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Tag: social media

  • European Commission accuses Elon Musk’s X platform of violating EU Digital Services Act

    European Commission accuses Elon Musk’s X platform of violating EU Digital Services Act

    London — The European Union said Friday that blue checkmarks from Elon Musk’s X are deceptive and that the online platform falls short on transparency and accountability requirements, in the first charges against a tech company since the bloc’s new social media regulations took effect.

    The European Commission outlined the preliminary findings from its investigation into X, formerly known as Twitter, under the 27-nation bloc’s Digital Services Act.

    The rulebook, also known as the DSA, is a sweeping set of regulations that requires platforms to take more responsibility for protecting their European users and cleaning up harmful or illegal content and products on their sites, under threat of hefty fines.

    Regulators took aim at X’s blue checks, saying they constitute “dark patterns” that are not in line with industry best practice and can be used by malicious actors to deceive users.

    Before Musk’s acquisition, the checkmarks mirrored verification badges common on social media and were largely reserved for celebrities, politicians and other influential accounts. After Musk bought the site in 2022, it started issuing them to anyone who paid $8 per month for one.


    Artificial intelligence, Elon Musk and the biggest tech stories of 2023

    04:26

    “Since anyone can subscribe to obtain such a ‘verified” status’ it negatively affects users’ ability to make free and informed decisions about the authenticity of the accounts and the content they interact with,” the commission said.

    An email request for comment to X resulted in an automated response that said “Busy now, please check back later.” Its main spokesman reportedly left the company in June.

    “Back in the day, BlueChecks used to mean trustworthy sources of information,” European Commissioner Thierry Breton said in a statement. “Now with X, our preliminary view is that they deceive users and infringe the DSA.”

    The commission also charged X with failing to comply with ad transparency rules. Under the DSA, platforms must publish a database of all digital advertisements that they’ve carried, with details such as who paid for them and the intended audience.

    But X’s ad database isn’t “searchable and reliable” and has “design features and access barriers” that make it “unfit for its transparency purpose,” the commission said. The database’s design in particular hinders researchers from looking into “emerging risks” from online ads, it said.

    The company also falls short when it comes to giving researchers access to public data, the commission said. The DSA imposes the provisions so that researchers can scrutinize how platforms work and how online risks evolve.

    But researchers can’t independently access data by scraping it from the site, while the process to request access from the company through an interface “appears to dissuade researchers” from carrying out their projects or gives them no choice but to pay high fees, it said.

    X now has a chance to respond to the accusations and make changes to comply, which would be legally binding. If the commission isn’t satisfied, it can levy penalties worth up to 6% of the company’s annual global revenue and order it to fix the problem.

    The findings are only a part of the investigation. Regulators are still looking into whether X is failing to do enough to curb the spread of illegal content — such as hate speech or incitement of terrorism — and the effectiveness of measures to combat “information manipulation,” especially through its crowd-sourced Community Notes fact-checking feature.

    TikTok, e-commerce site AliExpress and Facebook and Instagram owner Meta Platforms are also facing ongoing DSA investigations.

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  • At 25, Metafilter Feels Like a Time Capsule From Another Internet

    At 25, Metafilter Feels Like a Time Capsule From Another Internet

    Jessamyn West used to describe Metafilter as a social network for non-friends, a description belied in part by the tight-knit camaraderie that emerges in an online group of only a few thousand people. West herself is an example: She met her partner on the site. She also describes the Metafilter cohort as “a community of old Web nerds.”

    This month, the venerated site celebrates its 25th anniversary. It’s amazing it has lasted that long; it made it this far in great part thanks to West, who helped stabilize it after a near-death spiral. You could say it’s the site that time forgot—certainly I’d forgotten about it until I decided to mark its big birthday. Metafilter is a kind of digital Brigadoon; visiting it is like a form of time travel. To people who have been around a while, Metafilter seems to preserve in amber the spirit of what online used to be like. The feed is strictly chronological. It’s still text-only. Some members may be influential on Metafilter, but they don’t call themselves influencers, and they don’t sell personally branded cosmetics or garments. As founder Matt Haughey, who stepped down in 2017, says, “It’s a weird throwback thing—like a cockroach that survived.”

    When Haughey started Metafilter in 1999, he envisioned a quick way for people to share cool stuff they saw in what was then a few dozen key blogs. “I never even thought about free-flowing conversations, but it quickly went there,” he says.

    For about a year the community was tiny, maybe 100 visitors a day, but in 2000 it was featured in a popular blog called Cool Site of the Day, and 5,000 people checked it out. That helped Metafilter morph from a niche link-sharing site into a community where smart people also discussed what was cool on the internet. In the early aughts, Haughey felt too many people were joining, so he cut off new membership. (People could still view the conversation as an outsider.) For years, the only way you could get in was to email him and beg. Later, when he decided to charge a $5 fee, 4,000 people signed up on the first day. The fee also helped to weed out potential trolls. That, and fairly paid moderators, maintained civility on the site. More importantly, the community itself didn’t tolerate awful behavior.

    One popular feature from early on was “Ask Metafilter,” where members seek advice and tips from the Metafilter hive mind. “When you’re pitching a question to 10,000 really smart nerds, chances are somebody has to be experienced in the thing you’re asking,” says Haughey. It became an invaluable repository of knowledge, not just to the community but those who stumbled on the answers through Google. Quora later launched with a similar idea, but with ambitions for a mega-footprint. That wasn’t Metafilter’s thing.

    “I didn’t want to be Walmart,” says Haughey. “We’re just the neighborhood corner store.” At one point he consulted with a kid named Aaron Swartz, who had an idea for a site that would be like a social-media wiki for everything. Then Swartz joined the first Y Combinator batch and hooked up with some founders starting a company called Reddit, which was basically Metafilter with limitless ambition.

    Haughey was OK with that. In the early 2010s, things were pretty cush. Metafilter’s core community was tight, and millions of tourists dropped in, drawn by Google search results. Haughey monetized them via Google ads and was able to drop his day job as a web designer, buy a house, and raise a family. But beginning in 2012, Google made a number of spam-fighting changes to its ranking algorithms, and Metafilter, for mysterious reasons, suffered collateral damage. Over the next couple of years, revenue plunged and Metafilter had to lay off some employees.

    Steven Levy

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  • European Union says X’s blue checks are deceptive

    European Union says X’s blue checks are deceptive

    LONDON — The European Union said Friday that blue checkmarks from Elon Musk’s X are deceptive and that the online platform falls short on transparency and accountability requirements, the first charges against a tech company since the bloc’s new social media regulations took effect.

    The European Commission outlined the preliminary findings from its investigation into X, formerly known as Twitter, under the 27-nation bloc’s Digital Services Act.

    The rulebook, also known as the DSA, is a sweeping set of regulations that requires platforms to take more responsibility for protecting their European users and cleaning up harmful or illegal content and products on their sites, under threat of hefty fines.

    Regulators took aim at X’s blue checks, saying they constitute “dark patterns” that are not in line with industry best practice and can be used by malicious actors to deceive users.

    Before Musk’s acquisition, the checkmarks mirrored verification badges common on social media and were largely reserved for celebrities, politicians and other influential accounts. After Musk bought the site in 2022, it started issuing them to anyone who paid $8 per month for one.

    “Since anyone can subscribe to obtain such a ‘verified” status’ it negatively affects users’ ability to make free and informed decisions about the authenticity of the accounts and the content they interact with,” the commission said.

    An email request for comment to X resulted in an automated response that said “Busy now, please check back later.” Its main spokesman reportedly left the company in June.

    “Back in the day, BlueChecks used to mean trustworthy sources of information,” European Commissioner Thierry Breton said in a statement. “Now with X, our preliminary view is that they deceive users and infringe the DSA.”

    The commission also charged X with failing to comply with ad transparency rules. Under the DSA platforms must publish a database of all digital advertisements that they’ve carried, with details such as who paid for them and the intended audience.

    But X’s ad database isn’t “searchable and reliable” and has “design features and access barriers” that make it “unfit for its transparency purpose,” the commission said. The database’s design in particular hinders researchers from looking into “emerging risks” from online ads, it said.

    The company also falls short when it comes to giving researchers access to public data, the commission said. The DSA imposes the provisions so that researchers can scrutinize how platforms work and how online risks evolve.

    But researchers can’t independently access data by scraping it from the site, while the process to request access from the company through an interface “appears to dissuade researchers” from carrying out their projects or gives them no choice but to pay high fees, it said.

    X now has a chance to respond to the accusations and make changes to comply, which would be legally binding. If the commission isn’t satisfied, it can levy penalties worth up to 6% of the company’s annual global revenue and order it to fix the problem.

    The findings are only a part of the investigation. Regulators are still looking into whether X is failing to do enough to curb the spread of illegal content — such as hate speech or incitement of terrorism — and the effectiveness of measures to combat “ information manipulation,” especially through its crowd-sourced Community Notes fact-checking feature.

    TikTok, e-commerce site AliExpress and Facebook and Instagram owner Meta Platforms are also facing ongoing DSA investigations.

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  • Q: Why Do We Love Online News Quizzes? A: Because They Make Us Smarter

    Q: Why Do We Love Online News Quizzes? A: Because They Make Us Smarter

    Patti Wolter, a journalism professor at Northwestern University, describes quizzes as a form of service journalism. “I would applaud quizzes that have reporting and information embedded in them,” she says. “All we’re talking about is, what is the wrapper or the packaging that makes it more likely for the reader to engage? In a world in which every kind of media, news or otherwise, is really hunting for different ways of getting people to click it, being creative around story format is a strong strategy.”

    In fact, the quiz format in particular may prove to be a better way to tell certain stories, according to Dowling. Earlier this month, The Wall Street Journal published a poll titled “What Type of Voter Are You?” to share findings from a research study. The Washington Post published “Can you spot bad financial advice on TikTok?” to draw attention to, and help readers identify, potentially harmful misinformation on social media.

    Publishing information in the form of a quiz can also add depth to the scope of the reporting, Dowling says. “It forces a varied look at things. Your quiz is going to have some sort of an output that tells you that there are other ways that others could have answered that quiz. And so the sociological takeaway, I think, is diversifying. I think it’s healthy because I got to think about myself vis-a-vis others.”

    Social Studies

    The omnipresence of online quizzes also gives the news media a way to combat one of its most pressing challenges: the mass migration of readers to social media. The same institutions pushing quizzes are slowly losing their audiences to social platforms, where news is just one of the many content types on offer.

    According to a study from Pew published in April, 43 percent of American TikTok users say they get their news on TikTok. Pew also reported, in February, that those who get their news on social media cite convenience as the primary benefit. “If, on any given day, I want to know what’s happening in the Middle East, I want to know what’s going on with Congress, I’m looking for a new recipe, I’m looking for a creative way to work out,” says Wolter, “any given media outlet wants me to satisfy as many, many of those items on their site.”

    According to the same Pew study, 40 percent of Americans who get news from social media expressed concern about the potential for inaccurate information. In theory, a news publication’s use of diverse storytelling formats should offer the same one-stop-shop convenience as social media, but provide content produced with high editorial standards.

    Migration to social media indicates a failure on the part of the journalism industry to reclaim the connection with readers that’s been co-opted by social media, says Rawiya Kameir, an assistant professor of journalism at Syracuse University’s Newhouse School of Communications. “There’s an absence, in a lot of publications, of community in a comment section, or other kinds of direct engagement that we see on social,” she says, which exposes a need to “figure out how to capture community and bring it back to the publications themselves.”

    Quizzes generally deal with light-hearted topics, giving readers permission to momentarily abandon the often distressing news cycle and engage in some introspection, even within the context of the news. The Washington Post’s “Are you ready to buy a house?” quiz, for example, informs readers of relevant bits of news related to homeownership, like the current mortgage rate and the percentage of homes bought in cash.

    “We forget that a lot of people also turn to these publications for entertainment and for enlightenment and for things other than pure life-or-death information,” says Kameir. “From the reader’s perspective, the benefits of quizzes are multifold. They’re fun, they’re engaging, they are a way to understand ourselves and each other a little bit better.”

    Elana Klein

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  • Brit River Island manager in Malia scrap admits street brawling ‘is not clever’

    Brit River Island manager in Malia scrap admits street brawling ‘is not clever’

    ONE of the two British women who took part in a bloody Malia brawl has been identified as a River Island manager.

    The footage showed two women, one who remains unidentified, taking swings at each other in party resort Malia, Crete.

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    River Island manager Lexi Ryder, 20, was seen in vicious fight with another woman in Greece in ‘row over a man’Credit: Facebook
    The 20-year-old has since admitted street brawling 'is not clever'

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    The 20-year-old has since admitted street brawling ‘is not clever’Credit: Facebook
    Lexi, in black, attacking another woman who is wearing white and grey

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    Lexi, in black, attacking another woman who is wearing white and greyCredit: Supplied
    She admitted: "Black eye swollen, bruised nose, concussion, and a damaged ego" in a since deleted TikTok

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    She admitted: “Black eye swollen, bruised nose, concussion, and a damaged ego” in a since deleted TikTokCredit: TikTok

    The woman wearing black in the 14-second-clip has been named by MailOnline as 20-year-old River Island sales manager Lexi Ryder, from Northwich, Cheshire.

    Her opponent wore a white top and grey shorts opposite Lexi, who opted for a bodysuit featuring extreme cutouts.

    She uploaded a series of posts to her social media accounts following the brutal attack, thought to have broke out over the same man.

    Lexi has since deleted the TikTok post she captioned: “Scrapping in Malia streets is not clever,” admitting her unwise role in the boozy brawl.

    Bare-faced and wrapped up in a cosy grey hoodie in the TikTok, Lexi appears to be in better condition as a purple vape lies on her chest.

    She said: “Black eye swollen, bruised nose, concussion, and a damaged ego.”

    The video showed the boozy brawl escalate so far that they end up punching and kicking each other.

    At one point, the woman in white was seen grabbing Lexi’s hair, yanking it down and punching her several times.

    She then heaves her down to the ground before fleeing, leaving the 20-year-old sales manager bloodied on street.

    Lexi was later filmed sitting on the floor, recovering from the brutal beating.

    The Sun visits Split in Croatia, one of the hottest party destinations in recent years

    It comes after Brit tourists have been criticised for drunken, rowdy behaviour abroad.

    Residents in Tenerife, where thousands took to the streets to call out low-quality tourism, have accused drunk holidaymakers of ruining their island.

    The anti-tourist sentiment in the Canary islands quickly spread across Europe with protesters in other holiday hotspots calling for tourists to “go home”.

    Graffiti have also appeared on walls in cities across Greece and Spain telling visitors to stay away.

    Earlier this year, the UK’s ambassador to Spain urged British tourists in Magaluf to “show responsibility” as tensions boil over their alcohol-fuelled antics.

    Hugh Elliott said Brits have to remember they are guests during their time in the party resort, as they’re accused of “drinking cheap beer” and being “low quality”.

    Elliott’s visit comes as thousands of protesters demand tourist tax, fewer flights and a clampdown on foreigners buying houses march in Spain, Greece and Italy.

    Speaking during a visit to Majorca yesterday to publicise the Stick With Your Mates campaign for responsible alcohol consumption, Elliott said: “Generally what we all want is responsibility.

    “During holidays we all want to have a good time, don’t we, and young people above all.

    “This is about understanding what responsibility is about, responsibility as guests because us foreigners are guests here in Spain and in Calvia, it’s a question of knowing how to behave with responsibility and have a good time.

    “The tourism here is a type of tourism that appreciates the destination.”

    Lexi, who wore a plunging black bodysuit, is seen on the ground after the boozy brawl

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    Lexi, who wore a plunging black bodysuit, is seen on the ground after the boozy brawlCredit: Supplied
    The River Island manager is thought to be one of the women in the rowdy video

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    The River Island manager is thought to be one of the women in the rowdy videoCredit: Facebook

    Zeenia Naqvee

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  • European Union says social media site X’s blue checks are deceptive and transparency falls short under digital rules

    European Union says social media site X’s blue checks are deceptive and transparency falls short under digital rules

    European Union says social media site X’s blue checks are deceptive and transparency falls short under digital rules

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  • US signs agreement with 3 social media giants aimed at preventing distribution of synthetic drugs

    US signs agreement with 3 social media giants aimed at preventing distribution of synthetic drugs

    UNITED NATIONS — The United States signed a memorandum with several of the world’s biggest social media companies on Thursday aimed at preventing the use of their platforms for the distribution of synthetic drugs.

    U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told a signing ceremony that “t echnology companies have a critical role to play in both stopping the illegal manufacturing, trafficking and marketing of synthetic drugs, and just as importantly, educating the public.”

    The Alliance to Prevent Drug Harms is a joint effort of the U.S. Mission to the United Nations and Meta which owns Facebook and WhatsApp , X and Snap Inc., the owner of the photo sharing app Snapchat.

    The U.S. Mission said the signing parties will collaborate to “disrupt” illegal drug activities online and “amplify public awareness of the dangers of synthetic drug misuse.”

    Thomas-Greenfield said at the ceremony at the U.S. Mission that synthetic drug use is an “international crisis” that “no one government and no one sector can tackle alone.”

    “These criminals have adeptly used online platforms, social media, e-commerce, search engines and messaging apps to coordinate their illicit activities,” she said.

    Neither Thomas-Greenfield nor the social media representatives elaborated on the specific actions they will take to reduce online synthetic drug distribution as part of the Prevent Alliance, though Snap global platform safety chief Jacqueline Beauchere detailed the company’s existing efforts.

    Beauchere said Snap — which reaches 90% of 13- to 24-year-olds in the United States — has sought to make its platform a “hostile environment” for drug distributors by using technology that can “proactively detect illicit drug content,” making referrals to law enforcement, and “raising awareness” of the risks of drug use with users in the app.

    Meta trust and safety vice president Nell McCarthy said the company’s platform can help combat the opioid epidemic as a place where families of victims, people in recovery, and organizations fighting stigma can connect..

    The Prevent Alliance is a result of talks that began at the U.N. General Assembly’s annual gathering of world leaders in September 2023, Thomas-Greenfield said.

    The U.S, mission said the partnership’s objectives align with the U.S. State Department’s Global Coalition to Address Synthetic Drug Threats, a multilateral effort to prevent illicit synthetic drug distribution launched by Secretary of State Antony Blinken last July.

    “Whether it is companies that are involved in production or distribution, marketing or financial networks whose platforms may be abused for the movement of these illicit drugs, everybody has to play a role,” U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs Maggie Nardi said Thursday.

    Delphine Schantz, head of the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime’s New York office, put illicit drug use into a global perspective.

    According to the 2024 World Drug Report, 292 million people used drugs in 2022 — a 20% increase from the last decade, Schantz said.

    The report estimated 60 million of those people used opioids. In the same year, nearly 82,000 people died from opioid use in the United States, representing a 24-fold increase since 2010.

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  • Deepfake targets Ukraine’s first lady Olena Zelenksa with false claim she bought Bugatti

    Deepfake targets Ukraine’s first lady Olena Zelenksa with false claim she bought Bugatti

    A new deepfake video that falsely claims the first lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, purchased a $4.8 million Bugatti sports car has racked up millions of views on social media, CBS News has found. The video is part of a Russian disinformation campaign aimed at degrading Western support for Ukraine, researchers said. 

    CBS News determined the video was created using artificial intelligence. It shows a man claiming to be a French luxury car dealership employee sharing “exclusive” information about the fabricated sale. The man doesn’t move his neck, rarely blinks and his head barely moves — telltale signs of being manipulated using AI.

    Screenshot of a deepfake targeting the first lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska.

    CBS News


    The video was amplified by Russian disinformation networks across social media platforms, racking up over 20 million views on X, Telegram and TikTok. X and Telegram did not respond to a request for comment. A TikTok spokesperson told CBS News their policies do not allow misinformation that may cause harm and the company removes content that violates these guidelines.

    While it’s not clear who created the video, an early version of it appeared in an article on a French website called Verite Cachee — or in English, Hidden Truth — on July 1. Researchers from threat intelligence company Recorded Future linked the website to a Russian disinformation network they call CopyCop, which uses sham news websites and AI tools to publish false claims as part of influence campaigns. 

    The article included a fabricated invoice purporting to be from Bugatti to dupe readers further. Bugatti Paris — which is operated by Autofficina Parigi, a Car Lovers Group company — said it had filed a criminal complaint against people who shared the video and forged the invoice. Car Lovers Group said the invoice is not theirs, and it contains errors that show it’s fabricated, including the lack of required legal details and an incorrect price for the vehicle. 

    Russian disinformation networks have spread similar false claims about Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his family in the past year, including a false claim that he bought two luxury yachts for millions of dollars, and a false claim that Zelenska bought over $1 million worth of jewelry at Cartier in New York City.

    Clément Briens, a senior threat intelligence analyst for cybersecurity company Recorded Future, told CBS News that false stories about corruption are created to undermine Western support for Ukraine and “erode trust in the leaders, their institutions, and international alliances.”

    The falsehoods play into existing concerns and documented reports about corruption in Ukraine, researchers say.

    Darren Linvill, a Russian disinformation expert and professor at Clemson University in South Carolina, said the false claims are “framed for a very particular audience that wants to hear and is ready to hear that and repeat it.”

    Linvill said the narratives have managed to gain traction online, despite being debunked — likely because of the cost and status of the brand used by the network. “I think Bugatti has something to do with it,” he said.

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  • New students at Eton, the poshest of Britain’s elite private schools, will not be allowed smartphones

    New students at Eton, the poshest of Britain’s elite private schools, will not be allowed smartphones

    London — Eton College, arguably the poshest, most elite boarding school in Britain, is banning incoming students from having smartphones.  

    Eton, located near the royal palace in Windsor, just west of London, is renowned for its academic excellence. Notable alumni include Princes William and Harry, as well as novelist George Orwell, James Bond creator Ian Fleming and a long list of former prime ministers, including recent leaders Boris Johnson and David Cameron.  

    The ban, which is due to take effect in September, comes after the U.K. government issued guidance backing school principals who decide to ban the use of cellphones during the school day in an effort to minimize disruption and improve classroom behavior.

    Winter weather Jan 10th 2024
    Eton College, west of London, is seen in a Jan. 10, 2024 file photo.

    Andrew Matthews/PA Images/Getty


    Parents of first-year students at Eton — where tuition exceeds $60,000 per year — were informed of the changes in a letter, which said  that incoming 13-year-old boarders should have their smart devices taken home after their SIM cards are transferred to offline Nokia phones provided by the school, which can only make calls and send simple text messages. 

    Eton’s previous rules on smartphones required first-year students to hand over their devices overnight. 

    “Eton routinely reviews our mobile phone and devices policy to balance the benefits and challenges that technology brings to schools,” a spokesperson for the school told CBS News on Tuesday, adding that those joining in Year 9, essentially the equivalent of freshman year in high school for American students, “will receive a ‘brick’ phone for use outside the school day, as well as a school-issued iPad to support academic study.”

    Eton v Harrow cricket match, Lords
    Eton College boys celebrate the first wicket of the day during the Eton v Harrow cricket match at Lords Cricket Ground, in a May 12, 2023 file photo in London, England.

    Tom Jenkins/Getty


    The spokesperson added that “age-appropriate controls remain in place for other year groups.” 

    According to Ofcom, the U.K. government’s communications regulator, 97% of children have their own cellphone by the age of 12. 

    In the U.S., a recent survey published by Common Sense Media found around 91% of children own a smartphone by the age of 14. Similar policies on smartphones have been introduced in schools around the U.S., varying from complete bans to restricted use in specific times or areas. The 2021-2022 school year saw about 76% of schools prohibit the non-academic use of smartphones, according to the U.S. Department of Education

    Bans have been met with mixed reactions, as some argue these personal devices can also have curricular benefits, such as allowing students to engage in live surveys or access content and data during lessons. Some parents have also raised concerns that phone bans could prevent their children from reaching them during potential emergencies.

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  • His Galaxy Wolf Art Kept Getting Ripped Off. So He Sued—and Bought a Home

    His Galaxy Wolf Art Kept Getting Ripped Off. So He Sued—and Bought a Home

    “With every one shop that I got to take [items] down, another 10 popped up out of nowhere,” Jödicke says. “I almost wanted to give up on my art, because I felt so devastated that people would just take my work and profit out of it, and I didn’t see anything from it.”

    The widespread popularity of Where Light and Dark Meet only magnified this feeling, making it unclear where Jödicke should start. “Where infringing use is widespread, it may not be feasible to pursue every single infringement,” Eziefula says. “Especially if overseas from the artist’s home jurisdiction, nor worthwhile, where the damage caused is minimal.”

    Too often, however, the damage is significant—both in diverting income from artists and in diluting their brand, making them a more difficult proposition for potential clients. People often feel entitled to artwork they find online, and artists experience hostility when they try to assert their ownership of it. Yet, that entitlement is exactly what broke the dam for Jödicke and paved the way for him to fight back.

    In 2020, Jödicke caught a lucky break of sorts when Aaron Carter—pop singer and brother of the Backstreet Boys’ Nick—used one of the artist’s other pieces, titled Brotherhood, to promote his clothing line on Twitter (now X). The image, which shares the same vibe as Jödicke’s galaxy wolf, depicts two lions butting heads, one white and one black, as their manes curl in the shape of a heart. A frustrated Jödicke called Carter out on Twitter. Demands for credit and or removal are often met with stony silence. On this occasion Jödicke received a response:

    “you should’ve taken it as a compliment dick a fan of MINE sent this to me,” Carter wrote alongside a repost of Jödicke’s tweet, according to an August 2020 court filing. “oh here they go again, the answer is No this image has been made public and im [sic] using it to promote my clothing line… guess I’ll see you in small claims court FUCKERY.”

    For the first time, thanks to Carter’s retort, Jödicke had options. The public nature of this exchange had IP lawyers lining up to represent him, and, after years of watching others make money from his art, Jödicke called Carter on his threat.

    After a year of court proceedings in US District Court in central California, Jödicke says he got a settlement in the low five figures for violation of his copyright. It was a revelatory moment. “I had never really had any kind of justice,” Jödicke says. “That really, really motivated me to seek further legal advice and see if I could do something against all the art theft.” (Carter died in 2022.)

    That was a singular infringement with an immediately identifiable infringer. Countering the widespread sale of his work on various pieces of merchandise would be a far more challenging task. His win against Carter, however, brought him to the attention of UK-based Edwin James IP. The firm approached Jödicke to offer its resources, specifically its specialism in stopping counterfeiters from domains where copyright law is more lax, like China.

    Geoffrey Bunting

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  • The Hawk Tuah Girl: Everything You Need (and Absolutely Don’t Need) to Know

    The Hawk Tuah Girl: Everything You Need (and Absolutely Don’t Need) to Know

    “Hawk tuah.” A few weeks ago, these words—sounds, really—were little more than a Looney Tunes–esque way to mime the déclassé act of hawking a loogie. How quickly things can change! A young woman named Hailey Welch has gone viral for her spirited interpretation and risqué application of the phrase on camera, earning her the moniker Hawk Tuah Girl and capturing the attention of the nation. (Or at least, a large portion of the nation’s terminally online population.)

    Since that fateful video, Welch has been caught in a media storm—addressing rumors on a popular podcast, performing alongside a country star, and selling tens of thousands of dollars of merchandise based on the phrase alone. Things have even taken a political bent, with Welch and her signature phrase becoming an emblem for the American right. All the controversy and the clicks have led to Welch gaining representation with a professional management company as a personality in her own right.

    So how did we get here? What does the future hold for Hawk Tuah Girl? What does it even mean “to spit on that thang”? (Well, we won’t be getting into that one.) Here’s everything you need to know about the internet’s latest viral phenomenon.

    Where did this all start?

    TikTok, of course. The Hawk Tuah phenomenon began when 21-year-old Tennessee native Welch was stopped on the street for a TikTok interview by creator duo Tim and Dee TV. The resulting video, posted June 11, showed the content creators asking various women in Nashville—the unofficial bachelorette party capital of the world—the following question: “What is one move in bed that makes a man go crazy every time?”

    Welch’s response? “You gotta give ’em that ‘hawk tuah’ and spit on that thang! You get me?”

    The delivery, the specificity, the cadence—it all seemed to add up to more than the sum of its parts. Welch’s strong Southern twang coupled with her comedic timing and true commitment to the bit—she really leaned into the loogie of it all—made the moment pop within an almost 14-minute long video. It quickly became the centerpiece of a standalone TikTok clip that at the time of publishing has received 372,000 likes, 4.1 million views, and thousands of comments, bookmarks, remixes, and reedits. Thus, Hawk Tuah Girl was born.

    Is there more to it than that?

    Not really. Welch and her friend stuck around for a longer, more in-depth interview with Tim and Dee TV, but it was that one short phrase that catapulted her to mega-virality. Basically, she had us at “hawk tuah.”

    But why is she such a big deal?

    That’s an amazing question, actually. Hawk Tuah Girl was originally tracking to be a medium-to-high viral internet moment—on par with, or perhaps slightly eclipsing, recent viral sensations like the Girthmaster or the Tall Couple. But the wily whims of the internet, a smattering of misinformation, and incredible timing converged to shoot Hawk Tuah Girl into the stratosphere of viral fame.

    First, the misinformation. Immediately after Hawk Tuah went viral, the internet began running wild with jokes about Welch and the alleged consequences of her viral moment. One parody account on Facebook, Tippah County Tribune, wrote a post claiming that Welch, whom it called “Hailey Wellington,” was a preschool teacher at Epstein Day School and had been fired as a result of the video. Children, the Tippah County Tribune wrote, were allegedly “spitting on each other and everything else.” The fake story even included a fake statement from the fake Hailey Wellington, claiming that she planned to seek retribution against the preschool, and that she was throwing a fundraiser in the parking lot of a tractor supply store to retain funds for an attorney. Funny stuff!

    While “Epstein Day School” should have been enough to signal to any reasonable person that the account was probably fake, media literacy is in the toilet. As such, the rumor caught wind. Multiple publications, from Yahoo to The Times of India, attempted to set the record straight re: the satirical account, but the damage was already done, contributing to the lore—and more importantly, the notoriety—of the Hawk Tuah Girl.

    Eventually, the real Hawk Tuah Girl went on the podcast Plan Bri Uncut to set the record straight, revealing her real name and her real job. (Welch says she worked at a spring factory in her Tennessee hometown.) According to Welch, she was up at 2 a.m. getting ready to clock in for a shift at the factory when she first noticed she was going viral. She said she quit that job.

    Good for her. But what was so great about Welch’s timing?

    She struck when the iron was hot! Welch partnered with Tennessee-based apparel company Fathead Threads and quickly released a line of merchandise tied to the viral moment. Within weeks of going viral, Fathead Threads had reportedly sold more than $65,000 worth of “Hawk Tuah”–themed merchandise. The merch includes “Hawk Tuah ’24” hats for $32.78 per hat (or $50 for a signed hat—now out of stock).

    Chris Murphy

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  • UK’s Labour Is Winning the Meme War, but Young Voters Think It’s All Incredibly Embarrassing

    UK’s Labour Is Winning the Meme War, but Young Voters Think It’s All Incredibly Embarrassing

    Almost immediately after the UK general election was called on May 22, the meme war began. Social media campaigns from both the Labour and Conservative parties shared hundreds of memes, from Labour’s viral TikTok using English singer and TV presenter Cilla Black’s “Surprise! Surprise!” to mock the Conservative Party’s plans for mandatory national service at the age of 18, to the Tories’ TikTok video showing only blank slides titled “Here are all of Labour’s policies.” Reform UK, the Liberal Democrats, and the Green Party have contributed their own share of memes in the lead-up; meanwhile, the two leading parties in the polls have been engaged in a “trolling” back and forth on platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and X.

    “The shitposters have gone mainstream,” says political strategist Jack Spriggs from Cavendish Consulting, who specializes in TikTok’s influence on politics.

    But reactions to the meme war have been a mixed bag, particularly among the Gen Z electorate, ranging from amused to disgusted. “Although conversation provoking, it reads as infantilizing,” says 20-year-old voter Maya Hollick from London. “They’re trivializing a very serious event.”

    The Labour Party launched its TikTok account as soon as the election date of July 4 was announced, and has gained more than 200,000 followers since then, with hundreds more videos than any other party. Many of its posts have more than a million views, but its reach spans even further. “The most important power of TikTok isn’t how much it stays on the platform, but how much it travels,” says Hannah O’Rourke, cofounder of Campaign Lab, an organization that researches campaign innovation.

    “A meme is Labour’s way of getting somebody to look into party policy,” O’Rourke says, referencing Labour’s viral Cilla Black TikTok.

    WIRED spoke to students from the University of Bristol, with Bristol Central being a constituency where Labour and the Green Party, which also appeals to young voters, are frontrunners. (It is also the university where this writer studies.) Certain voters like Ed Sherwin, a 20-year-old student, say they don’t find memes useful: “I don’t really use TikTok but I did see the video,” he says, referencing the Cilla Black meme. “However, it didn’t make me go and look at the national service policies. I did that when I saw it on the news.” Sherwin labeled the memes “kind of pathetic and insensitive considering the state of the country.”

    Charlie Siret, a member of Extinction Rebellion Youth Bristol, one youth branch of the climate-focused pressure group XR, says that they personally think Labour’s memes “are transparent and embarrassing” and “show a complete lack of self-awareness,” while Conservative memes are “a half-hearted attempt to appeal to a generation that largely despises them.”

    Some also critiqued the simplification of political issues that happens in the meme format. “The use of memes infers that young people need a simplified version of politics—we are more intelligent than they give credit for,” says Grace Shropshire, 21. “Their marketing is quick, loud, and short.” Marketing student Alisha Agarwal says she “likes Labour, but not the oversimplified way they’re marketing their campaign.”

    Isabel Fraser

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  • AI Is Rewriting Meme History

    AI Is Rewriting Meme History

    Pretty much every online lurker knows the image: A man gawks at a passing woman making the kind of “How you doin’?” face that would make Joey Tribbiani blush. Ever since it landed in 2017, the “distracted boyfriend” meme, which took that stock photo and projected scenarios onto it, has been seared into the internet’s collective consciousness. Now, artificial intelligence is rendering the memory of that viral moment fuzzy, along with the memories of dozens of other memes.

    Often called “time traveler” videos, particularly on TikTok, the AI-generated clips currently bouncing around the internet take well-known memes and add context that wasn’t there before. In some cases, they “interrupt” the action; sometimes they include a haunting specter. In the “distracted boyfriend” animation, which was posted on X (formerly known as Twitter) last month, the boyfriend is seen turning around and following the girl walking in the opposite direction while his girlfriend stands nearby.

    The clip was made using Luma Dream Machine, an AI model that takes source images and text prompts and creates high-quality, realistic videos. Within days of its release, social media users started to borrow images and frames from recognizable memes to create visuals that test Dream Machine’s generation abilities. The results proved that while the AI model isn’t flawless, it does have the ability to rewrite internet history by altering the web’s most enduring images.

    As Dream Machine spread, some common visual limitations and faults of generative AI showed up in the model’s output, such as unnatural human depictions and objects morphing. While some social media users found the visuals to be scary and concerning in terms of AI’s acceleration and its potential to create misinformation, others found amusement in the model’s incoherent errors.

    While it may be disconcerting to think that one of these AI-altered memes could go so viral it eclipses the image that inspired it, Know Your Meme editor Phillip Hamilton believes that the trend doesn’t pose a huge threat to digital media preservation. Rather, it’s the ubiquity of the originals that makes the reboots work.

    “Generally, everyone knows the context,” Hamilton says, referring to the viral images being edited. “The iconicness of the video is at the core of the trend … the core of the [time-traveler] meme is that popular thing being stopped.”

    The nature of meme-sharing on social media revolves around user interaction with memes. Since most are the result of editing to begin with, editing memes with AI is fair game, Hamilton says.

    Luma boasts that Dream Machine can generate 120 frames of high-quality video in under 120 seconds, despite facing significant delays due to extremely high demand. The speedy generation, along with the availability of a “free” tier that allows users to generate up to 30 clips per month, have made Dream Machine much more accessible than its OpenAI counterpart, Sora, which, despite being revealed in February, has not yet been released to the public so far.

    Kristine Villarroel

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  • Brandi Glanville Threatens to Sue Bravo Over ‘Uncontrollable Stress’

    Brandi Glanville Threatens to Sue Bravo Over ‘Uncontrollable Stress’


    Brandi Glanville
    Paul Archuleta/Getty Images

    Brandi Glanville has threatened to take legal action against Bravo for allegedly causing her stress-induced issues.

    The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills alum, 51, took to social media on Tuesday, July 2, to share the news.

    “I’ve been left no choice but to sue Bravo,” she wrote via X. “This stress has ruined my health. I have uncontrollable stress induced angio-edema I haven’t worked for a year … to [sic] depressed to do my podcast.” (The last episode of Glanville’s “Brandi Glanville Unfiltered” podcast was released on May 15.)

    Us Weekly has reached out to Glanville’s rep for comment.

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    While it is unclear what “stress” Glanville is referring to, her post also claimed she is “being used as a fallguy.” Glanville also said she has “receipts 4days” regarding the unspecified matter and said she was also “to [sic] swollen 4cameo or OF [Only Fans].”

    The former Real Housewife joined Cameo in 2019, which coincided with the beginning of her second stint on RHOBH, and joined OnlyFans in July 2023. She revealed on her podcast in February that OnlyFans “saved” her “life” after the reality star failed to earn an income for six months.

    Glanville’s legal announcement comes after a tumultuous period for the reality star who was accused of sexually harassing Caroline Manzo during the January 2023 filming of The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip season 4 in Morocco.

    Manzo, 62, filed a lawsuit against Bravo and its production companies in January 2024 over an alleged “traumatic” incident, according to documents obtained by Us Weekly at the time. The Real Housewives of New Jersey alum alleged that a “clearly intoxicated” Glanville kissed her without consent.

    RHONJ's Jackie Announces Memoir About Recovering From Her Eating Disorder

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    Mention it all — in a book! Plenty of Real Housewives have started their own beauty brands and clothing lines, but there’s no more common pastime in the franchise than writing a book. More than 40 Housewives past and present have become authors over the years, writing everything from self-help guides to children’s books and […]

    Although Glanville was not listed as a defendant in Manzo’s lawsuit, Glanville’s legal team responded in a statement to Us, which read: “Sadly, Brandi had to wake up to yet another lawsuit that includes defamatory, false accusations about her. While filming, Brandi followed what the producers asked of her, and there was no sexual assault. She is innocent of these absurd accusations that have weighed on her mental and physical health for far too long without a word of support from Peacock, Shed or Bravo.”

    In April, the Real Housewives spinoff’s executive producer Lisa Shannon also responded to Manzo’s lawsuit. In court documents obtained by Entertainment Tonight, Shannon alleged that Manzo “told us that she did not feel sexually violated, she felt ‘disrespected’ by Glanville.”

    While it’s unclear if the Morocco trip will ever air, Glanville told Us she is hopeful viewers will one day watch what happened for themselves.

    Revisit Brandi Glanville’s Feud With Eddie Cibrian and LeAnn Rimes

    Related: Revisit Brandi Glanville’s Feud With Eddie Cibrian and LeAnn Rimes

    Divorce drama! Brandi Glanville feuded with ex-husband Eddie Cibrian and his current wife, LeAnn Rimes, for nearly a decade after his headline-making cheating scandal. The reality star’s issues with Rimes began when the singer was rumored to be having an affair with Cibrian in 2008 after they costarred in the film Northern Lights together. Glanville […]

    “I’ve been asking for it to air this whole entire time,” she told Us on April 25. “We were having such a good show that there was no need for this to be a part of the storyline. Just girls at a party having fun, everyone having fun, no one uncomfortable.”

    Glanville also shared that LeAnn Rimes, who is married to Glanville’s ex-husband, Eddie Cibrian, has encouraged Glanville to take better care of herself.  “[LeAnn] said, ‘You need a breath coach,” Glanville said. “She told me a long time ago, but it just kind of resonated with me.”

    Glanville, who shares two sons, Mason, 21, and Jake, 17, with Cibrian, 51, once blamed Rimes, 41, for her former husband’s infidelity, which led to a decade-long feud between Glanville, Cibrian and Rimes. The feud ended in 2018 when Glanville shared via X that the three parties “sat and talked for hours [and] hashed everything out.”

    Kristie Lau-Adams

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  • The Best Substack Alternatives

    The Best Substack Alternatives

    If your plan is to run a newsletter as a hobby, Substack is perfect—it’s free, easy to set up, and makes sending out emails and building a subscriber base fairly straightforward. The problem comes if you want to make a living publishing your newsletter, at which point Substack can quickly become expensive. That’s because, instead of charging a monthly fee, Substack takes a 10 percent cut of your newsletter’s revenue.

    Let’s set aside, for now, how Substack’s reputation might reflect poorly on your publication’s brand. The economics of using Substack are simply hard to justify as your newsletter grows. Say you manage to get 500 people to pay $10 a month for your newsletter—that’s a real accomplishment. It also means your newsletter is pulling in $5,000 a month, of which Substack will take $500. Annually you’ll be paying Substack $6,000, and it only gets more expensive as your success builds.

    You might think this is fair, you might not. Either way, sticking with Substack when other options may be more cost-effective is leaving money on the table. With that in mind, here are some more affordable alternatives that are worth checking out. I break down what these newsletter platforms cost, and I offer a few links to publishers who migrated to these services from Substack and discussed their experiences.

    Ghost

    Courtesy of Ghost

    Ghost is open source and run by a nonprofit. You could, in theory, install Ghost on your own server, though most people opt to pay Ghost instead, including several former Substack publishers. Ghost offers an official guide for migrating and even a free concierge service that will handle the migration for you.

    How does the pricing stack up? Here’s a breakdown:

    1. The Starter plan begins at $9 a month for up to 500 subscribers, which works out to $108 annually. That’s a discount over Substack if you’re pulling in more than $1,080 a year.
    2. The Creator plan starts at $25 a month for up to 1,000 subscribers, which works out to $300 a year, which is a discount over Substack if you’re pulling in more than $3,000 a year. This plan also offers custom themes, integrations with other software, and two user logins.
    3. Plans scale up from there. At 10,000 subscribers, for example, the Creator plan costs $99 a month, which works out to $1,188 annually, which is a discount over Substack if you’re pulling in more than $11,880 a year.
    4. For 205,000 subscribers, the Creator plan costs $1,065 a month, which works out to $12,780 annually. You would have to be pulling in $127,800 a year before that works out as a discount over Substack.

    Ghost’s prices scale regardless of whether a subscriber is paying you or getting the free edition, which means Ghost Pro probably isn’t the best deal for truly massive audiences. Because Ghost is open source, however, you can migrate the entire newsletter to your own server after it’s established.

    Justin Pot

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  • ‘Gilmore Girls’ Cast Reunions Through the Years: Photos

    ‘Gilmore Girls’ Cast Reunions Through the Years: Photos

    Miranda Siwak

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  • The Supreme Court casts doubt on Florida and Texas laws to regulate social media platforms

    The Supreme Court casts doubt on Florida and Texas laws to regulate social media platforms

    WASHINGTON — WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Monday kept on hold efforts by Texas and Florida to limit how Facebook, TikTok, X, YouTube and other social media platforms regulate content posted by their users in a ruling that strongly defended the platforms’ free speech rights.

    Writing for the court, Justice Elena Kagan said the platforms, like newspapers, deserve protection from governments’ intrusion in determining what to include or exclude from their space. “The principle does not change because the curated compilation has gone from the physical to the virtual world,” Kagan wrote in an opinion signed by five justices. All nine justices agreed on the overall outcome.

    The justices returned the cases to lower courts for further review in broad challenges from trade associations for the companies.

    While the details vary, both laws aimed to address long-standing conservative complaints that the social media companies were liberal-leaning and censored users based on their viewpoints, especially on the political right. The cases are among several this term in which the justices are wrestling with standards for free speech in the digital age.

    The Florida and Texas laws were signed by Republican governors in the months following decisions by Facebook and Twitter, now X, to cut then-President Donald Trump off over his posts related to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by his supporters.

    Trade associations representing the companies sued in federal court, claiming that the laws violated the platforms’ speech rights. One federal appeals court struck down Florida’s statute, while another upheld the Texas law. But both were on hold pending the outcome at the Supreme Court.

    While the cases are complicated, said First Amendment expert and Notre Dame Law School professor Richard W. Garnett, the justices were clear on two things:

    “First, the First Amendment protects what we choose to say, but also what we choose not to say, support, or endorse. That is, the freedom of speech includes editorial judgment. This is true whether the speaker is a lone individual or a large media company,” he said. “Second, the government is not permitted to regulate speakers simply to produce what the government thinks would be a better, or more diverse, marketplace of ideas. What’s on offer in that marketplace is, in the end, up to us.”

    In a statement when he signed the Florida measure into law, Gov. Ron DeSantis said it would be “protection against the Silicon Valley elites.”

    When Gov. Greg Abbott signed the Texas law, he said it was needed to protect free speech in what he termed the new public square. Social media platforms “are a place for healthy public debate where information should be able to flow freely — but there is a dangerous movement by social media companies to silence conservative viewpoints and ideas,” Abbott said. “That is wrong, and we will not allow it in Texas.”

    But much has changed since then. Elon Musk purchased Twitter and, besides changing its name, eliminated teams focused on content moderation, welcomed back many users previously banned for hate speech and used the site to spread conspiracy theories.

    President Joe Biden’s administration sided with the challengers, though it cautioned the court to seek a narrow ruling that maintained governments’ ability to impose regulations to ensure competition, preserve data privacy and protect consumer interests. Lawyers for Trump filed a brief in the Florida case that had urged the Supreme Court to uphold the state law.

    Free speech advocates hailed the ruling as a victory.

    “The court’s recognition that the government cannot control social media in an effort to impose its own vision of what online speech should look like is crucial to protecting all of our right to speak our minds and access information on the internet,” said Vera Eidelman, staff attorney with the ACLU’s Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. “The court’s recognition that the government cannot control social media in an effort to impose its own vision of what online speech should look like is crucial to protecting all of our right to speak our minds and access information on the internet.”

    Nora Benavidez, senior counsel at the nonprofit media advocacy group Free Press said that while the decision “rests on procedural grounds, Justice Kagan’s comprehensive opinion for the Court explains in very clear terms why the Florida and Texas laws will have a tough time ever passing First Amendment muster. That’s a very good thing.”

    But it’s a “bumpy win,” noted Gus Hurwitz, academic director of the Center for Technology, Innovation & Competition at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. He said the justices were “clearly frustrated” that the case came to them as a facial challenge — where the plaintiff argues that the law is unconstitutional — vacating both cases and sending them back to be “more fully developed.”

    “Five of the justices sign on to the direct statement that ‘Texas does not like the way those platforms are selecting and moderating content, and wants them to create a different expressive product, communicating different values and priorities. But under the First Amendment, that is a preference Texas may not impose,” Hurwitz said. “It is hard to see how this doesn’t dictate the ultimate resolution of the case, and clearly foreshadows a rocky road ahead for these statutes if Texas and Florida continue to press forward with them.”

    The cases are among several the justices have grappled with over the past year involving social media platforms, including one decided last week in which the court threw out a lawsuit from Louisiana, Missouri and other parties accusing federal officials of pressuring social media companies to silence conservative points of view.

    During arguments in February, the justices seemed inclined to prevent the laws from taking effect. Several justices suggested then that they viewed the platforms as akin to newspapers that have broad free-speech protections, rather than like telephone companies, known as common carriers, that are susceptible to broader regulation.

    But two justices, Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, appeared more ready to embrace the states’ arguments. Thomas raised the idea that the companies are seeking constitutional protection for “censoring other speech.” Alito also equated the platforms’ content moderation to censorship.

    The justices also worried about too broad a ruling that might affect businesses that are not the primary targets of the laws, including e-commerce sites like Uber and Etsy and email and messaging services.

    ___

    AP Technology Writer Barbara Ortutay contributed to this story.

    Follow the AP’s coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court.

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  • The Supreme Court nears the end of another momentous term. A decision on Trump’s immunity looms

    The Supreme Court nears the end of another momentous term. A decision on Trump’s immunity looms

    WASHINGTON — In the last 10 days of June, on a frenetic pace of its own making, the Supreme Court touched a wide swath of American society in a torrent of decisions on abortion, guns, the environment, health, the opioid crisis, securities fraud and homelessness.

    And, with the court meeting for the final time this term on Monday, an unusual push into July, the most anticipated decision of the term awaits: whether former President Donald Trump is immune from prosecution for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol.

    The court also will decide whether state laws limiting how social media platforms regulate content posted by their users violate the Constitution.

    The immunity case was the last case argued, on April 25. So in one sense, it’s not unusual that it would be among the last decided. But the timing of the court’s resolution of Trump’s immunity may be as important as the eventual ruling.

    By holding on to the case until early July, the justices have reduced, if not eliminated, the chance that Trump will have to stand trial before the November election, no matter what the court decides.

    In other epic court cases involving the presidency, including the Watergate tapes case, the justices moved much faster. Fifty years ago, the court handed down its decision forcing President Richard Nixon to turn over recordings of Oval Office conversations just 16 days after hearing arguments.

    Even this term, the court reached a decision in less than a month to rule unanimously for Trump that states cannot invoke the post-Civil War insurrection clause to kick him off the ballot over his refusal to accept Democratic President Joe Biden’s victory four years ago.

    Delaying the start of trials has been a primary goal of Trump’s lawyers in all four criminal cases against him. Only one trial has been held and it resulted in his conviction for falsifying business records to cover up a hush money payment made during the 2016 presidential election to a porn actor who says she had sex with him, which he denies. Trump is the first former president to be convicted of a felony.

    The Supreme Court’s handling of the immunity case, which began when the justices rejected a first plea to take it up in December, have led critics to say the court has so far granted Trump “immunity by delay.” A federal appeals unanimously rejected Trump’s immunity claim in February, and the justices agreed a few weeks later to hear Trump’s appeal.

    Then, too, the court considering the case has three justices nominated by the Republican — Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. Two other justices, Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas, have rejected calls to step aside from the case over questions about their impartiality.

    On Friday, the justices voted 6-3 to narrow a federal obstruction charge that has been used against hundreds of Jan. 6 defendants, as well as Trump. In that case, Alito and Thomas again took part and five conservatives were in the majority. Chief Justice John Roberts, Kavanaugh and Gorsuch were the other three.

    Conservative justices don’t usually side with criminal defendants, said University of Pennsylvania law professor Kim Roosevelt.

    “But it’s a Trump case, and so the lineup is less of a surprise and more of a disappointment,” Roosevelt said. “Increasingly, it looks as though a majority of this Court is willing to bend the normal rules to favor Trump.”

    The other major unresolved issue — state laws to regulate social media platforms — also could have an ideological tinge.

    The court is weighing efforts in Texas and Florida that would limit how Facebook, TikTok, X, YouTube and other social media platforms regulate content posted by their users.

    While the details vary, both laws aimed to address conservative complaints that the social media companies were liberal-leaning and censored users based on their viewpoints, especially on the political right.

    The Florida and Texas laws were signed by Republican governors in the months following decisions by Facebook and Twitter, now X, to cut Trump off over his posts related to the Capitol riot by his supporters.

    On Wednesday, the justices dismissed a lawsuit filed by other Republican-led states against the Biden administration over claims that federal officials improperly coerced the platforms to take down controversial posts related to COVID-19 and election security.

    ___

    Follow the AP’s coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court

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  • Say Hello to Creator-Built AI Chatbots on Instagram

    Say Hello to Creator-Built AI Chatbots on Instagram

    In case you thought Instagram influencers couldn’t get anymore online, they’re soon going to have the ability to make AI versions of themselves that you can interact with at all times.

    The announcement came from the mouth of a chain-clad Mark Zuckerberg, who shared his thoughts about AI and who gets to control the technology in an interview with YouTuber Kane Sutter, aka Kallaway. (He also said Meta has holographic AR glasses coming soon, but let’s save that for another time.)

    The AI chatbots will be made in collaboration with a handful of Instagram creators that Meta has partnered with. Zuckerberg says the feature is in the test phase and will roll out to various Instagram users slowly. It is not yet clear exactly what form these AI chatbots will take, but it seems the creators that Meta is partnering with will build their characters in the company’s AI studio, so they will likely operate a lot like the AI Characters that Meta debuted last year.

    If this all goes according to plan, you’ll soon be able to go into your Instagram DMs and chat with AI simulacra of your favorite influencers. File this one away in the “What could possibly go wrong?” folder.

    Here’s some other consumer tech news from around the web.

    2 H2 2 Furious

    Extreme E, the off-road racing series that uses only electric vehicles for its high-speed shenanigans, is moving into another gear of power systems for its vehicles.

    The new series, called Extreme H, will be a race for hydrogen-powered cars only. Purpose-built for this series is the new Pioneer 25, a speedy racing car powered entirely by hydrogen. The Pioneer 25 can get up to 200 kph (124 mph), which is very zippy for an off-roading vehicle.

    The Pioneer is meant to usher in a new era of eco-friendlier motorsports, though there is some debate about how clean hydrogen power actually is.

    Hyundai Funday

    On the more affordable vehicle front, the Korean car company Hyundai has a new EV. The Hyundai Inster is a compact urban hatchback that can seat four people. It has a boxy look to it—similar to a Scion or a Mini Cooper—and boasts a projected range of up to 355 kilometers (220 miles). The Inster’s battery has a charge time of 4.5 hours for a full charge. It definitely isn’t a race car, as it tops out at 86 mph.

    The official price hasn’t been revealed yet, but according to AutoNews, the sticker should wind up being somewhere around $26,000. Or the foreign-currency equivalent of that, anyway; the Inster is not yet being released in the US. The car will land first in Korea, followed by Europe, the Middle East, and other countries in Asia.

    FCC U

    The US Federal Communications Commission is trying to make it easier for phone users to switch networks. A proposal put forth this week by FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel calls for mobile phone providers to unlock customers’ phones if they want to use the device on a different network. Lots of providers lock customers into their networks by pairing their devices with a subscription plan that keeps them on the network run by a particular carrier. If this guidance makes its way into reality, companies would be forced to unlock devices 60 days after being activated, which means you’d be free to switch carriers and take your phone with you.

    There’s no official ruling being put in place yet. This proposal is coming in the form of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, which the FCC drafts to seek public comment on potential rulings in the future. The proposal itself isn’t public yet, but it might be after the FCC votes to move it along during its July 18 open meeting session.

    One Vape to Juul Them All

    Juul once held near-total dominance over the nicotine vaping industry. But when US regulators cracked down on the purveyors of the addictive nicotine dispensers (particularly ones that were the most popular among underage customers), Juul’s reign came to an end. Of course, that doesn’t mean demand for vaping is anywhere close to gone. Plenty of illegal operations have moved to fill that void, and it’s relatively easy to find vape pods for sale in the US that come from overseas distributors.

    This latest episode of WIRED’s Gadget Lab podcast features Leon Neyfakh and former WIRED associate editor Arielle Pardes, the hosts of the new podcast Backfired: The Vaping Wars. The show is all about what happened to the nicotine vaping industry, whether vapes are really better than cigarettes (yes, but you probably still shouldn’t puff on them), and what will happen in the future of vaping.

    Boone Ashworth

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  • The Real Relationship Hustlers of TikTok

    The Real Relationship Hustlers of TikTok

    Anna Kai believes in self-gaslighting. On TikTok, as @itsmaybeboth, she markets beauty products for Garnier, Nivea, and Nexxus Hair Care while dispensing relationship advice to her 1.3 million followers. “If you can gaslight yourself into believing the man that doesn’t love you actually loves you, then why can’t you gaslight yourself into believing you will find a man who actually does?”

    For Blaine Anderson, finding the right partner is all about savvy marketing, which “great guys often SUCK at,” a note on her website exclaims. She has hacks for every possible scenario that could, and will, arise during the dating process: how to text like a “high-value man,” what first-date mistakes to avoid, how to make women obsessed, and the best ways to attract them without talking. In case you were curious, it starts with good posture and grooming. “If you haven’t been shopping since the Obama administration, it’s time,” she says in a video uploaded to TikTok in May.

    “As a relationship therapist, I’ve literally spent my career studying the art of attraction and human psychology, so I know that these things work,” Kimberly Moffit, a Toronto-based psychotherapist said in a TikTok video from 2022. Maybe your crush is shy and you want to know if he is “micro-flirting” with you? One tell-tale sign: Dirty jokes. “An aggressive guy is just gonna hit on you,” she said, “but a shy guy is really gonna test the waters first.”

    If you haven’t heard, it’s boom times for dating influencers. According to a new survey of single adults ages 18 to 62 conducted by the app Flirtini, one in four people rely on TikTok as their primary source of relationship information, and almost 50 percent of people surveyed turn to social media for dating advice.

    This phenomenon has created an ecosystem of thoughtful, overzealous, trend-chasing dating influencers who think they know what’s best for you. The marketplace is now overrun with gurus offering up romantic hacks and how-tos to anyone who will listen. Everyone from credentialed therapists and life coaches to that annoying friend who just discovered bell hooks’ All About Love and wants to share everything they learned, brands themself a dating influencer these days. The effect has been seismic. On TikTok, the hashtags #datingadvice and #relationshipadvice have upwards of 16 billion views.

    And it’s not all bad advice per se. Kai’s self-gaslighting tip is actually quite clever. (Kai and the other influencers mentioned in this story did not respond to messages seeking comment.) There’s just one problem: relationship misinformation is spreading fast.

    A growing number of young adults now get their news from TikTok, according to a 2023 Pew Research Center study, “so it makes sense that they’d turn to the app for relationship advice too,” says Liesel Sharabi, a professor at Arizona State University who specializes in the effect technology has on interpersonal relationships. The increased reliance on the platform as a go-to source for romantic guidance has led many users to form parasocial relationships with advice-giving influencers. Unlike face-to-face, IRL relationships, these tend to be one-way. But emotionally, they feel like the real thing.

    “Someone might feel like they’re getting dating advice from a trusted friend because they’ve developed such a strong sense of familiarity and connection with that person,” Sharabi says. “The problem is that when it comes to dating, there are plenty of people who call themselves experts on TikTok without any sort of training or qualifications, which can make it difficult to separate fact from opinion.”

    Not all advice is created equal. As dating influencers gain more traction across social media, the proliferation of relationship misinformation becomes harder to contain. This, Sharabi describes, is “false or misleading information about relationships that can’t be evaluated using scientific data and which may perpetuate harmful stereotypes.”

    Jason Parham

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