexible and skillful name, giving stylish sports watches and high-tech Master Chronom͏eter parts. Breitling, however, is famous for big pilot watches, bold looks on the wrist and ties to flying. Picking one or the other relies mainly on your way of life; style likes and what you think is most important in a fancy watch.
In this full expert look, we will compare Breitling and Omega in many areas like history, skill, moving tech, style, strength, selling value, cost and how easy they are to collect. We will also look at famous designs like the Omega Speedmaster and Breitling Navitimer and the Omega Seamaster with the Breitling Superocean. If you are trying to pick which fancy watch brand should have a spot in your group, this clear guide will help you make the good choice.
Brand History and Heritage
Omega Heritage
Omega started in 1848 in Switzerland and has turned into one of the most important names in watch-making. The brand is well-known for making the first watch worn on the moon, the famous Speedmaster Professional. Omega also acts as the official timekeeper for Olympic Games and has a long link with the James Bond series.
Omega’s name is built on͏ exactness, new ideas and flexibility. Groups like the Speedmaster, Seamaster, Constellation and De Ville have turned into lasting favorites in a luxury watch world.
Breitling Heritage
Breitling began in 1884 and soon got known for flying watches and timers. The name has strong ties to flight past and helped make wrist timers common for pilots. Types like the Navitimer turned into key tools for flyers because of their slide-rule use.
Breitling’s name stays closely linked to fun, flying and exactness. Series like the Navitimer, Chronomat, Avenger and Superocean show the brand’s brave look
Design Philosophy: Breitling vs Omega
One of the largest gaps between Breitling and Omega is in their look style.
Omega Design Style
Omega timepieces mostly aim for nice style and flexibility. Their faces are often simpler, more even and easy to put on every day. Even casual ranges like the Seamaster keep neat shapes and smooth looks.
This changeableness is a reason Omega likes more people.
Breitling Design Style
Breitling clocks are braver and more tool-based. Lots of Breitling types have:
Large casesBusy dialsAviation slide rulesStrong wrist presenceRugged aesthetics
The Navitimer, for instance, pops out right away because of its smart dial setup and pilot-watch look. Breitling styles often seem more active and stronger than Omega’s neat look.
Movement Technology and Accuracy
Omega Movements
Omega has put a lot of money into new ways of moving over the last 20 years. The brand’s Co-Axial escape technology cuts down on friction, which makes it more accurate and lasts longer. Omega also makes Master Chronometer-certified movements that are checked for how precise they are and how well they stand up to magnets.
Lots of Omega timepieces stand up to magnetic fields as high as 15,000 gauss which makes them one of the most clever fancy watches you can find right now.
Breitling makes great timekeeping parts that are checked for accuracy. The name used to depend a lot on ETA-based models but now it uses more of its own parts like the Breitling B01.
The Breitling B01 gear is really liked for:
High precisionLong power reserveReliable chronograph performance
Breitling puts more care on time-measuring tools and flying time gadgets than Omega’s wider tech change plan.
Winner: Omega
Omega often comes first in change, resist magnetism and whole skill improvement.
Craftsmanship and Build Quality
Both names give great Swiss skill but their way of working is a bit different.
Omega emphasizes:
Fine polishingElegant finishingRefined bracelet constructionLuxurious detailing
Breitling focuses on:
Rugged durabilityTool-watch engineeringThick casesTechnical construction
Gatherers often cheer for Omega for giving a bit more smooth touch while Breitling does well in a tough sporty look.
Omega Speedmaster vs Breitling Navitimer
This is a well-known fancy watch comparison in the timepiece world.
Omega Speedmaster
The Speedmaster Pro “Moonwatch” is famous for its NASA space past and classic͏ look. It gives:
Many gatherers think the Seamaster is a bit more useful and tricksier.
Comfort and Wearability
Omega watches are usually easier to wear every day due to their even shapes and thinner designs.
Breitling watches often feel bigger and bulkier on the wrist. While a lot of buyers enjoy this strong look, some people think Omega is more comfy for using it every day over a long time.
Best for Daily Wear: Omega
Best for Bold Wrist Presence: Breitling
Pricing Comparison
Both names fight in the same fancy cost areas.
Omega Pricing
Entry-level luxury models: $5,000–$7,000Speedmaster and Seamaster models: $7,000–$12,000+Precious metal models: Significantly higher
Breitling Pricing
Entry-level models: $4,500–$6,500Navitimer and Chronomat collections: $7,000–$11,000+Limited editions: Higher pricing
In general, Breitling can at times give a bit more worth at the store while Omega usually does better over time in resale areas.
Resale Value and Collectability
Omega usually has better resale worth and wider collector wish, mainly for:
The Speedmaster is one of the safest fancy timepiece buys besides a Rolex.
Breitling’s resale prices have gone up a lot in the last few years, mainly after the brand got a fresh look under CEO Georges Kern. But, Omega still stands out with better collector value and strength in the secondhand market.
Winner: Omega
Which Brand Is More Luxurious?
Both Omega and Breitling are real fancy watch names but Omega is often seen as a bit more important because:
NASA associationOlympic partnershipJames Bond connectionStronger movement innovationWider global recognition
Breitling, yet, has a smaller fan base that cares about flying and strong watch looks.
Who Should Buy Omega?
Omega is great for folks who want a fancy watch that mixes classic style, tech improvement and daily use. Omega watches are really good for people searching for a smooth timepiece that can change easily between work places, casual outfits and special events.
First time fancy watch buyers often pick Omega since the brand gives a great mix of old story, good quality and long-lasting worth. Sets like Speedmaster and Seamaster are known around the world and stay cool year after year making them good buys for new collectors.
Omega is also great for folks who enjoy smart watch making tech. The brand’s Master Chronometer moves, Co-Axial escape tech and anti-magnetic features make Omega one of the most clever Swiss watch brands in the world.
People and simple style lovers are really attracted to Omega due to its nice and easy design. Unlike big heavy sport watches, most Omega styles have smooth shapes and fine looks that fit for everyday wear.
The name is also great for gatherers who like past and famous stories. Omega’s link with NASA, the Moon landing, the Games and the James Bond series gives its clocks big cultural meaning.
Overall, Omega is good for p͏eople who want a fancy watch with rich history, flexible style, modern tech and great long-lasting value. It’s one of the safest and more trusted picks in the luxury watch market.
Who Should Buy Breitling?
Breitling is great for watch fans who like brave designs, flight history and fancy sporty looks. Unlike simple dress watches, Breitling pieces are made to catch eyes on the wrist. Their big cases, clear chronograph faces and tough build attract mainly buyers who enjoy skillful and manly watch styles.
Breitling is a great pick for people who love flying because the brand has strong links to pilot watches and timer inventions. Sets like Navitimer and Avenger are very liked by fans who enjoy flying-style use and tool-like looks.
The brand also works well for people who like bigger watches with a strong wrist look. Many Breitling styles have big case sizes, thick rings and very detailed faces that catch the eye right away. Shoppers who like fancy sporty watches instead of quiet style often move toward Breitling.
People who love fun and busy workers might also like Breitling since lots of their watches are made for strength and good use. Dive watches such as the Superocean and tough timers are made for games, travel and outside life styles.
Breitling is a good choice for skilled watch lovers who have classic fancy watches and seek something more special and different. While names like Omega or Rolex look a lot at variety, Breitling gives more style-focused designs with a one-of-a-kind flying theme. In general, Breitling is great for buyers who like strong fancy sport watches, timer features, flying past and big wrist look more than simple daily style.
Final Verdict
The talk between Breitling and Omega really ends up being about what you like, how you live, and what matters most to you in a fine watch. Both brands show great Swiss skill and have rich pasts and great watch making, making either choice a good buy for true watch fans.
If you are seeking a fancy watch that gives flexibility, fine looks and modern movement tech, Omega usually has the advantage. Sets like the Speedmaster and Seamaster mix classic style with new ideas, including Master Chronometer stamp and great anti-magnetic ability. Omega watches also often keep better resale value and have wider global fame due to their link with NASA, the Olympics and James Bond movies.
On the flip side, Breitling shines in strong sport watches and flying-themed stopwatches. The brand’s character is closely linked to pilot watches, practical use and tough manly looks. Watches like the Navitimer and Chronomat offer a big look on the wrist and special style that attract especially to plane lovers and collectors who like bigger, sportier timepieces.
From a look point of view, Omega watches are often simpler to wear every day due to their even sizes and nice adaptation. Breitling watches create a bolder visual mark and are more fitting for shoppers who like strong luxury sport looks.
When it comes to how people see the market, Omega is seen as a bit fancier because of its new ideas, past successes and bigger fan base. But Breitling is still one of the top fancy sports watch names around and gives great quality, skill in making things and uniqueness.
In the end, there is no bad pick in the Breitling and Omega matchup. Omega is great for classic style and fine details while Breitling is best for flashy plane-style luxury and sporty vibe.
FAQs
Which is better, Breitling or Omega?
Omega is often thought of as more flexible and skilled, while Breitling shines in plane timers and strong sport watches.
Does Omega hold value better than Breitling?
Yes, Omega watches often have better selling prices, especially the Speedmaster kind.
Is Breitling more expensive than Omega?
Cost is similar, but a few Breitling stopwatches can be a bit pricier.
Which watch is more accurate, Breitling or Omega?
Both are very precise but Omega’s Master Chronometer tech gives better anti-magnet power.
Is Breitling a luxury brand?
Yes, Breitling is a well-known Swiss fancy watch brand loved for plane-inspired watches.
Which is more popular, Omega or Breitling?
Omega mostly has wider world fame thanks to its Moonwatch and James Bond story.
Disrupts AI-powered exploit-driven attacks earlier in the attack chainEnables security teams to prioritize remediation based on real attacker activity—not severity scoresAutomatically translates exploit intelligence into immediate protection across primary attack paths
SUNNYVALE, Calif., May 27, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Proofpoint, Inc., a leading cybersecurity and compliance company, today announced Active Exploits Protection, a new solution that empowers organizations to defend against the growing exposure to AI-accelerated cyber threats. Based on real-world threats observed across Proofpoint’s telemetry, it identifies vulnerabilities actively abused in the wild and automatically translates that intelligence to enable immediate protection across the primary attack paths.
Advanced AI models, including frontier systems capable of autonomously discovering software vulnerabilities, are dramatically increasing the speed at which they are discovered and weaponized. The patch cycle is no longer the security clock, with time-to-active targeting collapsing from years to a matter of hours or less. In some cases, attacks begin before public tracking frameworks reflect the risk. Traditional, patch-based security approaches cannot keep pace with this machine-speed threat environment.
Deep Intelligence Grounded in Real-World ExploitationProofpoint’s advantage is rooted in dual-source visibility into how vulnerabilities are actually abused—often before they are reflected in public risk frameworks. Proofpoint’s attack telemetry spans hundreds of millions of daily email interactions, complemented by a global network of more than 5,000 sensors, that have generated over three million exploit-related alerts in 2026 alone. Year to date, Proofpoint has identified 12 actively exploited 2026 CVEs compared to eight currently listed in CISA’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog. Active Exploits Protection operationalizes this intelligence, translating real-world malicious activity into prioritized remediation and immediate protection.
“The speed at which threats are evolving has fundamentally changed the risk equation,” said Sumit Dhawan, CEO of Proofpoint. “It’s no longer enough to identify vulnerabilities. Organizations need to understand what attackers are exploiting in real time and reduce their exposure immediately. By combining real-world exploit intelligence with protections across the primary attack paths, we can help defend at the speed today’s threats spread.”
From Vulnerability Overload to Exploitation ClarityEven as vulnerability volumes surge, with frontier AI accelerating discovery at scale, fewer than 6% of all disclosed vulnerabilities are ever observed being exploited in real-world attacks. Security teams are left drowning in “critical” findings, forced to triage thousands of alerts without clear signals about what materially increases risk. Organizations often find themselves allocating resources based on severity scores rather than actual attacker behavior.
Active Exploits Protection helps organizations move beyond patch velocity toward real-time exposure reduction. Grounded in observed attacker activity, the solution enables security teams to focus remediation on what materially reduces risk, shrink the window between vulnerability discovery and defense, and stop exploit-driven threats before they disrupt the business.
To help organizations operationalize this approach, Active Exploits Protection delivers four core capabilities:
Prioritize Actively Exploited Vulnerabilities: Identifies vulnerabilities confirmed to be used in the wild based on Proofpoint telemetry across more than 3 million organizations and 14,000 large enterprises. Prioritization is driven by observed attacker behavior, not theoretical severity scoring, enabling security teams to focus remediation on what materially reduces risk.Enable Immediate Protection: Exploit intelligence is automatically translated into protection in approximately 35 seconds, with network-wide propagation in under 18 minutes. This reduces the exposure window for zero-day and newly weaponized threats to a median of minutes, even when patching hasn’t started. Across more than two billion emails analyzed daily, the platform maintains 99.999% detection precision.Faster, Threat-Informed Decisions: Turning intelligence directly into action, Active Exploits Protection shortens the time between threat identification and protection deployment, provides real-time context for investigations, and enables customers to access and tailor attack intelligence via APIs. The solution integrates with existing SOC tools, vulnerability management platforms, and automation pipelines.Scale with AI-Driven Workflows: Designed for modern security operations, the solution provides a foundation for AI-driven and automated workflows. By embedding exploit intelligence directly into operational processes, organizations can reduce manual triage and operationalize exposure reduction at scale.
“With AI-accelerated threats exploiting vulnerabilities faster, enterprise security teams need a sharper view of what attackers are targeting,” said Vishal Salvi, Global Head of Cognizant’s Cybersecurity Service Line. “Proofpoint’s Active Exploits Protection offers that focus, and Cognizant intends to help our clients operationalize it through our managed security and threat response services, so they can prioritize remediation where it matters most.”
AvailabilityProofpoint Active Exploits Protection is available globally today and delivered via integrated platform capabilities and API access.
To learn more about the vulnerability landscape, read our threat insight blog: https://www.proofpoint.com/us/blog/threat-insight/more-cves-same-playbook-2026-vulnerability-exploitation-wildFor more information about Proofpoint Active Exploits Protection, visit: https://www.proofpoint.com/us/blog/email-and-cloud-threats/future-exploit-defense-starts-first-mile
About Proofpoint, Inc. Proofpoint, Inc. is a global leader in human- and agent-centric cybersecurity, securing how people, data and AI agents connect across email, cloud and collaboration tools. Proofpoint is a trusted partner to over 80 of the Fortune 100, over 10,000 large enterprises, and millions of smaller organizations in stopping threats, preventing data loss, and building resilience across people and AI workflows. Proofpoint’s collaboration and data security platform helps organizations of all sizes protect and empower their people while embracing AI securely and confidently. Learn more at http://www.proofpoint.com.
Connect with Proofpoint on LinkedIn
Proofpoint is a registered trademark or tradename of Proofpoint, Inc. in the U.S. and/or other countries. All other trademarks contained herein are the property of their respective owners.
PROOFPOINT MEDIA CONTACT: Estelle Derouet Proofpoint, Inc. pr@proofpoint.com
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“Special things often need explanation. Because they’re special, they’re unusual, and so not familiar. Whether through writing or imagery or trying, they need that little bit of explanation.”
I recently reconnected with the guys at Stoffa after a few years of being out of touch. I did so, partly, because my recent article on A Presse reminded me how Stoffa really is my preferred version of that kind of brand.
Both develop unusual, distinctive products with custom fabrics. The fits and silhouettes aren’t always for me, but I find the designer-led approach consistently interesting.
The difference with Stoffa is that in each collection there will always be one or two things that fit my style – and my particular wardrobe – in a way that doesn’t happen with A Presse or other fashion brands. They remain close enough to classic menswear ideas.
Then the wonderful thing is how utterly unique those pieces are – whether it’s the fabric, the design or the silhouette. Stoffa is a designer brand in that sense – at least today – and in that way different to most we cover.
It helps that Stoffa always starts with fabric, rather than the ideas of shape and silhouette that designers usually begin with. Custom fabric has always been part of Stoffa’s approach – it’s what the name means.
Going back nine years to when we first covered Stoffa, the first piece I made was a pair of trousers in their basketweave cotton (above). It felt completely different to what I was seeing from tailors or MTM brands – matte, washed and naturally dyed, it was elegant but relaxed.
Since then the range of fabrics has expanded considerably, and you can see them all listed on the fabric page here. There are also deep dives into them here. Stoffa is expensive, but when you read about the work that goes into that fabric (and you personally value it) it’s hard not to see the value.
Unique fabrics means unusual fabrics, which means they won’t necessarily be for you. An example is the fig silk blouson, which I tried recently (above). As Nick and Agyesh put it: “That was our most adventurous piece of the season, the extreme version of the silhouette.”
It’s made with a silk crepe designed for summer shirts, which means it’s light and flyaway. It’s also made in a shirt workshop, which means finer needle stitching and finishing. It’s beautiful, but certainly not for everyone.
The mistake I consistently made with Stoffa over the years, I think, was looking at the brand as a whole and assuming I would either wear all of it or none of it. It was either a brand for me, or it wasn’t.
I loved those basket-weave trousers, and eventually had three pairs made in different colours. But I was surprised that the suede flight jacket didn’t work for me. I should have seen the difference – one was more classic, the other more unusual, too cropped and wide for the style I like in a jacket.
This is the case with most designers I find – even the biggest fans wouldn’t buy everything. Instead, they appreciate the range and freshness of new ideas, and enjoy picking out which ones they buy into.
Perhaps the biggest difference between Stoffa and other fashion brands is that Stoffa was built around made to order, and most clothes still work on that basis.
This means that if you like the silhouette of a jacket but it’s a little short on you, you can add length. If you need one size in a shirt’s body but another in the collar, that can be done. You shouldn’t try and change the intended design (another mistake I’ve made in the past) but you can make the design work a lot better for your shape than at other brands.
I might cover this more in depth in a follow-up article, as I know readers will want to know which current Stoffa pieces we recommend, and which we’d have made to measure or not.
Stoffa have always followed their own path, yet they feel more relevant today than ever. The world has turned towards their muted colours and drapey silhouettes, and places more value on their natural processes and sustainability focus.
It makes complete sense to me now that a reader I know would want to get married in a Stoffa suit – in a pale pistachio wool, with wide-legged trousers and a cream knitted top. It feels very much a contemporary version of elegance.
My problem has always been that I hugely admired the people and the brand, but didn’t quite know how to wear it in my style. Seeing Stoffa as a designer for me to pick and choose from – rather than a haberdasher to fill all my needs – has made a big difference.
Quote used at the top: from Nick (Ragosta) at Stoffa, during our conversation. It summed up for me why I sometimes struggled with their designs, but also the value PS can perhaps provide in talking about them.
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Mackenzie Shirilla Accused Dom of Trying to Kill Her Before Fatal Crash
Published
May 27, 2026
1:00 AM PDT |
Updated
May 27, 2026
5:10 AM PDT
Mackenzie Shirilla’s shocking text messages appear to show her accusing Dominic Russo of trying to kill her … just days before the fatal crash that claimed his life.
According to text messages between Mackenzie and Dominic — released by law enforcement — Mackenzie says she believed Dominic was trying to harm her during a heated argument between the two. Investigators claimed Mackenzie and Dom got into it while she was driving erratically, just weeks before the fatal crash.
At one point in the alleged text messages, Mackenzie accuses Dom of intentionally putting her in danger by saying, “Do you think I would have my car started with you in it knowing that you just tried to kill me” … while also venting about how she wants examples of reasons why he loves her.
The alleged texts offer a deeply personal look into the couple’s deteriorating relationship before prosecutors later argued Mackenzie intentionally drove her car into a building at high speed.
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As previously reported, Mackenzie was convicted of several serious felony counts in connection with the crash, though her legal team maintained the collision was a tragic accident rather than an intentional act. She was sentenced and is currently serving 2 concurrent life sentences with the possibility of parole after 15 years for the murder of Dom and their friend Davion Flanagan.
Worth noting … the alleged texts do not prove any criminal conduct by Dominic Russo, but they could add new context to the volatile dynamic between the couple in the days before the deadly crash.