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While that's a rumour and Apple hasn't said anything about it, Apple was TSMC's first customer on 5nm and 7nm, so it's implausible that Apple hasn't already started testing on the new production node.
The details of the rumour are that there will be M2 chips in between on either 5nm or 4nm. That's also plausible since it's not expected that 3nm will deliver in volume until early 2023, with a few more months beyond that before products using the chips can reach customers.
Well, it's not entirely impossible; there's a tiny slot in one of the components where if you slip in the point of an X-Acto knife and lever it verrrrry carefully you can unlock it and tease it all apart again.
Looks like it's inadvertent; it's just that things slide too neatly into place and leave no affordances for disassembly.
The scam is pretty simple: Assert copyright over content you don't own, post claims against YouTube channels you don't run, and steal all the advertising money.
This goes on all the time and YouTube doesn't care. This particular scam was big enough that it caught the attention of law enforcement, which is also rare.
False DMCA takedown claims can be perjury, but Content ID doesn't require a DMCA takedown claim. The charges in this case relate to wire fraud and money laundering.
Something worth noting is that these new chips go backwards in terms of full-size cores. The low-power parts only have two P-cores; the full-size parts have six. Current 11th-gen laptops have four or eight full-size cores.