ReportWire

Tag: Internet

  • Nvidia, Google, Microsoft and more head to Las Vegas to tout health-care AI tools

    Nvidia, Google, Microsoft and more head to Las Vegas to tout health-care AI tools

    [ad_1]

    Visitors check out Nvidia’s AI technology at the 2024 Apsara Conference in Hangzhou, China, on September 19, 2024.

    Costfoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Nvidia, Google, Microsoft and dozens of other tech companies are descending on Las Vegas next week to showcase artificial intelligence tools they say will save doctors and nurses valuable time. 

    Sunday marks the official start of a health-care technology conference called HLTH, which is expected to draw more than 12,000 industry leaders this year. CNBC will be on the ground. Based on the speaking agenda and announcements leading up to the conference, AI tools to conquer administrative burdens will be the star of this year’s show. 

    Doctors and nurses are responsible for mountains of documentation as they work to keep up with patient records, interface with insurance companies and comply with regulators. Often, these tasks are painstakingly manual, in part because health data is siloed and stored across multiple vendors and formats. 

    The daunting administrative workload is a major cause of burnout in the industry, and it’s part of the reason a nationwide shortage of 100,000 health-care workers is expected by 2028, according to consulting firm Mercer. Tech companies, eager to carve out a piece of a market that could top $6.8 trillion in spending by the decade’s end, argue that their generative AI tools can help.

    Alex Schiffhauer, group product manager at Google, speaks during the Made By Google event at the company’s Bay View campus in Mountain View, California, Aug. 13, 2024.

    Josh Edelson | AFP | Getty Images

    Google, for instance, said it’s working to expand its health-care customer base by tackling administrative burden with AI.

    On Thursday, the company announced the general availability of Vertex AI Search for Healthcare, which it introduced in a trial capacity during HLTH last year. Vertex AI Search for Healthcare allows developers to build tools to help doctors quickly search for information across disparate medical records, Google said. New features within Google’s Healthcare Data Engine, which helps organizations build the platforms they need to support generative AI, are also now available, the company said.

    Google on Thursday released the results of a survey that said clinicians spend nearly 28 hours a week on administrative tasks. In the survey, 80% of providers said this clerical work takes away from their time with patients, and 91% said they feel positive about using AI to streamline these tasks. 

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella speaks at a company event on artificial intelligence technologies in Jakarta, Indonesia, on April 30, 2024.

    Dimas Ardian | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Similarly, Microsoft on Oct. 11 announced its collection of tools that aim to lessen clinicians’ administrative workload, including medical imaging models, a health-care agent service and an automated documentation solution for nurses, most of which are still in the early stages of development. 

    Microsoft already offers an automated documentation tool for doctors through its subsidiary, Nuance Communications, which it acquired in a $16 billion deal in 2021. The tool, called DAX Copilot, uses AI to transcribe doctors’ visits with patients and turn them into clinical notes and summaries. Ideally, this means doctors don’t have to spend time typing out these notes themselves. 

    Nurses and doctors complete different types of documentation during their shifts, so Microsoft said it’s building a separate tool for nurses that’s best suited to their workflows. 

    AI scribe tools such as DAX Copilot have exploded in popularity this year, and Nuance’s competitors, such as Abridge, which has reportedly raised more than $460 million, and Suki, which has raised $165 million, will also be at the HLTH conference. 

    Dr. Shiv Rao, the founder and CEO of Abridge, told CNBC in March that the rate at which the health-care industry has adopted this new form of clinical documentation feels “historic.” Abridge received a coveted investment from Nvidia’s venture capital arm that same month. 

    Nvidia is also gearing up to address doctor and nurse workloads at HLTH. 

    Kimberly Powell, the company’s vice president of health care, is delivering a keynote Monday that will explain how using generative AI will help health-care professionals “dedicate more time to patient care,” according to the conference’s website.

    Nvidia’s graphics processing units, or GPUs, are used to create and deploy the models that power OpenAI’s ChatGPT and similar applications. As a result, Nvidia has been one of the primary beneficiaries of the AI boom. Nvidia shares are up more than 150% year to date, and the stock tripled last year. 

    The company has been making steady inroads into the health-care sector in recent years, and it offers a range of AI tools across medical devices, drug discovery, genomics and medical imaging. Nvidia also announced expanded partnerships with companies such as Johnson & Johnson and GE HealthCare in March. 

    While the health-care sector has historically been slow to adopt new technology, the buzz around administrative AI tools has been undeniable since ChatGPT exploded onto the scene two years ago. 

    Even so, many health systems are still in the early stages of evaluating tools and vendors, and they’ll be making the rounds on the HLTH exhibition floor. Tech companies will have to prove they have the chops to tackle one of health care’s most complex problems. 

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Amazon cloud boss says employees unhappy with 5-day office mandate can leave

    Amazon cloud boss says employees unhappy with 5-day office mandate can leave

    [ad_1]

    Amazon Web Services CEO, Matt Garman speaks during CNBC Power Lunch on July 1, 2024.

    CNBC

    Amazon‘s cloud boss on Thursday gave employees a frank message about the company’s recently announced five-day in-office mandate.

    Staffers who don’t agree with Amazon’s new policy can leave, Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman said during an all-hands meeting at the company’s second headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.

    “If there are people who just don’t work well in that environment and don’t want to, that’s OK, there are other companies around,” Garman said, according to a transcript viewed by CNBC. “At Amazon, we want to be in an environment where we are working together, and we feel that collaborative environment is incredibly important for our innovation and for our culture.”

    Garman’s comments were reported earlier by Reuters.

    Amazon announced the new mandate last month. The company’s previous return-to-work stance required corporate workers to be in office at least three days a week. Employees have until Jan. 2 to adhere to the new policy.

    Amazon is forgoing its pandemic-era remote work policies as it looks to keep up with rivals Microsoft, OpenAI and Google in the race to develop generative artificial intelligence. It’s one of the primary tasks in front of Garman, who took over AWS in June after his predecessor Adam Selipsky stepped down from the role.

    The move has spurred backlash from some Amazon employees who say they’re just as productive working from home or in a hybrid work environment as they are in an office. Others say the mandate puts extra strain on families and caregivers.

    Roughly 37,000 employees have joined an internal Slack channel created last year to advocate for remote work and share grievances about the return-to-work mandate, according to a person familiar with the matter.

    At the all-hands meeting, Garman said he’s been speaking with employees and “nine out of 10 people are actually quite excited by this change.” He acknowledged there will be cases where employees have some flexibility.

    “What we really mean by this is we want to have an office environment,” said Garman, noting an example scenario where an employee may want to work from home one day with their manager’s approval to focus on their work in a quiet environment.

    “Those are fine,” he said.

    An Amazon spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Garman said the mandate is important for preserving Amazon’s culture and “leadership principles,” which are a list of more than a dozen business philosophies meant to guide employee decisions and goals. He pointed to Amazon’s principle of “disagree and commit,” which is the idea that employees should debate and push back on each others ideas respectfully. That practice can be particularly hard to carry out over Amazon’s videoconferencing software, called Chime, Garman said.

    “I don’t know if you guys have tried to disagree via a Chime call — it’s very hard,” Garman said.

    WATCH: Amazon ramps up AI chip race

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • New E-rate rules could narrow the homework gap

    New E-rate rules could narrow the homework gap

    [ad_1]

    Key points:

    Learning is mobile–but how can schools provide reliable high-speed internet for students who need devices at home, but who lack connectivity?

    In July, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the use of E-rate funds to loan Wi-Fi hotspots that support students, school staff, and library patrons without internet access.

    For an update on the 2025 E-rate, register for an eSchool News webinar featuring expert insight.

    The federal E-rate program provides discounts to help schools and libraries obtain affordable telecommunications and internet access. Over the years, the program has been modernized to focus support on bringing high-speed broadband to and within schools and libraries.  This latest action will help students gain access to educational resources that may have been previously out of reach and enable them to learn without limits.

    “I believe every library and every school library in this country should be able to loan out Wi-Fi hotspots to help keep their patrons and kids connected. It is 2024 in the United States. This should be our baseline. We can use the E-rate program to make it happen,” said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel in a statement.

    “That is why today we modernize E-rate to ensure that schools and libraries nationwide can loan out Wi-Fi hotspots to support high-speed internet access in rural America, urban America, and everything in between. The time to do this is now. We do not need to go back; we can go forward and make it possible for everyone to get the connections they need,” she added.

    According to an FCC announcement, the new ruling will:

    • Allow schools and libraries to use E-rate funding to loan out Wi-Fi hotspots and support high-speed internet access for students, school staff, and library patrons in both rural and urban parts of the country.
    • Adopt a budget mechanism that sets a limit on the amount of support that an applicant can request for Wi-Fi hotspots and services over a three-year period.  In the event that demand for E-rate support exceeds available funding in a given funding year, eligible on-premises category one and category two equipment and service requests will be prioritized and funded before eligible off-premises equipment and service requests.
    • Adopt numerous safeguards to protect the integrity of the E-rate program, including measures to ensure the supported Wi-Fi hotspots and services are in use, are used for educational purposes, are not funded through other sources, and are properly documented for auditing purposes.
    • Require compliance with the Children’s Internet Protection Act.

    “We commend the FCC for working to ensure that every student has the opportunity to thrive in a connected world. The approval of this initiative represents a forward-thinking approach to the E-rate program, aligning it with the realities of today’s educational landscape,” said John Harrington, CEO of Funds For Learning. “Learning extends outside the classroom or library to homes, while on the go, and in every community space. This move empowers schools and libraries to bridge the homework gap, providing students with the resources they need to succeed academically, regardless of their socioeconomic status or geographical location.”

    Harrington added: “The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the vital role of connectivity in education, and this decision makes it possible for more students and library patrons to gain internet access. Reliable internet access is fundamental to modern education, allowing students to participate fully in digital learning environments. This is a monumental step towards closing the digital divide and ensuring equitable access to educational resources for all. Funds For Learning is committed to supporting this expansion and will continue to advocate for policies that enhance the effectiveness of the E-rate program.”

    On June 6, the FCC adopted a three-year, $200 million Schools and Libraries Cybersecurity Pilot Program, which will allow the FCC to obtain and analyze actionable data about which cybersecurity services and equipment would best help K-12 schools and libraries address growing cyberthreats and attacks against their broadband networks.

    Through the pilot, the FCC aims to learn how to improve school and library defenses against sophisticated ransomware and cyberattacks that put students at risk and impede their learning.

    The pilot will enable the FCC to gather the data needed to better understand whether and how universal service funds could be used to support the cybersecurity needs of schools and libraries and to share lessons learned with our federal partners to jointly combat this growing problem.

    Laura Ascione
    Latest posts by Laura Ascione (see all)

    [ad_2]

    Laura Ascione

    Source link

  • T-Mobile Enhances Project 10Million Program and Announces New Partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs to Boost Digital Access for Even More Students

    T-Mobile Enhances Project 10Million Program and Announces New Partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs to Boost Digital Access for Even More Students

    [ad_1]

    BELLEVUE, Wash. — Since 2020, T-Mobile (NASDAQ: TMUS)’s $10.7 billion  Project 10Million (P10M) initiative has delivered reliable and affordable internet service to more than 6 million young learners across the U.S., but even with that progress the need for connectivity has only continued to rise. Technology use in education has seen a massive  226% surge over the past five years that spans classroom and homework. School-related tasks from digital assignments to research, video streaming, video lessons, and web calls require more data. And a vast majority of students are working from homes with multiple users. All of this on top of an up to 17 million school age children across the U.S. who still may not have reliable internet access at all,  according to the FCC. To meet this continued demand, the Un-carrier announced that it is enriching its P10M program, increasing the data allowance for many students to better meet user needs and partnering with  Boys & Girls Clubs of America and artist and activist  Common to help even more youth get the access they need to be successful.

    Starting Sept. 26, qualifying kindergarten through 12th grade student families who sign up for P10M with T-Mobile will now receive 200GB per year for five years, twice the previous 100GB allotment. Current Project 10Million families with T-Mobile will also enjoy increased data for the remainder of their five years. Student families will also be able to purchase a new highly discounted 10GB data pass for just $10 if they hit their data limit. And, starting in October 2024, school districts with the greatest needs served by P10M will have the opportunity to receive more data for their students — also up to 200GB.

    To continue helping bridge the digital divide and reach more students, the Un-carrier is also partnering with Boys & Girls Clubs of America to hold enrollment campaigns and sign-up events nationwide. Two events were recently held alongside Oscar, Emmy and Grammy award-winning artist and activist  Common, a champion of digital equity, education and T-Mobile’s Project 10Million; one was held on Sept. 6 in Dallas, and the other one in the Bronx, New York, on Sept. 24.

    “We launched our groundbreaking Project 10Million program back in 2020 with a simple goal – to provide free or highly subsidized home Internet to up to 10Million students at home, so they won’t fall behind in school,” said Mike Sievert, CEO, T-Mobile. “And today, after providing more than 6 million students with the critical Internet access they need to succeed, we’re making the program even better than ever, with a set of program enhancements, to help our largest and most important community program to make an even bigger impact.”

    “Our Club professionals are dedicated to ensuring all youth have the resources and support they need to achieve academic success. We believe strongly in the power of collaboration and community, which is why we’re joining forces with T-Mobile to make sure families with school-aged children have access to the essential connectivity that enables all youth to unlock their full potential,” said Jim Clark, President and CEO, Boys & Girls Clubs of America.

    Additional Project 10Million back-to-school activations have been held or are to come in Baton Rouge, Louisiana; Tacoma, Washington; Kansas City, Missouri; and Oklahoma City.

    T-Mobile announced Project 10Million in 2019 and launched the program in 2020 with the goal of offering 10 million at-risk students a free hotspot, free data plans, and access to at-cost laptops and tablets and has continued to improve the initiative to include a portfolio of options for schools and families. To date the company has provided $6.9 billion in products and services and connected over 6 million students through P10M to help close the digital divide. To learn more and sign up go to  www.t-mobile.com/project10million.

    Data enhancements available for households eligible for the National School Lunch Program that sign up for Project 10Million directly with T-Mobile. Schools working with T-Mobile to provide access to Project 10Million for qualifying student populations may also be able to participate in these program enhancements. During congestion, Project 10Million customers may notice speeds lower than other customers due to data prioritization. Video typically streams in SD quality. Verify National School Lunch Program eligibility at signup.

    About T-Mobile 
    T-Mobile US, Inc. (NASDAQ: TMUS) is America’s supercharged Un-carrier, delivering an advanced 4G LTE and transformative nationwide 5G network that will offer reliable connectivity for all. T-Mobile’s customers benefit from its unmatched combination of value and quality, unwavering obsession with offering them the best possible service experience and undisputable drive for disruption that creates competition and innovation in wireless and beyond. Based in Bellevue, Wash., T-Mobile provides services through its subsidiaries and operates its flagship brands, T-Mobile, Metro by T-Mobile and Mint Mobile. For more information please visit:  https://www.t-mobile.com 

    About Boys & Girls Clubs of America
    For more than 160 years, Boys & Girls Clubs of America (BGCA.org) has provided a safe place for kids and teens to learn and grow. Clubs offer caring adult mentors, fun and friendship, and high-impact youth development programs on a daily basis during critical non-school hours. Boys & Girls Clubs programming promotes academic success, good character and leadership, and healthy lifestyles. Over 5,400 Clubs serve more than 3 million young people through Club membership and community outreach. Clubs are located in cities, towns, public housing and on Native lands throughout the country, and serve military families in BGCA-affiliated Youth Centers on U.S. military installations worldwide. The national headquarters is located in Atlanta. Learn more about Boys & Girls Clubs of America on Facebook and X.

    eSchool News Staff
    Latest posts by eSchool News Staff (see all)

    [ad_2]

    ESchool News Staff

    Source link

  • How to Stay Safe and Secure Online – Aha!NOW

    How to Stay Safe and Secure Online – Aha!NOW

    [ad_1]

    Online safety and security is a great challenge, however, taking up responsibility personally helps deal with it to a great extent. We’ve to proactively take measures to secure our devices, be careful about our actions and activities online, increase our awareness about the possible threats to our online safety and security and just act responsibly. These tips will give you a good headstart. ~ Ed.

    There is no doubt that modern technology and Internet has many positive impacts on our lives. However, the impacts on teenagers and adults alike can include several negative factors. Perhaps the biggest danger relates to online security and privacy.

    The harsh reality is that people fall victim to cyberattacks and other online threats every single day. It is quite a scary thought, not least because it’s virtually impossible to live in modern society without using digital tech.

    8 Ways to Stay Safe and Secure Online

    While it might not be possible to eliminate the threats completely, you can significantly reduce them. Here’s how:

    Stay Private

    We are already being watched by big brother through surveillance cameras and AI tools when out in public. So, the last thing you want is to let other people see what you’re doing when online. Investing in good security features is vital.

    Adding cybersecurity and antivirus software will protect devices. Meanwhile, you can download VPN apps to stop people and location services from tracking your movements. Aside from an extra layer of privacy, it can stop annoying ads.

    A VPN doesn’t suddenly remove all dangers but does allow you to browse the internet with greater confidence. It is the best starting point.

    Think Carefully About What You Post

    Maintaining your privacy isn’t just about stopping others from tracking your online activities. You must also pay close attention to the content that you share publicly, especially on social media channels. Even private stories should consider potential risks.

    For example, we all enjoy posting holiday photos. However, doing this while you’re away tells people your property is currently vacant. This could leave you open to theft. With this in mind, it’s better to delay the photo dump until after you return.

    Similarly, you must avoid posting any personal details. Passport info, bank details, and other items could be used maliciously if you’re not careful.

    Use Multi-Layered Security

    When thinking about online threats, the thought of someone gaining unauthorised access to an account is a big one. Sadly, cybercriminals are attempting to hack your accounts. So, it is imperative that you take the right steps to stop them from succeeding.

    Firstly, setting strong passwords is vital. An 8-character password takes just minutes to crack but a 16-character one can take billions of years. Even if someone guesses your password, biometrics and two-step authentications will come to the rescue.

    It may occasionally mean it takes an extra few seconds to get into your account. But it’s a worthy trade for preventing the damages that unauthorised access could bring.

    Use Trustworthy Businesses

    Arguably the scariest aspect of online safety is that your details could be compromised as a result of a third-party’s shortfalls. In the UK alone, almost 15 attacks on businesses are recorded every minute. Worse still, companies of all sizes are at risk.

    Even the biggest and best companies can suffer data breaches. Still, mindful decisions about which companies you use will reduce your risks. Businesses that are shown to take security seriously won’t only prevent attacks. They’ll also implement quick responses.

    By using different passwords and security credentials on each account, the impact of any breach will be limited.

    Learn About Threats

    Research shows that 88% of all data breaches are attributed to human error. Therefore, staying vigilant and carefully considering all online actions is vital. Prevention is the best form of protection and it’s better to be overly cautious than not cautious enough.

    Phishing scams, malware, and other tactics may be used by cybercriminals. They will try to trick you into making a costly mistake that allows them to steal information or money. Take care when clicking hyperlinks and always check that websites have https security.

    Whether it’s a lack of encryption or due to entering data that is directed to a cybercriminal, the threats are huge. Do not fall victim to them.

    Know Who You Are Talking To

    The internet allows us to connect with people like never before. However, it also opens the door to several possible dangers. Most notably, the person you are talking to behind a screen may not be the person that you think you are talking to.

    This could come courtesy of catfishing on dating apps or someone pretending to be a loved one. Either way, it could potentially lead to financial scams, such as them getting you to send money before disappearing. Or you may share too much info that could be used against you.

    So, you must always focus on retaining some secrecy at least until you have confirmed that the person is who you think.

    Update Your Tech

    While the use of VPNs and cybersecurity tools will reduce the risks, you also need to update the tech. Software companies don’t just update products with new features. They also add security patches that actively combat the latest threats.

    It can be frustrating when your device needs to complete an update. So, scheduling an update to occur once per week when you are not busy could be a particularly smart move. It will keep you protected without encountering stressful updates at the worst times.

    Phone updates, PC updates, and tablet updates are all vital. The sooner you complete them, the better. Not least because it puts your mind at ease.

    Use Reliable Accessories

    When thinking about your online data and general safety, it’s not just about browsing and devices. The accessories used can also pose a huge threat. Unbranded products don’t only threaten the device battery. They may also spy on your online activities.

    It might not be a hugely common risk for the average person but it does happen. More worryingly, public chargers are known to pose this threat. For this reason, avoiding them, along with public WiFi is vital. Otherwise, another person could be snooping.

    Even if you don’t want to pay sky-high prices from manufacturers, you should always buy from reputable retailers. Their own branded goods are safe.

    The Final Word

    If you truly want to stay safe online, you need to be both comprehensive and consistent in your thinking. Sadly, it only takes one incident to spell disaster. With the right care, though, danger can be averted.

    Over to you

    What steps do you take to enhance and ensure your safety and security online? Share in the comments section.

    [ad_2]

    Marcelia HR

    Source link

  • How to make typing easier on the phone and leave the laptop at home

    How to make typing easier on the phone and leave the laptop at home

    [ad_1]

    With summer officially over, it’s back to business (or school) for many people, which can mean more time writing longer things, especially on the go. The smartphone has replaced the laptop for many tasks, but when it comes to text input, tapping away on tiny onscreen keys might make you wish you had hauled along the computer just for its keyboard. Thankfully, your phone includes several features to make text entry much easier. Here are a few suggestions.

    Visit your settings

    Thanks to predictive text prompts, automatic punctuation and other shortcuts (like pressing vowel keys to see the pop-up menu of accent marks), typing on small glass rectangles isn’t as awkward as it used to be. To find out what features are available for your phone, start with its Settings app.

    On an iPhone, tap General and then Keyboard.

    For many Android phones, tap System, Keyboard, On-screen Keyboard and then Gboard (often the default app). Galaxy models typically offer the Samsung Keyboard with similar options.

    You should see choices for spell-check, text correction — yes, Apple’s infamous Auto-Correction has gotten better — and other aids. For example, both the Apple iOS keyboard and the Google Gboard (which has an iOS version, too) can display a compact keyboard for easier single-handed input.

    On the Gboard keyboard, press and hold the comma key for a shortcut into the settings — or tap the four-squares icon on the far left and select the One-Handed button; the same menu lets you resize or “float” the keyboard around the screen if you prefer.

    Password-manager tools prevent mistyped logins, and fewer taps may help to prevent errors elsewhere. With tools like Slide to Type from Apple and Glide Typing by Google, you can drag your finger around the keyboard and the software guesses the word you want; note that the results may vary.

    The keyboard can move the text-insertion cursor, too. On an iPhone, press and hold the space bar until the keyboard dims, and then drag your finger to reposition the cursor on the screen. For the Google Gboard, you can move the cursor by sliding a finger along the space bar if the “gesture cursor control” is enabled in the Glide Typing settings.

    Apple and Google include keyboard layouts for typing in languages other than English or inserting emojis. You can add third-party keyboard apps, but beware of software from unfamiliar companies that could pose security risks.

    Add hardware

    If you have a lot of text to enter, pairing your iPhone or Android phone with an external Bluetooth keyboard (including the Magic Keyboard made by Apple) lets you switch to traditional typing hardware. You can even use navigational buttons and shortcuts with an iPhone by going to Settings, Accessibility and Keyboards and enabling the Full Keyboard Access feature.

    If you don’t want to haul a full keyboard around, consider a folding model, as it can fit easily in a jacket pocket but expand into something resembling a full-size set of keys.

    Traveling keyboards, which typically fold up into two or three sections when not in use, range in price from about $25 to $80 depending on the size and features.

    Speak your mind

    Speech-to-text technology that converts the spoken word into editable type on the screen has been around for decades and has only become more accurate as the software has improved. Many apps (including virtual assistants) can take dictation. The Apple Notes app in iOS 18 can now directly record a live audio file and transcribe it.

    To use the feature on an iPhone, open Settings, select General and then Keyboard, and turn on Enable Dictation. The Auto-Punctuation option automatically inserts commands, periods and question marks as you talk, but Apple’s site has a full list of dictation commands for editing text and inserting emoji characters.

    [ad_2]

    The New York Times News Service Syndicate

    Source link

  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    [ad_1]

    Sammy Griner, widely known as the viral ‘Success Kid’ meme, has turned 18 years old.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Terrifying Watch Dogs-Like Smart Glasses Make It Possible To Dox Strangers On The Street

    Terrifying Watch Dogs-Like Smart Glasses Make It Possible To Dox Strangers On The Street

    [ad_1]

    In Ubisoft’s open-world game Watch Dogs (and its sequels), you can quickly scan any NPC you meet and discover facts about them, including their name, address, criminal record, and so on. And now two people have essentially created this tech in real life using Meta’s smart glasses and mostly off-the-shelf tech and software, providing a scary glimpse at our future.

    As reported by 404 Media, two Harvard students have built working smart glasses that use facial recognition technology to automatically identify someone via their face. Not only that, but the glasses then use that information to track down other details about the stranger including their address, phone number, past photos, and family members. According to the two students, AnhPhu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio, they did this to raise awareness of what is possible with current tech and they have no plans to release it publicly.

    Nguyen and Ardayfio call the project I-XRAY and showed a demo of it in action earlier this week on social media. In the video posted to Twitter, the pair were able to identify multiple strangers without asking them for any details, though some of the data proved to be inaccurate when the duo talked to the people.

    “The motivation for this was mainly because we thought it was interesting, it was cool,” Nguyen told 404 Media. Apparently, other people they showed it to also thought it was “really cool” and some suggested it could be used for “networking” or to “make funny videos.” However, thankfully, someone also mentioned to them how incredibly dangerous this tech could be in the wrong hands. “Some dude could just find some girl’s home address on the train and just follow them home,” said Nguyen.

    As pointed out by 404 Media, this kind of smart-glasses-facial-scanning tech has been around for a few years now. But Google and Facebook, two companies who were working on it, eventually decided to not release their software.

    But you don’t need big tech resources and money to build your own Watch Dogs super glasses that can instantly dox anyone you meet on the street. Nguyen and Ardayfio’s I-XRAY uses Meta’s Ray Bans and the publicly available face recognition service Pimeyes to scan someone’s face with hidden cameras in the glasses and then identify them. That info is then used to scrape the web for phone numbers, other photos, family information, and addresses.

    “We would show people photos of them from kindergarten, and they had never even seen the photo before,” said Ardayfio. “Most people were surprised by how much data they have online.” One time, they were able to show a stranger their mom’s phone number after simply scanning their face.

    “I think people could definitely take [the idea of I-XRAY] and run with it,” Ardayfio said. “If people do run with this idea, I think that’s really bad. I would hope that awareness that we’ve spread on how to protect your data would outweigh any of the negative impacts this could have.” The duo has included information on how to protect yourself in a large document about the project that is freely available online.

     .

    [ad_2]

    Zack Zwiezen

    Source link

  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

    [ad_1]

    In 2008, Pakistan accidentally caused a global YouTube outage while trying to block the platform…

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Air France is partnering with Elon Musk’s Starlink to offer free high-speed Wi-Fi during flights

    Air France is partnering with Elon Musk’s Starlink to offer free high-speed Wi-Fi during flights

    [ad_1]

    Air France announced on Thursday that starting in summer 2025, passengers would have access to “ultra-high-speed” Wi-Fi on its flights through Elon Musk’s Starlink.

    Starlink will eventually be rolled out to Air France’s entire fleet, with access available for free to all travel cabins. Users will have to sign up for and log into the airline’s Flying Blue loyalty program to use the service.

    “During the flight, customers will be able to easily stay in touch with friends and family, follow all the world’s news live, play video games online, and of course stream TV, films, and series,” Air France said in a release. “The service will be accessible from smartphones, digital tablets, and laptops, and each customer will be able to connect several devices simultaneously.”

    Air France noted that during the transition to Starlink, there will still be a free “Message Pass” for Flying Blue members as well as a paid Wi-Fi option for expanded connectivity needs.

    The announcement comes just over a week after United Airlines unveiled a similar partnership with Starlink. Delta Airlines, a major Air France partner, was the first to roll out Starlink on its flights starting in 2023 and is in the process of adding the Wi-Fi to international flights.

    Air France, and other airlines that have switched to the SpaceX service, boast that Starlink offers stronger streaming and faster connectivity due to its low-Earth orbit satellites that can provide internet access in remote regions and over the ocean.

    Recommended newsletter
    Data Sheet: Stay on top of the business of tech with thoughtful analysis on the industry’s biggest names.
    Sign up here.

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Seipel

    Source link

  • New Cloudflare Tools Let Sites Detect and Block AI Bots for Free

    New Cloudflare Tools Let Sites Detect and Block AI Bots for Free

    [ad_1]

    According to Dark Visitors founder Gavin King, most of the major AI agents still abide by robots.txt. “That’s been pretty consistent,” he says. But not all website owners have the time or knowledge to constantly update their robots.txt files. And even when they do, some bots will skirt the file’s directives: “They try to disguise the traffic.”

    Prince says Cloudflare’s bot-blocking won’t be a command that this kind of bad actor can ignore. “Robots.txt is like putting up a ‘no trespassing’ sign,” he says. “This is like having a physical wall patrolled by armed guards.” Just as it flags other types of suspicious web behavior, like price-scraping bots used for illegal price monitoring, the company has created processes to spot even the most carefully concealed AI crawlers.

    Cloudflare is also announcing a forthcoming marketplace for customers to negotiate scraping terms of use with AI companies, whether it involves payment for using content or bartering for credits to use AI services in exchange for scraping. “We don’t really care what the transaction is, but we do think that there needs to be some way of delivering value back to original content creators,” Prince says. “The compensation doesn’t have to be dollars. The compensation can be credit or recognition. It can be lots of different things.”

    There’s no set date to launch that market, but even if it rolls out this year it will be joining an increasingly crowded field of projects intended to facilitate licensing agreements and other permissions arrangements between AI companies, publishers, platforms, and other websites.

    What do the AI companies make of this? “We’ve talked to most of them, and their reactions have ranged from ‘this makes sense and we’re open’ to ‘go to hell,’” says Prince. (He wouldn’t name names, though.)

    The project has been fairly quick-turnaround. Prince cites a conversation with Atlantic CEO (and former WIRED editor in chief) Nick Thompson as inspiration for the project; Thompson had discussed how many different publishers had encountered surreptitious web scrapers. “I love that he’s doing it,” Thompson says. If even big-name media organizations struggled to deal with the influx of scrapers, Prince reasoned, independent bloggers and website owners would have even more difficulty.

    Cloudflare has been a leading web security firm for years, and it provides a large portion of the infrastructure holding up the web. It has historically remained as neutral as possible about the content of the websites its services; on the rare occasions it made exceptions to that rule, Prince has emphasized that he doesn’t want Cloudflare to be the arbiter of what’s allowed online.

    Here, he sees Cloudflare as uniquely positioned to take a stand. “The path we’re on isn’t sustainable,” Prince says. “Hopefully we can be a part of making sure that humans get paid for their work.”

    [ad_2]

    Kate Knibbs

    Source link

  • United Airlines will offer free internet on flights using service from Elon Musk’s SpaceX

    United Airlines will offer free internet on flights using service from Elon Musk’s SpaceX

    [ad_1]

    DALLAS (AP) — United Airlines has struck a deal with Elon Musk’s SpaceX to offer satellite-based Starlink WiFi service on flights within the next several years.

    The airline said Friday the service will be free to passengers and allow them to connect multiple devices.

    United said it will begin testing the service early next year and begin offering it on some flights by later in 2025.

    Financial details of the deal were not disclosed.

    The announcement comes as airlines rush to offer more amenities as a way to stand out when passengers pick a carrier for a trip. United’s goal is to make sitting on a plane pretty much like being on the ground when it comes to browsing the internet, streaming entertainment and playing games.

    Delta Air Lines began offering free in-flight Wi-Fi last year using Viasat, a rival to Starlink. Hawaiian Airlines uses Starlink for free internet service on Airbus A321neo flights between Hawaii and the U.S. mainland. United plans a more aggressive rollout across its fleet of more than 1,000 United and United Express planes.

    Linda Jojo, United’s chief customer officer, said U.S. passengers now expect free WiFi, making it one of the most sought-after on-board amenities among all types of travelers.

    “It doesn’t matter where you’re sitting on the plane, it doesn’t matter how much you paid for your ticket, you’re going to benefit” from the service, Jojo said.

    Starlink will let passengers get internet access even over oceans and polar regions where traditional cell or Wi-Fi signals may be weak or missing, she said.

    SpaceX’s owner has emerged as a prominent supporter of Donald Trump, hosting the former president in a friendly chat on X and making many pro-Republican posts. United considered potential reaction to dealing with a partisan figure in a politically divided country.

    “Obviously we are aware that SpaceX and Starlink are controlled by Elon Musk, and we’re certainly aware of the things that he says in the public,” Jojo said. “We definitely talked about that, but it always comes back to our customer, and this is a significant customer benefit.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • What is Wi-Fi 7? Everything You Need to Know

    What is Wi-Fi 7? Everything You Need to Know

    [ad_1]

    Photograph: Simon Hill

    Multi-Link Operation

    Perhaps the most exciting advance in Wi-Fi 7 is Multi-Link Operation (MLO). Every previous Wi-Fi standard establishes a connection between two devices on a single band. Even a tri-band Wi-Fi 6E router connects two devices on a single band on a fixed channel (the router decides whether to connect on the 2.4-GHz, 5-GHz, or 6-GHz band).

    MLO can combine several frequencies across bands into a single connection. A Wi-Fi 7 router can connect to a Wi-Fi 7 device across two or more channels in different bands simultaneously. MLO potentially enables wider channels capable of transmitting more data—going back to our highway analogy, you can send traffic on the highway and the superhighway at once.

    Speed isn’t always the priority, but MLO also allows for more efficient performance. A Wi-Fi 7 router can take congestion and other interference into account and transmit on the best channel to bypass it, switching to maintain a stable connection and low latency. MLO can also help mitigate the relatively short range of the 6-GHz band, ensuring you get seamless connectivity from your mesh system as you move around the home.

    Higher QAM

    Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) is a method to transmit and receive data in radio-frequency waves. The higher it is, the more information you can pack in. Wi-Fi 7 supports 4K-QAM, while Wi-Fi 6 supported 1,024-QAM, and Wi-Fi 5 was limited to 256-QAM.

    The potential benefits are complicated by signal strength, background noise, and interference. Consequently, as QAM goes up, the range drops, and you need a stronger signal. So, the jump to 1,024-QAM in Wi-Fi 6 offered around a 25 percent data rate increase over Wi-Fi 5. The leap to 4K-QAM in Wi-Fi 7 translates to a 20 percent increase in peak performance.

    Wi-Fi 7 also enhances existing technologies like OFDMA, MU-MIMO, and TWT, which we discuss in our Wi-Fi 6E explainer.

    When Should I Upgrade to Wi-Fi 7?

    This is a tricky question. Wi-Fi 7 devices and routers began rolling out in early 2023. While you won’t feel the benefit of a Wi-Fi 7 router until you have Wi-Fi 7 devices, the new Wi-Fi 7 routers are backward compatible. Buying a Wi-Fi 7 system may make sense for people considering an upgrade now, especially folks considering an expensive Wi-Fi 6E system, as they will handle 6E connections but also afford some future-proofing.

    Archer BE900 WiFi 7 router

    Photograph: TP-Link

    We have tested a number of Wi-Fi 7 routers and mesh systems, including the TP-Link BE800 (8/10, WIRED Review), the Amazon Eero Max 7 (7/10, WIRED Review), the Netgear Orbi 970 Series (7/10, WIRED Review), and the TP-Link Deco BE85 (7/10, WIRED Review). All of these systems are very expensive. Thankfully, some manufacturers have started dropping prices on their flagship Wi-Fi 7 routers and introducing midrange and entry-level options (you can find some in our best router and best mesh guides).

    On the device side, we are seeing more and more smartphones and laptops with Wi-Fi 7 on board. The latest flagship phone ranges from Apple, Google, and Samsung all support Wi-Fi 7. All of the major chipmakers, including Qualcomm, Intel, Broadcom, and MediaTek now offer chipsets that have been Wi-Fi 7 certified, and the Wi-Fi Alliance is using them as the test bed for certification. It suggests that more than 233 million Wi-Fi 7 devices will enter the market this year.

    [ad_2]

    Simon Hill

    Source link

  • United Airlines will offer free internet on flights using service from Elon Musk’s SpaceX

    United Airlines will offer free internet on flights using service from Elon Musk’s SpaceX

    [ad_1]

    DALLAS — United Airlines has struck a deal with Elon Musk’s SpaceX to offer satellite-based Starlink WiFi service on flights within the next several years.

    The airline said Friday the service will be free to passengers and allow them to connect multiple devices.

    United said it will begin testing the service early next year and begin offering it on some flights by later in 2025.

    Financial details of the deal were not disclosed.

    The announcement comes as airlines rush to offer more amenities as a way to stand out when passengers pick a carrier for a trip. United’s goal is to make sitting on a plane pretty much like being on the ground when it comes to browsing the internet, streaming entertainment and playing games.

    Delta Air Lines began offering free in-flight Wi-Fi last year using Viasat, a rival to Starlink. Hawaiian Airlines uses Starlink for free internet service on Airbus A321neo flights between Hawaii and the U.S. mainland. United plans a more aggressive rollout across its fleet of more than 1,000 United and United Express planes.

    Linda Jojo, United’s chief customer officer, said U.S. passengers now expect free WiFi, making it one of the most sought-after on-board amenities among all types of travelers.

    “It doesn’t matter where you’re sitting on the plane, it doesn’t matter how much you paid for your ticket, you’re going to benefit” from the service, Jojo said.

    Starlink will let passengers get internet access even over oceans and polar regions where traditional cell or Wi-Fi signals may be weak or missing, she said.

    SpaceX’s owner has emerged as a prominent supporter of Donald Trump, hosting the former president in a friendly chat on X and making many pro-Republican posts. United considered potential reaction to dealing with a partisan figure in a politically divided country.

    “Obviously we are aware that SpaceX and Starlink are controlled by Elon Musk, and we’re certainly aware of the things that he says in the public,” Jojo said. “We definitely talked about that, but it always comes back to our customer, and this is a significant customer benefit.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Dutch neobank Bunq goes on hiring spree, targeting digital nomads, as other fintechs slash jobs

    Dutch neobank Bunq goes on hiring spree, targeting digital nomads, as other fintechs slash jobs

    [ad_1]

    Dutch digital bank Bunq is plotting re-entry into the U.K. to tap into a “large and underserved” market of some 2.8 million British “digital nomads.”

    Pavlo Gonchar | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Dutch challenger bank Bunq told CNBC that it plans to grow its global headcount by 70% this year to over 700 employees, even as other financial technology startups have decided to cut jobs.

    Bunq, which operates in markets across the European Union, is looking to expand into new regions including the U.K. and the United States, taking on the fintechs already in those countries, including the likes of Britain’s Monzo and Revolut, and American neobank Chime.

    Bunq said it needs corresponding talent in those regions to support its global expansion ambitions. To that end, the firm said it plans to see out the year with 735 employees globally — up 72% from its 427 members of staff at the start of 2024.

    “Bunq focusses on digital nomads who tend to roam the world,” Ali Niknam, Bunq’s CEO and co-founder, told CNBC via emailed comments.

    So-called “digital nomads” are defined as people who travel freely while working remotely, using technology and the internet to work abroad from hotels, cafes, libraries, co-working spaces, or temporary housing.

    “We’d love to be able to service our users wherever they go — given the regulatory environment we’re in, this results in us having to have a lot of extra people to make this happen,” Niknam added.

    Bunq is currently in the process of applying for banking licenses in both the U.S. and U.K. Last year, the firm submitted an application for a federal banking license. And in the U.K., Bunq is awaiting a decision from financial regulators on an application to become a licensed e-money institution, or EMI.

    The digital bank said it was actively looking to hire across sales and business development, product marketing, PR, affiliate marketing, and market analysis, as well as user support, development, and quality assurance.

    Many of these positions will be part of a “tailored digital nomad” program that allows staff to work from anywhere in the world, Bunq said.

    However, the firm stressed it’s not closing down office space and that many new hires would work in its offices, including in Amsterdam, Sofia, Istanbul, Munich, Paris, Dublin, Madrid, London, and New York City.

    A contrast from jobs cuts at other fintechs

    Over the past two years, one of the biggest stories in both the fintech and broader technology industry has been companies slashing jobs to cut back on the massive spending implemented during in the pandemic years of 2020 and 2021.

    The operating environment for fintech firms has gotten tougher, meanwhile, with inflation knocking consumer confidence and higher interest rates making it harder for startups to raise money.

    In January last year, cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase slashed 950 jobs. It was followed by payments giant PayPal, which reduced its global headcount by 2,000 people in early 2023, and then by another 2,500 jobs in early 2024.

    Meanwhile, some fintechs are looking to artificial intelligence to take on a growing number of roles.

    Swedish buy now, pay later firm Klarna, for instance, said last month that it was able to reduce its workforce from 5,000 to 3,800 over the past year from attrition alone. It added that it is looking to further cut employee numbers down to 2,000 through the use of AI in marketing and customer service.

    “Our proven scale efficiencies have been enhanced by our investment in AI, which has driven down operating expenses and improved gross profits,” the company said in first-half earnings.

    Klarna said that its average revenue per employee had risen 73% year-over-year, thanks in no small part to the internal application of AI.

    Bunq’s Niknam said he doesn’t see AI as a way to help firms reduce headcount, however.

    “We’ve been deploying AI systems and solutions years before they became mainstream, [but] in our experience AI empowers our employees to be able to do better by our users, more effectively and efficiently,” he told CNBC.

    Bunq earlier this year reported its first full year of profitability, generating 53.1 million euros ($58.51 million) in net profit in 2023. The business was last valued privately by investors at 1.65 billion euros.

    [ad_2]
    Source link

  • Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, Diablo IV, Starfield And More Missing From Game Pass’ Newest Tier

    Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, Diablo IV, Starfield And More Missing From Game Pass’ Newest Tier

    [ad_1]

    Microsoft has officially rolled out Game Pass Standard, the Netflix-like subscription service’s new middle tier, and with it revealed which games will and won’t be included at the start. Among those missing are Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, Diablo IV, and some other notable blockbusters like Starfield.

    Announced earlier this summer, Game Pass Standard is $15 a month and includes access to online multiplayer as well as a library of hundreds of games that can be downloaded and played on-demand. The big difference between Game Pass Standard and Game Pass Ultimate, the now $20 a month version, is that the former won’t include certain day-one additions to the library until up to 12 months later or even longer in some cases. The most notable example is Call of Duty: Black Ops 6, which will only be part of Game Pass Ultimate and Game Pass PC when it launches on October 25.

    But a list of the existing libraries for each tier also reveals other discrepancies for games that already came to the service. Modern Warfare 3, added last month, is notably absent. As is Diablo IV, added in the spring with a new expansion, Vessel of Hatred, coming October 8. Valorant, Riot Games’ hero shooter that recently came to console, is free-to-play but locks certain characters behind a paywall. The Game Pass version that unlocks them all for free is part of Ultimate but not Standard.

    There are some smaller day-and-date games missing as well. Flintlock, the colonial-era Soulslike, came to Game Pass in July but isn’t included in Standard’s library. Neither is Another Crab’s Treasure, the cartoony Soulslike that joined in April. Still Wakes The Deep, the horror walking sim that arrived in June, is also absent. It seems like a lot of recent day-one Game Pass releases, including Microsoft’s own Age of Mythology Retold, won’t be hitting Standard anytime soon, despite arriving on the service before the split was official. Senua’s Saga: Hellblade II isn’t there either, nor Starfield which came out over a year ago.

    When will we see these games and others make it to the middle tier? That’s the most confusing part of all. For now there doesn’t seem to be one standard approach, with all releases being staggered by the same number of months. Even for Microsoft’s own first-party releases, it seems like their arrival on Standard will happens when it happens. Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, for example, might not hit Game Pass Standard until it first arrives on PS5 in the spring.

    Microsoft did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

         

    [ad_2]

    Ethan Gach

    Source link

  • Google faces new antitrust trial after ruling declaring search engine a monopoly

    Google faces new antitrust trial after ruling declaring search engine a monopoly

    [ad_1]

    ALEXANDRIA, Va. — One month after a judge declared Google’s search engine an illegal monopoly, the tech giant faces another antitrust lawsuit that threatens to break up the company, this time over its advertising technology.

    The Justice Department and a coalition of states contend that Google built and maintains a monopoly over the technology that matches online publishers to advertisers. Dominance over the software on both the buy side and the sell side of the transaction enables Google to keep as much as 36 cents on the dollar when it brokers sales between publishers and advertisers, the government contends in court papers.

    Google says the government’s case is based on an internet of yesteryear, when desktop computers ruled and internet users carefully typed precise World Wide Web addresses into URL fields. Advertisers now are more likely to turn to social media companies like TikTok or streaming TV services like Peacock to reach audiences.

    In recent years, Google Networks, the division of the Mountain View, California-based tech giant that includes such services as AdSense and Google Ad Manager that are at the heart of the case, actually have seen declining revenue, from $31.7 billion in 2021 to $31.3 billion in 2023, according to the company’s annual reports.

    The trial over the alleged ad tech monopoly begins Monday in Alexandria, Virginia. It initially was going to be a jury trial, but Google maneuvered to force a bench trial, writing a check to the federal government for more than $2 million to moot the only claim brought by the government that required a jury.

    The case will now be decided by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema, who was appointed to the bench by former President Bill Clinton and is best known for high-profile terrorism trials including Sept. 11 defendant Zacarias Moussaoui. Brinkema, though, also has experience with highly technical civil trials, working in a courthouse that sees an outsize number of patent infringement cases.

    The Virginia case comes on the heels of a major defeat for Google over its search engine. which generates the majority of the company’s $307 billion in annual revenue. A judge in the District of Columbia declared the search engine a monopoly, maintained in part by tens of billions of dollars Google pays each year to companies like Apple to lock in Google as the default search engine presented to consumers when they buy iPhones and other gadgets.

    In that case, the judge has not yet imposed any remedies. The government hasn’t offered its proposed sanctions, though there could be close scrutiny over whether Google should be allowed to continue to make exclusivity deals that ensure its search engine is consumers’ default option.

    Peter Cohan, a professor of management practice at Babson College, said the Virginia case could potentially be more harmful to Google because the obvious remedy would be requiring it to sell off parts of its ad tech business that generate billions of dollars in annual revenue.

    “Divestitures are definitely a possible remedy for this second case,” Cohan said “It could be potentially more significant than initially meets the eye.”

    In the Virginia trial, the government’s witnesses are expected to include executives from newspaper publishers including The New York Times Co. and Gannett, and online news sites that the government contends have faced particular harm from Google’s practices.

    “Google extracted extraordinary fees at the expense of the website publishers who make the open internet vibrant and valuable,” government lawyers wrote in court papers. “As publishers generate less money from selling their advertising inventory, publishers are pushed to put more ads on their websites, to put more content behind costly paywalls, or to cease business altogether.”

    Google disputes that it charges excessive fees compared to its competitors. The company also asserts the integration of its technology on the buy side, sell side and in the middle assures ads and web pages load quickly and enhance security. And it says customers have options to work with outside ad exchanges.

    Google says the government’s case is improperly focused on display ads and banner ads that load on web pages accessed through a desktop computer and fails to take into account consumers’ migration to mobile apps and the boom in ads placed on social media sites over the last 15 years.

    The government’s case “focuses on a limited type of advertising viewed on a narrow subset of websites when user attention migrated elsewhere years ago,” Google’s lawyers write in a pretrial filing. “The last year users spent more time accessing websites on the ‘open web,’ rather than on social media, videos, or apps, was 2012.”

    The trial, which is expected to last several weeks, is taking place in a courthouse that rigidly adheres to traditional practices, including a resistance to technology in the courtroom. Cellphones are banned from the courthouse, to the chagrin of a tech press corps accustomed at the District of Columbia trial to tweeting out live updates as they happen.

    Even the lawyers, and there are many on both sides, are limited in their technology. At a pretrial hearing Wednesday, Google’s lawyers made a plea to be allowed more than the two computers each side is permitted to have in the courtroom during trial. Brinkema rejected it.

    “This is an old-fashioned courtroom,” she said.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • OnlyFans owner has made $1 billion in dividends since 2021

    OnlyFans owner has made $1 billion in dividends since 2021

    [ad_1]

    OnlyFans Ltd. paid owner Leonid Radvinsky $472 million in dividends last fiscal year, bringing his takings from the site to more than $1 billion in three years. 

    Radvinsky made $338 million in 2022 and $284 million the year before that, according to UK financial filings. The 42-year-old US citizen is the sole owner of OnlyFans’ holding company, Fenix International Ltd. 

    The London-based company, which skyrocketed in popularity during Covid-19 lockdowns and has a reputation for hosting pornographic and adult content forbidden on most other social networks, has been building up its stable of comedians, chefs, personal trainers and other types of creators to widen its user base. 

    OnlyFans posted a profit of about $485.5 million in the year ending Nov. 30 2023, up 20% from the previous year, Fenix International said in a report published on Friday. 

    “We have cemented our place as a leading digital entertainment company and a UK tech success story,” Chief Executive Officer Keily Blair said in the statement. “We have done this by continuing to provide opportunities for our diverse creator community to monetize their content and grow their global fan base.”

    Revenue also rose about 20% from a year earlier to $1.3 billion, according to the report. The platform’s total number of creators rose 29% to 4.1 million and users rose 28% to 305 million. 

    Recommended reading:
    In our new special issue, a Wall Street legend gets a radical makeover, a tale of crypto iniquity, misbehaving poultry royalty, and more.
    Read the stories.

    [ad_2]

    Benoit Berthelot, Bloomberg

    Source link

  • Why It’s So Hard to Fully Block X in Brazil

    Why It’s So Hard to Fully Block X in Brazil

    [ad_1]

    The social network X has been largely inaccessible in Brazil since Saturday, after the country’s Supreme Court ordered all mobile and internet service providers to block the platform. The court order followed a months-long dispute between Judge Alexandre de Moraes and X CEO Elon Musk over the company’s misinformation, hate speech, and moderation policies.

    With Brazil’s population of 215 million people, a mature democracy, a sprawling land mass, and more than 20,000 internet service providers, it isn’t straightforward to block a web platform in the South American nation. And while the biggest ISPs have implemented the ban, many are still scrambling to comply with the order, leaving a patchwork of access to the site.

    “Brazil has made headway blocking X on the main internet providers, but our telemetry indicates there’s a long tail of local and regional ISPs where the service is still available,” says Isik Mater, director of research at the internet censorship analysis group NetBlocks.

    The Open Observatory of Network Interference reported that a similar progression played out in when Brazil’s Federal Police obtained a court order in April 2023 for ISPs to block the communication platform Telegram because it would not fully share information about users involved in neo-Nazi group chats. Some large ISPs began blocking Telegram immediately; “however, the block was not implemented by all ISPs in Brazil, nor was it implemented in the same way,” the group wrote. “This suggests lack of coordination between providers, and that each ISP implemented the block autonomously.”

    A similar progression has been playing out with the X ban. Brazil’s 20,000 ISPs produce a notably competitive market, but only a few have infrastructure nationwide. About 40 percent are tiny regional providers with 5,000 customers or fewer. The human and digital rights watchdog Freedom House rates Brazil’s internet freedom as “partly free” and trending to be more restrictive, because of the country’s far reaching efforts to crack down on political misinformation in recent years and its three-day ban on Telegram. Brazil also blocked the secure communication platform WhatsApp in December 2015 and again in May 2016 because it did not respond to similar data requests.

    Brazil’s National Telecommunications Agency ANATEL did not respond to WIRED’s multiple requests for comment.

    Unlike in countries including Russia, Iran, and China, there is currently no legal apparatus or technical infrastructure by which the Brazilian government can systematically and comprehensively restrict access to particular websites or online platforms or impose connectivity blackouts on its citizens.

    Reports indicate that many Brazilian ISPs that have implemented the ban are using the technique known as “DNS filtering” to block access to X. The Domain Name System is the internet’s phonebook for looking up the IP addresses associated with URLs like www.wired.com. DNS queries are sent to a DNS “resolver” that does the IP address lookups, and ISPs can configure their resolvers to filter or block requests for particular websites.

    Mobile apps like X’s Android and iOS apps don’t rely on DNS, though, so DNS filtering alone is not enough to block all connections to a web platform. Some Brazilian ISPs seem to also be using IP address “sinkholing”—redirecting online traffic to a different server than the users intended to visit—as a way to send traffic meant for X into the abyss.

    “We’re seeing variation by provider in Brazil and right now it looks they’re each trying their own thing to see what works,” NetBlocks’ Mater says. “Brazil has a diverse network infrastructure with lots of ways for data to enter and leave the country, so there isn’t that centralized choke point and ‘kill switch’ we see in [some] authoritarian-leaning countries.”

    VPN usage has surged in Brazil this week under the ban as a way around ISP attempts to block X, but the court order ban includes a provision that people could be charged a fine of 50,000 reais—about $8,900—per day for using circumvention tools like VPNs.

    [ad_2]

    Lily Hay Newman

    Source link

  • The Search for the Face Behind Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing

    The Search for the Face Behind Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing

    [ad_1]

    Jazmin Jones knows what she did. “If you’re online, there’s this idea of trolling,” Jones, the director behind Seeking Mavis Beacon, said during a recent panel for her new documentary. “For this project, some things we’re taking incredibly seriously … and other things we’re trolling. We’re trolling this idea of a detective because we’re also, like, ACAB.”

    Her trolling, though, was for a good reason. Jones and fellow filmmaker Olivia Mckayla Ross did it in hopes of finding the woman behind Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing.

    The popular teaching tool was released in 1987 by The Software Toolworks, a video game and software company based in California that produced educational chess, reading, and math games. Mavis, essentially the “mascot” of the game, is a Black woman donned in professional clothes and a slicked-back bun. Though Mavis Beacon was not an actual person, Jones and Ross say that she is one of the first examples of Black representation they witnessed in tech. Seeking Mavis Beacon, which opened in New York City on August 30 and is rolling out to other cities in September, is their attempt to uncover the story behind the face, which appeared on the tool’s packaging and later as part of its interface.

    The film shows the duo setting up a detective room, conversing over FaceTime, running up to people on the street, and even tracking down a relative connected to the ever-elusive Mavis. But the journey of their search turned up a different question they didn’t initially expect: What are the impacts of sexism, racism, privacy, and exploitation in a world where you can present yourself any way you want to?

    Using shots from computer screens, deep dives through archival footage, and sit-down interviews, the noir-style documentary reveals that Mavis Beacon is actually Renée L’Espérance, a Black model from Haiti who was paid $500 for her likeness with no royalties, despite the program selling millions of copies.

    Creating artificial likenesses of people from marginalized groups is not unique to Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing. Big brands have used these likenesses to generate both notoriety and money without disseminating that success to the real people behind the inspiration.

    “Lil Miquela,” an AI-generated music artist with some 2.5 million Instagram followers, appears in commercials for BMW. MSI, which recently partnered with the artificial influencer to promote an OLED monitor, noted on a web page touting the collaboration that Lil’ Miquela has “a rich heritage of half-Brazilian and half-Spanish roots.” The AI bot reportedly makes millions of dollars per year as an influencer. Meanwhile, human BIPOC social media influencers report making up to 67 percent less than white influencers per Instagram post, according to findings released last year by the public relations firm MSL Group.

    Another example is Shudu Gram, who, according to her Instagram account, is known as “the world’s first digital supermodel.” Launched in 2017, Shudu is long and lean with very dark skin. She looks even more human than Lil Miquela, but she’s not. At a time when Black models still face challenges in the fashion industry, Gram has appeared in Vogue Czechoslovakia, partnered with Sony Pictures, and amassed 239,000 followers on Instagram.

    [ad_2]

    Alana Yzola

    Source link