‘Fortnite’ is offline on iOS around the world

After winning a court case pretty decisively against Apple, developer Epic submitted Fortnite to the US App Store and suggested it would soon be back on iOS. However, according to the Fortnite team, Apple has blocked the game on both the US App Store and the EU’s iOS version of its own Epic Games Store.

Fortnite had been available on iPhones in Europe since August last year due to EU rules that allow third-party iOS stores.

Epic CEO Tim Sweeney suggested that Apple didn’t have any particular reason to refuse the application. “Apple’s App Review team should be free to review all submitted apps promptly and accept or reject according to the plain language of their guidelines,” he tweeted. “App Review shouldn’t be weaponized by senior management as a tool to delay or obstruct competition, due process, or free speech.” Apple has yet to comment on the matter. 

To recap: this entire kerfuffle between Apple and Epic has been over, essentially, rent-seeking, and who gets to profit from it. Apple thinks it should keep getting a cut of sales through its App Store; Epic, naturally, would like to keep lining its own pockets. This fight initially opened up the option for developers to use third-party app stores for iOS apps, though a portion of their sales were still flowing back to Apple’s coffers. The most recent court ruling attempted to close that apparent loophole.

The latest Fortnite version submitted by Epic included payment systems for Apple along with external payment via Epic’s own store. Fortnite was originally banned from the App Store in 2020 after it submitted a version that included an external payment system that violated Apple’s rules at the time — a decision subsequently backed by a court decision in 2021. To that end, Apple may not be legally obligated to reinstate Epic, despite the fact that the rule originally broken by the developer no longer existed.

This fight is, of course, ongoing. Apple appealed the most recent ruling and asked the court to halt App Store changes until a final decision is made.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/fortnite-is-offline-on-ios-around-the-world-131535163.html?src=rss 

How Murderbot’s Chris and Paul Weitz adapted All Systems Red for TV

For Paul and Chris Weirtz, Murderbot — the upcoming TV adaptation of Martha Wells’ sci-fi novella All Systems Red — was an experiment: Can you have a hero who tries to do nothing?

The 10-episode sci-fi series, which debuts May 16 on Apple TV+, follows an anxious security robot (Alexander Skarsgård) assigned to protect a survey group on a planetary mission. As the mission progresses and deadly surprises emerge, Murderbot grapples with concealing its capacity for free will — an ability enabled when it hacked its governor module — and its insecurities around humans, all while navigating existential questions about its purpose in the universe. Above all, though, Murderbot wishes it could spend its days simply viewing the 7,532 hours of video content it secretly squirreled away in its system for entertainment — a true media junkie, like most of the show’s viewers.

Apple

Bringing All Systems Red to TV took years, delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic and the Writers Guild of America strike in 2023. But with support from Apple TV+’s head of worldwide video Jamie Erlicht, a fan of Wells’ work, Paul and Chris chipped away at the show’s scripts, sending every version to Wells for feedback. (Wells, as a consulting producer, ultimately weighed in on other aspects of the project, including design and casting.)

The series stays faithful to All Systems Red — the first of several books and short stories comprising The Murderbot Diaries — in most of the ways that count. The plot largely follows that of the novella, but also makes substantial additions. Members of the PresAux survey group which Murderbot protects, including Dr. Mensah (Noma Dumezweni), Gurathin (David Dastmalchian), Pin-lee (Sabrina Wu), Ratthi (Akshay Khanna), Arada (Tattiawna Jones) and Bharadwaj (Tamara Pdoemski), now have more nuance and deeper backstories. 

The Preservation Alliance, an independent group of planets which the PresAux survey group hails from, is now eccentric, even downright bohemian. During Murderbot’s season premiere, PresAux holds hands in a meditative circle, eyes closed, deliberating over whether to rent the refurbished Murderbot for their mission. Soon after landing on the planet, they dance in the desert, their bodies heaving, arms waving to the music’s beat — little touches inspired by aspects of Chris’s two decades of experience with Burning Man. (Several members of the mission also find themselves navigating the particular dramas of polyamory.)

“We also wanted a sense of these people being out of their element and out of their social setting,” Chris told Engadget. “They’re in the corporation rim, which is a really brutal, extractive capitalist world, but these people are egalitarians from outside of that system. They are [seen as] freaks not just to Murderbot, but to the corporation flunkies who are upselling them.”

While Murderbot’s favorite TV series, The Rise & Fall of Sanctuary Moon, is referenced in Wells’ novel, in Murderbot, the futuristic soap opera is its own fleshed out universe – a bonafide show-within-a-show. Intended as a parody of classic sci-fi, most obviously the original Star Trek series, Sanctuary Moon’s scenes are rife with heavily saturated sets and gaudy costumes. John Cho, as the captain of a starship, falls madly in love with a navigation systems robot (DeWanda Wise); Jack McBrayer portrays a navigation officer out of his depth. Their performances are comically over-the-top, but that’s the point.

“I have a theory that people think of good acting as being very restrained, and that is the case often, but my theory is that humans are emoting maniacs all the time. They’re hamming it up in front of the mirror, in their bathroom,” Paul said. “There was something great about being able to enter a David Lynch-like telenovela world and do the sci-fi version of those things.”

Casting the droll but irreverent character of Murderbot took time. Part-human, it experiences a full range of emotions but struggles with deep-seated social anxiety, and detests showing its face to humans — which may help explain why the character has become popular with members of the neurodivergent community. Skarsgård, whose diverse acting resume includes a Viking prince in The Northman, a ruthless tech CEO in Succession, the titular character in The Legend of Tarzan and a physically abusive husband on Big Little Lies, had traits and experiences Paul and Chris felt were essential for effectively playing the show’s central character.

As one might expect for a security robot, Paul Weisz noted Skarsgård is “physically imposing.” “You get the sense maybe he could kill somebody,” said Paul. But much like the titular character Paul felt this sometimes terrifying exterior belied something much more nuanced. “Alexander also has a really quirky sense of humor. His mind is very different from his body. He’s really unique.”

Bringing in Cho and McBrayer for their roles in the Sanctuary Moon scenes wasn’t nearly as intensive a search; Cho and the Weitz brothers had worked on several projects together over the years.

“It’s like a Faustian bargain when you work with us once, that we’re probably going to get your home cellphone,” Paul mused. “Jack McBrayer is best friends with Alexander, so that was the route to [him]. In terms of John, we worked with him first on American Pie, and I think we’ve done 12 things in different ways with him over the years. So it’s a little like The Godfather where it’s like, someday, I’m going to ask you for a favor.”

Apple

Filmed in Ontario, production started in 2024, lasting six months. Shooting the show’s planetary scenes meant scouring for locations like mining quarries, slag heaps and abandoned factories. Interior shots for scenes at Port Freecommerce, a vast star base, in the season premiere were filmed on soundstages in Toronto.

All along, Paul and Chris set out to present a far-flung universe seen less often on screen in recent years. Shirking the dark, grim aesthetic heavily favored in many more recent sci-fi TV and film projects, they worked with production designer Sue Chan to create a universe dominated by bright lighting, white and gray sets, light-colored fabrics and colorful patterns.

“We drew on the wellspring of science fiction we read when we were kids and on science fiction paperback covers of the 1980s, which always seemed to have such great concept design and a bright, interesting world in which to lose yourself,” Paul recalled. “Specifically, it seemed like since this was a world that was dominated by corporations, there’d be a lot of logos everywhere. There’d be a cheapness to a lot of what was manufactured. Also, if you look around, there are a lot of things that seem to have been extruded by giant 3-D printers. Even the food is extruded by 3-D printers.”

Designing Murderbot’s armor was a collaborative process with the costume department, led by costume designer Carrie Grace and specialty costume designer Laura Jean Shannon. To start, they looked at helmets from virtually every well-known robot depicted in military and sci-fi movies from the last 50 years. Initial designs resembled Star Wars stormtroopers, but Skarsgård “really pushed” for the robot’s look to be “something unique,” according to Paul. Drawing inspiration from The Little Rascals’ Petey, who had a large black circle around one of his eyes, the team built a large, distinctive black eye piece into Murderbot’s helmet visor.

Apple

Murderbot spends much of its time clad in armor, but it also has downtime when the armor comes off, revealing an impossibly smooth humanoid form resembling Mattel’s Ken dolls. To achieve that look, Skarsgård regularly waxed his entire body during filming.

“Alexander actually volunteered to have his body waxed, because he thought it was what would be best for the character,” Chris recalled. “I remember discussing it with him, and I said, ‘Listen, man, I don’t know if people are even going to notice, but it might make just a tiny bit of difference in terms of the believability of the character.’”

“[Alexander’s] like, ‘Yeah, I should wax myself,’” Chris continued. “Then for the next five, six months, he had to do that every week until he realized eventually that his next role was to play a hairy biker [in the romance drama Pillion].”

In Murderbot, Paul and Chris saw more than a quirky sci-fi novella — they saw a deeply human story wrapped in armor and deadpan humor. Their TV adaptation doesn’t just bring Wells’ world to screen with panache, it leans into the quiet radicalism of a character who resists heroism, craves isolation and struggles to navigate the messiness of human connection.

That emotional core — unexpected, thoughtful, and entirely sincere — is what makes Murderbot more than just another sci-fi romp. It’s a mirror for our most vulnerable selves, disguised as a robot who’d really rather be watching TV.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/tv-movies/how-murderbots-chris-and-paul-weitz-adapted-all-systems-red-for-tv-130034113.html?src=rss 

Grok kept talking about ‘white genocide’ due to an ‘unauthorized modification’

In the early hours of May 14, xAI’s chatbot Grok repeatedly gave X users responses that referred to claims about a “white genocide” in South Africa even if their inquiries had nothing to do about the subject. Now, in a statement posted on the social network, Elon Musk‘s AI company has explained that “an unauthorized modification” to Grok’s prompt on X caused it to “provide a specific response on a political topic.” It didn’t say what had happened to the personnel involved in rolling out the rogue update. But it added that the modification violated its “internal policies and core values” and that it has conducted a thorough investigation about the incident. 

The website’s various users had posted several instances wherein Grok included references to the controversial claims that white South African farmers are facing racial discrimination and land seizures in their country. Their questions? Well, in one tweet, someone asked how many times HBO has changed its streaming service’s name. In another, the user asked a baseball player’s salary history. In yet another one, someone asked for more information about a WWE match. CNBC was able to replicate the chatbot’s responses with white genocide references. When the news website asked if it was specifically programmed to promote “white genocide,” Grok said that it wasn’t and that its “purpose is to provide factual, helpful, and safe responses based on reason and evidence.”

Before xAI issued a response, OpenAI chief Sam Altman posted a snarky response on X. “I’m sure xAI will provide a full and transparent explanation soon,” he wrote, and then mimicked Grok’s responses by segueing into talking about white genocide. xAI said that from now on, it will be publishing its system prompts on GitHub so that the public can give feedback on every alteration. The company also said that it will put additional checks and measures to ensure xAI employees can’t modify Grok’s prompt without a review. Whoever edited it recently was able to circumvent its current review process in this case. In addition, the company said it’s putting together a team that can monitor incidents related to Grok’s answers not caught by automated systems 24/7.

As TechCrunch has noted, this isn’t the first time xAI had blamed a contentious Grok behavior to an unauthorized change. Back in February, the chatbot briefly censored sources that talked about how Musk and President Donald Trump are spreading misinformation. xAI co-founder Igor Babuschkin said at the time that a rogue employee had pushed an unapproved modification to Grok’s prompt.

We want to update you on an incident that happened with our Grok response bot on X yesterday.

What happened:
On May 14 at approximately 3:15 AM PST, an unauthorized modification was made to the Grok response bot’s prompt on X. This change, which directed Grok to provide a…

— xAI (@xai) May 16, 2025

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/grok-kept-talking-about-white-genocide-due-to-an-unauthorized-modification-120044119.html?src=rss 

The Morning After: Sony’s best headphones keep getting better

When it comes to headphones, we can’t shut up about Sony’s top-tier buds and over-the-head options. In each iteration, the company adds new features, develops better technology and hones its strengths in portable audio, and three years on from the WH-1000XM5, the sixth-gen model does it yet again.

Sony’s overhauled its flagship headphones in all the right ways. The WH-1000XM6 sound better, with improved active noise cancellation and convenient features that match the best-sounding and the most feature-packed rivals.

You should definitely check out Billy Steele’s full review. The headphones’ only major challenge remains a non-clunky naming convention.

— Mat Smith

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Android gets a young, vibrant makeover

It’s bright, it’s brash, it’s… bouncy? It’s Android 16.

Google

As spoiled by Google itself, Android is getting a major visual refresh. Dubbed Material 3 Expressive, it’s the latest evolution of the Material You design, adding customizable color swatches and, I guess, spicier fonts.

Google says the Quick Settings menu can now fit more actions, and there is an addition of live-updating notifications, similar to Apple’s Live Activities.

In Android 16 (and even Wear OS 6), expect more animation between menus and items, while notifications will jiggle and offer haptic responses to your touch.

Google is basing a lot of these tweaks on research: The company claims up to 87 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds prefer expressive design — a term hard to define. There’s a lengthy post on Google’s design blog if you want to get into all that.

Continue reading.

The Xperia 1 VII is here, with some Walkman inspiration

Sony still makes phones!

Sony

Sony has now folded in Hi-Fi sound from its Walkman series, as well as the company’s Bravia screen tech and Alpha camera smarts. The Xperia 1 VII has launched quietly with an array of new audio features, including high-end Walkman components. Unlike other smartphone makers, Sony has kept its headphone jack and improved wired sound via a premium-grade integrated circuit. The Xperia 1 VII supports Sony’s DSEE Ultimate AI sound upscaling technology, along with 360 Reality audio or Dolby Atmos formats.

The latest Xperia also features a new 48-megapixel ultrawide camera with a good-sized 1/1.56-inch sensor, significantly improving the specs of the Xperia 1 VI’s ultrawide. That’s on top of the main 48MP 1/1.35-inch 24mm camera and a 12MP telephoto zoom.

Sony is also trying to differentiate its smartphones through camera features, with improved Bokeh mode, real-time tracking, and even real-time eye autofocus. It claims low-light shooting is “in line with full-frame cameras, ” which is bold!

I’m wondering what other parts of Sony’s corporate machinery it will integrate next. Maybe Aibo dog ears?

Continue reading.

One year of Peacock Premium is on sale for only $25

The Memorial Day deal knocks off $55.

Want a cheaper sub for Peacock? You’ll need a code, but if you input SPRINGSAVINGS at checkout you’ll get $55 off the standard annual price of the Premium plan. It does include ads, however. The big draw for this particular streaming service is likely the long-awaited spinoff of The Office, called The Paper. That premieres in September, so you’ll be primed and ready to watch (and rewatch).

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-123515822.html?src=rss 

How to cancel subscriptions on iPhone

Managing subscriptions directly from your iPhone is one of the simplest ways to prevent unwanted charges and keep track of active services. Whether you’re looking to cancel a streaming platform, cloud storage plan or any other recurring charge that you signed up for through Apple, doing so only takes a few steps.

If you download an app from the App Store, you may find the app unlocks additional features through a subscription. It’s easy to manage your subscription and app directly through your iPhone, allowing you to keep an eye on what you’re paying out. Some apps might tempt you with a free trial, so if you don’t want to pay a monthly subscription fee or you’ve had enough of your subscription, you can cancel or renew on your iPhone. Here’s how to find and cancel your subscriptions on iPhone.

How to cancel a subscription using your iPhone

Apple allows you to manage and cancel App Store subscriptions pretty easily. Subscriptions tied to your Apple ID include services such as Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple Arcade, iCloud+ and third-party offerings purchased through the App Store.

To cancel a subscription:

Open the Settings app on your iPhone.

Tap your Apple ID name at the top of the screen.

Select Subscriptions.

Scroll through your list of active subscriptions.

Tap the subscription you want to cancel.

Tap Cancel Subscription, then confirm.

If the subscription is already marked as “Canceled” or shows an expiration date, no further action is needed.

Keep in mind that when you cancel a subscription, it typically remains active until the end of the current billing cycle(since you’ve already paid for it). You won’t be charged again, but you’ll still be able to use the service until the subscription officially ends.

Rob Webb for Engadget

How to cancel a subscription through the App Store

In addition to the Settings app, you can also access subscription details from within the App Store.

Open the App Store.

Tap your profile icon in the upper-right corner.

Tap Subscriptions.

Select the subscription you want to cancel.

Tap Cancel Subscription and follow the confirmation prompts.

This method leads to the same subscription menu found in the Settings app, so it’s simply a different way to get there. Both approaches work equally well, as they require the same number of taps.

What to do if you don’t see the subscription listed

If a subscription you want to cancel isn’t listed in the Subscriptions section, it may not be billed through Apple. Some services, such as Spotify, Netflix or Hulu, often require you to manage your subscription directly through their website or billing provider.

To check if a subscription is handled outside of Apple:

Look at or search for the confirmation emails you received when signing up.

Check your bank or credit card statement for the company name.

Open the app and look under its account or settings section for billing info.

If the subscription isn’t associated with your Apple ID, canceling it will require visiting the provider’s website or app, or contacting its customer support directly.

How to cancel Apple One

If you’re subscribed to Apple One, which bundles several Apple services into one plan, you can cancel the entire bundle or individual services to stop using them.

To cancel Apple One:

Go to Settings > Apple ID > Subscriptions.

Tap Apple One.

Tap Cancel Apple One to remove the bundle.

If you only want to cancel one service within the bundle, tap Choose Individual Services and turn off the specific one you no longer want.

Canceling Apple One may remove access to multiple services, including Apple Music, iCloud+, and Apple Arcade, depending on your plan.

How to cancel a free trial

If you signed up for a free trial, be sure to cancel before the trial period ends to avoid charges. Apple will begin billing you automatically once the trial converts to a paid subscription.

Free trials follow the same cancellation process:

Go to Settings > Apple ID > Subscriptions.

Select the trial you want to cancel.

Tap Cancel Subscription.

The trial will end immediately if canceled, and you may lose access to premium features.

How to resubscribe after canceling

If you change your mind and want to restart a canceled subscription, you can do so from the same Subscriptions menu, as long as the service is still available.

Open Settings > Apple ID > Subscriptions.

Scroll down to the Inactive section.

Tap the service you want to reactivate.

Select a plan and confirm your payment method.

Your subscription will resume under the current terms, and the billing cycle starts from the date you resubscribe.

To downgrade or cancel iCloud+:

Go to Settings > Apple ID > iCloud > Manage Storage or iCloud Storage.

Tap Change Storage Plan > Downgrade Options.

Sign in if prompted.

Select the Free 5GB plan to cancel your paid plan.

Changes take effect at the end of your current billing period.

How to check for hidden or expired subscriptions

To view old subscriptions:

Go to Settings > Apple ID > Subscriptions.

Scroll to the Inactive or Expired section at the bottom of the screen.

These entries can’t be canceled again and are listed for reference only. If a subscription you no longer use is listed under “Active,” it’s still billing and needs to be manually canceled.

More tips for subscription management

Use reminders: Set calendar reminders to review subscriptions before trials or renewals occur.

Review billing statements: Check your monthly charges for unexpected renewals.

Enable purchase sharing: If you’re in a Family Sharing group, know that some subscriptions can be shared or managed by the organizer.

Consider using Apple’s Report a Problem page if you were charged for a subscription you didn’t authorize: reportaproblem.apple.com

If a subscription doesn’t have a cancel option or is listed as “renewing soon,” you may not be able to cancel it from the iPhone directly. In this case:

Double-check for another Apple ID you may have used to subscribe.

Try restarting your iPhone and checking the Subscriptions list again.

If it’s an Apple service like iCloud+ and the cancel button isn’t visible, you may need to change your iCloud storage plan instead.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/how-to-cancel-subscriptions-on-iphone-110015175.html?src=rss 

Engadget Podcast: Who needs Samsung’s super-thin Galaxy S25 Edge?

It looks like we’re entering the era of crazy-thin phones. This week, Samsung finally announced the Galaxy S25 Edge, its slimmest smartphone yet. Is there actually a point to it, or is Samsung just trying to beat Apple to its rumored super-thin iPhone? Engadget’s Sam Rutherford joins us to dive into the S25 Edge, as well as some pre-Google I/O news from the Android Show.

Subscribe!

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Topics

Surface Pro 12-inch review: less weight, less power? – 2:04

ASUS’ Xbox handheld photos leak in FCC filing – 21:39

OpenAI restructures business, announces plan for hostile takeover-proof public benefit corp – 26:14

The EPA announces plans to shut down the Energy Star Program – 31:16

Telemessage, a Signal clone favored by Trump administration officials has been hacked – 34:44

Samsung subsidiary buys Masimo and now it owns all the fancy speakers – 36:35

Half-Life 3 is fully formed and playable?! – 40:59

Around Engadget – 49:53

Pop culture picks – 51:42

Credits 

Hosts: Devindra Hardawar and Cherlynn Low
Guest: Sam Rutherford
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mobile/smartphones/engadget-podcast-who-needs-samsungs-super-thin-galaxy-s25-edge-113049744.html?src=rss 

TikTok will try to force teens to meditate after 10PM

TikTok recently began experimenting with an in-app meditation feature that encouraged teens to “wind down” after 10PM. Now, the company is making the feature official for all users and turning it on by default for all teens under the age of 18.

With the change, teens will hit a full-screen “guided meditation exercise” when attempting to scroll after 10PM. The prompt is apparently something you can opt to ignore, but teens who do will encounter a second “harder to dismiss” prompt. TikTok’s adult users will also be able to access the in-app meditations via the app’s screen time controls (the feature will not be on by default for adults).

The company notes that its initial tests of “Sleep Hours” were successful, with 98 percent of teens opting to keep the late-night meditation settings on. Previous attempts by TikTok to limit screen time have a somewhat different track record. Documents that surfaced as part of a lawsuit against the company showed that teens were spending about 107 minutes a day in the app even when screen time was set to a 60-minute limit.

Since then, TikTok has beefed up some of its safety features, including its parental controls, amid increasing scrutiny of the company. TikTok’s fate in the US is still, officially, in limbo as President Donald Trump signed off on another extension of a deadline to ban the app last month. Terms of a final deal that will allow it to remain in the country permanently have yet to be announced, though there are a number of interested buyers.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/tiktok-will-try-to-force-teens-to-meditate-after-10pm-231118942.html?src=rss 

Meta’s ‘Behemoth’ Llama 4 model might still be months away

Last month, Meta hosted LlamaCon, its first ever generative AI conference. But while the event delivered some notable improvements for developers, it also felt a bit underwhelming considering how important AI is to the company. Now, we know a bit more about why, thanks to a new report in The Wall Street Journal.

According to the report, Meta had originally intended to release its “Behemoth” Llama 4 model at the April developer event, but later delayed its release to June. Now, it’s apparently been pushed back again, potentially until “fall or later.” Meta engineers are reportedly “struggling to significantly improve the capabilities” of the model that Mark Zuckerberg has called “the highest performing base model in the world.”

Meta has already released two smaller Llama 4 models, Scout and Maverick, and has also teased a fourth lightweight model that’s apparently nicknamed “Little Llama.” Meanwhile, the “Behemoth” model will have 288 billion active parameters and “outperforms GPT-4.5, Claude Sonnet 3.7, and Gemini 2.0 Pro on several STEM benchmarks,” the company said last month.

Meta has never given a firm timeline of when to expect the model. The company said last month that it was “still training.” And while Behemoth got a few nods during the LlamaCon keynote, there were no updates on when it might actually be ready. That’s probably because it could still be several months. Inside Meta there are apparently questions “about whether improvements over prior versions are significant enough to justify public release.”

Meta didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. As the report notes, it wouldn’t be the first company to run into snags as it races to release new models and outpace competitors. But the delay is still notable given the Meta’s lofty ambitions when it comes to AI. Zuckerberg has made AI a top priority with Meta planning to spend as much as $72 billion on its AI infrastructure this year.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/metas-behemoth-llama-4-model-might-still-be-months-away-221240585.html?src=rss 

Chris Brown & Rihanna’s Relationship Timeline: From First Kiss To Infamous Grammys Assault To Today

Chris Brown and Rihanna were the ‘it’ couple of the late 2000s until their romance came to an end. Learn about their relationship timeline and status today.

Chris Brown and Rihanna were the ‘it’ couple of the late 2000s until their romance came to an end. Learn about their relationship timeline and status today. 

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