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Uber wants to make riding with a service animal easier

Uber introduced a new feature designed to make it easier for people with disabilities to ride with service animals.

For years, Uber’s policies toward service animals have been in accordance with state and federal law: they are allowed to ride at all times at no extra cost. But now the company is allowing customers to self-identify as owners of service animals in order to give drivers more visibility when to expect a furry companion. The new feature also includes a warning to drivers to avoid cancelling rides or discriminating against customers with service animals.

The new feature was “developed over the past two years in collaboration with leading advocacy organizations and service animal handlers, that will help make the Uber experience even better,” Chris Yoon, product managver for equity at Uber, said in a blog post

Image of Uber app for service animals

Owners of a service animals can now go into their settings on the Uber app and fill out an eligibility form and select the option that will identify them as someone who will ride with a service animal. They can also choose whether to notify drivers of that fact – though that’s not required.

If a rider opts into notifying drivers and a driver requests to cancel their trip at pickup, the driver will receive a notification reminding them it’s against the law to refuse to transport someone because of their service animal and confirming that they wish to proceed with the cancellation. “Any driver who violates this policy may permanently lose access to the platform,” Yoon says.

Uber already offers pet-friendly rides in some cities, so the hope is that customers won’t try to abuse the feature by registering non-service animals. Still, the Americans with Disabilities Act specifically prohibits requesting documentation or special identification for service animals.

As Uber spokesperson Sarah Casanovas notes, “federal ADA guidance suggests asking the following questions when it is not obvious what service an animal provides: 1) is your animal required because of a disability, and 2) what work or task has your animal been trained to perform.” Uber also has policies related to “emotional support animals,” to which drivers have discretion to deny rides if they choose.

But while Uber Pet drivers can also charge riders a cleaning fee if their furry companions shed or, um, deposit any surprises in the backseat, drivers cannot do the same for riders with service animals. In fact, if riders with service animals are improperly charged a cleaning fee by a driver, they can request a refund from the company.

AI Company Asks Job Applicants Not to Use AI in Job Applications

AI Company Asks Job Applicants Not to Use AI in Job Applications

Anthropic, the company that made one of the most popular AI writing assistants in the world, requires job applicants to agree that they won’t use an AI assistant to help write their application. 

“While we encourage people to use AI systems during their role to help them work faster and more effectively, please do not use AI assistants during the application process,” the applications say. “We want to understand your personal interest in Anthropic without mediation through an AI system, and we also want to evaluate your non-AI-assisted communication skills. Please indicate 'Yes' if you have read and agree.”  

Anthropic released Claude, an AI assistant that’s especially good at conversational writing, in 2023.  

This question is in almost all of Anthropic’s nearly 150 currently-listed roles, but is not in some technical roles, like mobile product designer. It’s included in everything from software engineer roles to finance, communications, and sales jobs at the company. 

The field was spotted by Simon Willison, an open source developer. The question shows Anthropic trying to get around a problem it’s helping create: people relying so heavily on AI assistants that they struggle to form opinions of their own. It’s also a moot question, as Anthropic and its competitors have created AI models so indistinguishable from human speech as to be nearly undetectable.

These AI models are also replacing the kinds of roles Anthropic is hiring for, leaving people in communications and coding fields searching for employment. 

Last month, after Chinese AI company DeepSeek released a model so good it threw U.S. AI companies into a tailspin, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said that the race to make more, better, and faster AI models is “existentially important.” 

And last year, Anthropic’s data scraper, which it uses to feed its AI assistant models the kind of human-produced work the company requires applicants to demonstrate, systematically ignored instructions to not scrape websites and hit some sites millions of times a day

Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Deals: Google Pixel Watch 3 up to $130 off, Sonos Ace ANC headphones $100 off, Galaxy SmartTag 2, and more

Your daily roundup of the best ways to save some cash on Android gear and accessories for it all is now ready to go. First up, we have solid $50 price drops across the Google Pixel Watch 3 lineup alongside some open-box offers at up to $130 off. We also spotted a straight up $100 discount on the Sonos Ace ANC headphones with deals starting as low as $262 alongside even lower prices on the Galaxy SmartTag 2 item tracker and Amazon’s eero mesh routers with a FREE $100 Amazon gift card thrown in. All of that joins a host of charging gear and more down below. 

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Deals: AirPods 4 $100 all-time low, AirPods Pro 2 $170, MacBook Pro $210 off, Apple Studio Displays, more

After a steady string of iPad mini, M2 iPad Air, and M4 iPad Pro deals to kick the year off, we are now seeing our first chances to save big on the latest AirPods releases. Amazon has now dropped the AirPods 4 down to a new $100 all-time low there while the lauded AirPods Pro 2 have now dropped from the $249 regular list price to $170 shipped. Those offers join a $210 price drop on a couple different M4/Pro MacBook Pro configs as well as up to $299 off the gorgeous Apple 5K Studio Display lineup. You’ll also find a $100 price drop on Sonos Ace headphones, Beats deals, Anker Apple Watch power banks, and more.

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The Apple Watch SE is $80 off right now

The Apple Watch SE is on sale via Amazon for $169. This is a discount of $80, which represents a savings of over 30 percent. If you’ve been on the fence regarding Apple’s entry-level smartwatch, this could be the perfect excuse to, uh, get off that fence. Or climb it. I’m not exactly sure how that idiom works.

The Watch SE easily found a place on our list of the best Apple smartwatches. Despite being the company’s bare-bones model, it still offers plenty of bang for the buck. It can do crash detection, heart rate monitoring, emergency calling and more. There’s a reason why we called it “the best smartwatch for the money” in our official review.

It uses the same chip as the original Ultra and the Series 8, so the performance is on point. It’s covered in durable Ion-X glass and offers 50 meters of water resistance. The screen isn’t quite as bright as with the pricier models, but we still found the display to be “crisp and easy to read.” The watch is also lightweight and comfortable.

There are some trade-offs here when compared to Apple’s more extravagant smartwatches. The SE doesn’t support the new Double Tap feature for Siri requests and it doesn’t include a blood oxygen monitor or a temperature sensor. The final caveat? This watch came out in 2022, so a refresh is likely on the horizon.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/the-apple-watch-se-is-80-off-right-now-162845944.html?src=rss

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© Cherlynn Low / Engadget

A watch on a wrist.

Ontario cancels $100 million Starlink contract in protest at U.S. tariffs

Doug Ford, the premier of Ontario, one of Canada’s most populous provinces, announced on X that the province’s government would be “ripping up” its $100 million contract with Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite internet service. The news comes soon after President Donald Trump announced this weekend a 25% tariff on nearly all Canadian imported goods, causing […]

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Look at this keyboard

Hey, real quick: look at this keyboard. There’s something cool about it.

It’s a mechanical keyboard. It’s a laser keyboard. It’s a magnetic induction keyboard.

It has the new switches. It has the old switches. It’s very thin. It’s got a weird layout. It has a trackpoint. Or a screen. It has cool keycaps. It has cool screens on its keycaps. It’s…furry? It folds in half. It’s retractable.

Maybe it’s not a keyboard at all, except spiritually. Sometimes it’s a mouse, or a trackpad, or a trackball.

Sometimes The Verge reviews keyboards. Other times, we just want to show them to you.

Look at this keyboard.

Did OpenAI steal Deepseek’s code? O3-Mini reasoning in Chinese sparks AI theft controversy

OpenAI’s latest model, O3-mini, has raised eyebrows after users reportedly discovered it was generating responses in Chinese, even when prompted in English. This unexpected behavior, highlighted by X (formerly Twitter) user Vikhyat Rana, has fueled speculation that OpenAI may have […]

The post Did OpenAI steal Deepseek’s code? O3-Mini reasoning in Chinese sparks AI theft controversy first appeared on Tech Startups.

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