Normal view
- Latest Tech News from the Financial Post
- SEC accuses Musk of delaying disclosures on Twitter share position
- Latest Tech News from the Financial Post
- Intel to spin off venture capital arm as chipmaker tries to cut costs
Intel to spin off venture capital arm as chipmaker tries to cut costs
- Latest Tech News Gizmodo
- Say Bye to Just BMI: Experts Call for a Major Shift in How We Measure Obesity
Say Bye to Just BMI: Experts Call for a Major Shift in How We Measure Obesity
An international and widely supported group of experts is pushing doctors to avoid the exclusive use of BMI to decide whether someone has obesity, alongside other major changes.
- Latest Tech News from Ars Technica
- There was a straight shot from Earth to the Moon and Mars last night
There was a straight shot from Earth to the Moon and Mars last night
I almost missed it. Amid a bout of prime-time doomscrolling, a social media post reminded me there was something worth seeing in the sky. Mars disappeared behind the full Moon for a little more than an hour Monday night, an event visible across most of North America and parts of Africa.
So I grabbed my camera, ran outside, and looked up just as Mars was supposed to emerge from the Moon's curved horizon. Seen with the naked eye, the Moon's brightness far outshined Mars, casting soft shadows on a cold winter evening in East Texas.
Viewing the Moon through binoculars, the red planet appeared just above several large partially shadowed craters at the edge of the Moon's curved limb. I quickly snapped dozens of photos with my handheld Canon 80D fitted with a 600 mm lens. Within a few minutes, Mars rose farther above the Moon's horizon. Thanks to the parallax effect, the Moon's relative motion in its orbit around Earth appears significantly faster than the movement of Mars in its orbit around the Sun.
- Latest Tech News from CNBC
- SEC sues Elon Musk, alleging failure to properly disclose Twitter ownership
SEC sues Elon Musk, alleging failure to properly disclose Twitter ownership
Elon Musk tweets so much, people bet over $1M weekly to guess how many posts
Will Elon Musk post more than 400 tweets this week? With Polymarket, this to be one of the silliest ways people spend their money on the internet.
Β© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.
RedNote: what itβs like using the Chinese app TikTokers are flocking to
Instead of wallowing in misery about potentially losing access to their favorite short-form video app, many TikTokers are flocking to RedNote, a Chinese social media platform also called Xiaohongshu. Iβve decided to spend some time on the platform myself, and it looks like so-called βTikTok refugeesβ are excited about interacting with a community mainly comprised of Chinese-speaking users β and vice versa.
Launched in 2013 as a shopping platform, RedNote has grown into one of Chinaβs most popular social apps featuring photos, videos, and written content. Now itβs seeing another spike in users from another part of the globe, with more than 700,000 users joining RedNote in just two days, according to a report from Reuters. The number is still small, at just a fraction of the 150 million Americans TikTok reported were already using the app in early 2023.
As noted by CNN, the name Xiaohongshu translates to βlittle red book,β which βcould be seen as a tongue-in-cheek reference to a red-covered book of quotations from the founding father of Communist China, Mao Zedong.β Many US users seem to be using the Chinese platform out of spite of the US governmentβs plan to ban TikTok β but in a deeply unserious way.
Amongst all the Chinese-language posts depicting sleek fit checks, mouthwatering food videos, and memes I donβt quite understand yet, is content from TikTok expats. Many joke about their sudden appearance on the app, with one user wondering what Chinese users might think after seeing an influx of US-based users and another showing their gradual transformation from a gun-wielding, Buc-eeβs merch-wearing American into a Chinese-speaking RedNote user. Others are simply saying βhelloβ to their new community β some of whom have written captions in what Iβd assume is machine-translated Chinese.
Even more interesting though, are all the RedNote users welcoming TikTokers with open arms. Several RedNote users are eager to introduce the app while also sharing some tips and tricks on how to navigate it. One creator says, βnowβs the perfect time to dive into Chinese cultureβ through RedNote with the Chinese New Year coming up, adding that users on the platform are βobsessed with Luigi, Trump, and Squid Game.β Some even offer to teach their new community members Chinese.
But many TikTokers are equally curious about RedNote users in China, too. βChinese friends, post pictures of your meal or snacks for today! Curious to see what you typically eat,β one user writes. Another asks, βIβm American. Do yβall like us? We know yβall not the enemy. Can we all be friends?β
The trend is actually kind of wholesome, and Iβm here for it, but Iβm not confident it will actually last. If these apps grow in popularity, they could potentially face a ban, too. But the migration to RedNote is likely just a trend β and trends only last as long as it takes for another to replace it.
Honey: all the news about PayPalβs alleged scam coupon app
Some YouTubers say Honeyβs practices are stealing money from them.
PayPalβs Honey browser extension has been lauded for years as an easy way to find coupons online. But some are calling it a βscamβ after a deep dive from YouTuber MegaLag, who accused Honey of βstealing money from influencers.β
The video shines a light on Honeyβs use of last-click attribution, an approach to online shopping referrals that gives credit for a sale to the owner of the last affiliate cookie in line before checkout. As MegaLagβs video tells it, Honey takes that credit by swapping its tracking cookie in for othersβ when you interact with it.
The company has issued statements saying that it follows βindustry rules and practicesβ like last-click attribution. But creators who may have missed out on money because of it arenβt happy. Some YouTube channels Legal Eagle and GamersNexus are now suing.
Below, youβll find all our coverage of the controversy.
- Latest Tech News from Ars Technica
- FBI forces Chinese malware to delete itself from thousands of US computers
FBI forces Chinese malware to delete itself from thousands of US computers
The FBI said today that it removed Chinese malware from 4,258 US-based computers and networks by sending commands that forced the malware to use its "self-delete" function.
The People's Republic of China (PRC) government paid the Mustang Panda group to develop a version of PlugX malware used to infect, control, and steal information from victim computers, the FBI said. "Since at least 2014, Mustang Panda hackers then infiltrated thousands of computer systems in campaigns targeting US victims, as well as European and Asian governments and businesses, and Chinese dissident groups," the FBI said.
The malware has been known for years but many Windows computers were still infected while their owners were unaware. The FBI learned of a method to remotely remove the malware from a French law enforcement agency, which had gained access to a command-and-control server that could send commands to infected computers.
- Tech News - Latest Technology and Gadget News | Sky News
- Apple AI feature 'must be revoked' over notifications misleading users
Apple AI feature 'must be revoked' over notifications misleading users
TikTok is βplanning for various scenariosβ ahead of possible US ban
TikTokβs executives are βplanning for various scenariosβ ahead of the Supreme Court likely upholding a US ban of the app.
In an internal memo obtained by The Verge, employees were told that the company is βcontinuing to plan the way forwardβ ahead of the courtβs imminent decision, which is expected as soon as Wednesday, January 15th.
βWe know itβs unsettling to not know exactly what happens next,β reads the memo, which notes that TikTokβs offices will stay open regardless of what happens to the app over the next several days. βThe bill is not written in a way that impacts the entities through which you are employed, only the US user experience [of TikTok],β according to the memo.
Inside TikTok, the mood is grim. One source describes the situation as βdefinitely stressful,β while another notes that even the employees who survived the first US ban attempt now βseem rattled.β
The Chinese government, which has the final say on any sale of TikTok, is reportedly considering allowing Elon Musk to buy the app. Frank McCourt, a billionaire real estate and former owned of the LA Dodgers, has also floated a proposal to buy the appβs US operations. βShark Tankβ star Kevin OβLeary...
- The Verge News
- Inside Metaβs race to beat OpenAI: βWe need to learn how to build frontier and win this raceβ
Inside Metaβs race to beat OpenAI: βWe need to learn how to build frontier and win this raceβ
A major copyright lawsuit against Meta has revealed a trove of internal communications about the companyβs plans to develop its open-source AI models, Llama, which include discussions about avoiding βmedia coverage suggesting we have used a dataset we know to be pirated.β
The messages, which were part of a series of exhibits unsealed by a California court, suggest Meta used copyrighted data when training its AI systems and worked to conceal it β as it raced to beat rivals like OpenAI and Mistral. Portions of the messages were first revealed last week.
In an October 2023 email to Meta AI researcher Hugo Touvron, Ahmad Al-Dahle, Metaβs vice president of generative AI, wrote that the companyβs goal βneeds to be GPT4,β referring to the large language model OpenAI announced in March of 2023. Meta had βto learn how to build frontier and win this race,β Al-Dahle added. Those plans apparently involved the book piracy site Library Genesis (LibGen) to train its AI systems.
An undated email from Meta director of product Sony Theakanath, sent to VP of AI research Joelle Pineau, weighed whether to use LibGen internally only, for benchmarks included in a blog post, or to create a model trained on the site. In the email, Theakanath writes that βGenAI has been approved to use LibGen for Llama3... with a number of agreed upon mitigationsβ after escalating it to βMZβ β presumably Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. As noted in the email, Theakanath believed βLibgen is essential to meet SOTA [state-of-the-art] numbers,β adding βit is known that OpenAI and Mistral are using the library for their models (through word of mouth).β Mistral and OpenAI havenβt stated whether or not they use LibGen. (The Verge reached out to both for more information).
The court documents stem from a class action lawsuit that author Richard Kadrey, comedian Sarah Silverman, and others filed against Meta, accusing it of using illegally obtained copyrighted content to train its AI models in violation of intellectual property laws. Meta, like other AI companies, has argued that using copyrighted material in training data should constitute legal fair use. The Verge reached out to Meta with a request for comment but didnβt immediately hear back.
Some of the βmitigationsβ for using LibGen included stipulations that Meta must βremove data clearly marked as pirated/stolen,β while avoiding externally citing βthe use of any training dataβ from the site. Theakanathβs email also said the company would need to βred teamβ the companyβs models βfor bioweapons and CBRNE [Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and Explosives]β risks.
The email also went over some of the βpolicy risksβ posed by the use of LibGen as well, including how regulators might respond to media coverage suggesting Metaβs use of pirated content. βThis may undermine our negotiating position with regulators on these issues,β the email said. An April 2023 conversation between Meta researcher Nikolay Bashlykov and AI team member David Esiobu also showed Bashlykov admitting heβs βnot sure we can use metaβs IPs to load through torrents [of] pirate content.β
Other internal documents show the measures Meta took to obscure the copyright information in LibGenβs training data. A document titled βobservations on LibGen-SciMagβ shows comments left by employees about how to improve the dataset. One suggestion is to βremove more copyright headers and document identifiers,β which includes any lines containing βISBN,β βCopyright,β βAll rights reserved,β or the copyright symbol. Other notes mention taking out more metadata βto avoid potential legal complications,β as well as considering whether to remove a paperβs list of authors βto reduce liability.β
Last June, The New York Times reported on the frantic race inside Meta after ChatGPTβs debut, revealing the company had hit a wall: it had used up almost every available English book, article, and poem it could find online. Desperate for more data, executives reportedly discussed buying Simon & Schuster outright and considered hiring contractors in Africa to summarize books without permission.
In the report, some executives justified their approach by pointing to OpenAIβs βmarket precedentβ of using copyrighted works, while others argued Googleβs 2015 court victory establishing its right to scan books could provide legal cover. βThe only thing holding us back from being as good as ChatGPT is literally just data volume,β one executive said in a meeting, per The New York Times.
Itβs been reported that frontier labs like OpenAI and Anthropic have hit a data wall, which means they donβt have sufficient new data to train their large language models. Many leaders have denied this, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said plainly: βThere is no wall.β OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever, who left the company last May to start a new frontier lab, has been more straightforward about the potential of a data wall. At a premier AI conference last month, Sutskever said: βWeβve achieved peak data and thereβll be no more. We have to deal with the data that we have. Thereβs only one internet.β
This data scarcity has led to a whole lot of weird, new ways to get unique data. Bloomberg reported that frontier labs like OpenAI and Google have been paying digital content creators between $1 and $4 per minute for their unused video footage through a third-party in order to train LLMs (both of those companies have competing AI video-generation products).
With companies like Meta and OpenAI hoping to grow their AI systems as fast as possible, things are bound to get a bit messy. Though a judge partially dismissed Kadrey and Silvermanβs class action lawsuit last year, the evidence outlined here could strengthen parts of their case as it moves forward in court.
YouTube Premium code takes $100 off Pixel 9, stacks with existing $150 discount
Some YouTube Premium subscribers are getting promo codes that discount the Pixel 9 series by $100. Notably, this can be combined with an existing Google Store sale.
moreβ¦AI Will Spew Gas Fumes for Years Before the Nuclear Revolution Takes Off
Nuclear reactors take a long time to build and Big Tech will use gas power to bridge the gap and meet its energy demands.
Sonos' chief product officer is also leaving the company
Sonos is continuing to clean house as the company recovers from the hits it took following a disastrous mobile app redesign last year. Just a day after CEO Patrick Spence departed the company, chief product officer Maxime Bouvat-Merlin is also leaving. He will act as an advisor to interim CEO Tom Conrad during the leadership transition before fully exiting Sonos.
Conrad informed Sonos employees about the latest leadership change in a company-wide email today. The CPO role is being made redundant, with Sonos' product team reporting directly to Conrad for the time being.
Sonos has been in a tailspin since releasing a mobile app update in May that contained many bugs and was missing key features. The company's financial results took a dive, and it laid off about 100 employees in August. Sonos has made several efforts to keep customers aware of its plans to recover from the app launch, and the decision to replace top leadership seems like the latest move to win back public trust in the business.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/audio/speakers/sonos-chief-product-officer-is-also-leaving-the-company-223256031.html?src=rssAfter CEO exit, Sonos gets rid of its chief product officer, too
A day after announcing that CEO Patrick Spence is departing the company, Sonos revealed that chief product officer Maxime Bouvat-Merlin is also leaving. Bouvat-Merlin had the role since 2023.
As first reported by Bloomberg, Sonos will not fill the chief product officer role. Instead, Tom Conrad, the interim CEO Sonos announced yesterday, will take on the role's responsibilities. In an email to staff cited by Bloomberg (you can read the letter in its entirety at The Verge), Conrad explained:
With my stepping in as CEO, the board, Max, and I have agreed that my background makes the chief product officer role redundant. Therefore, Maxβs role is being eliminated and the product organization will report directly to me. Iβve asked Max to advise me over the next period to ensure a smooth transition and I am grateful that heβs agreed to do that.
In May, Sonos released an update to its app that led to customers, many of them long-time users, revolting over broken features, like accessibility capabilities and the ability to set timers. Sonos expects that remedying the app and Sonos' reputation will cost it at least $20 million to $30 million.Β
- Latest Tech News from Ars Technica
- Maker of weight-loss drugs to ask Trump to pause price negotiations: Report
Maker of weight-loss drugs to ask Trump to pause price negotiations: Report
Eli Lilly and other drugmakers are reportedly planning to urge the Trump administration to pause Medicare drug-price negotiations that were put in place by the Biden administration's Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
"They need to fix [the IRA]," Eli Lilly CEO Dave Ricks told Bloomberg at the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco.
The results of the first round of IRA negotiations, announced in August, saw the list prices of 10 high-cost drugs get slashed by as much as 79 percent. Collectively, the negotiated prices are estimated to save seniors $1.5 billion in out-of-pocket costs in 2026, when the prices go into effect. The savings will likely be well received, given that KFF polling has found that over a quarter of Americans struggle to afford prescription medications, and 31 percent say they haven't taken medicines as prescribed due to costs.
- Latest Tech News from CNBC
- Intel to spin off venture capital arm as chipmaker continues to restructure
Intel to spin off venture capital arm as chipmaker continues to restructure
- TechCrunch News
- Biden adminβs final rule banning Chinese connected cars also bars robotaxi testing on U.S. roads
Biden adminβs final rule banning Chinese connected cars also bars robotaxi testing on U.S. roads
The U.S. Department of Commerce announced a final rule Tuesday that would ban the sale or import of connected vehicles from China and Russia due to national security concerns. The rule would also bar Chinese car companies, such as WeRide and Pony AI, from testing self-driving cars on U.S. roads.Β βChina is trying to dominate [β¦]
Β© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.