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14 Mar 13:38

Continued Conversation on Google Home works in UK English (and possibly more)

by Hagop Kavafian

Continued Conversation lets you reply to Assistant after it answers you, without having to repeat "OK Google" every time. For instance, after asking it for the weather, you can respond to your smart speaker with another command such as "How about tomorrow?" Until recently, the feature only supported US English, but the company has now made it available to all English users.

Indeed, people using UK English can now have back-and-forth chats with their Google Homes, should they chose to enable the feature.

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Continued Conversation on Google Home works in UK English (and possibly more) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

14 Mar 01:13

Google will release six Android Q Betas in coming months, public launch Q3 2019

by Abner Li

Google this afternoon launched the Android Q Beta for all Pixel phones. Renamed from Developer Previews, this and future releases are considered “betas.” In total, there will be six updates starting today until the public release in Q3 of 2019.

more…

The post Google will release six Android Q Betas in coming months, public launch Q3 2019 appeared first on 9to5Google.

14 Mar 01:13

Here’s everything new in Android Q Beta 1 [Gallery]

by Abner Li

Google announced the Android Q Beta this afternoon and it’s shaping up to be a big release even in its early form. There are already a number of functional and visual changes. We’re enrolling in the Beta Program and sideloading the OTAs right now to explore them all, but in the meantime, catch up on all the new features for apps and developers with our updating (reverse chronological) list below.

more…

The post Here’s everything new in Android Q Beta 1 [Gallery] appeared first on 9to5Google.

13 Mar 19:43

Dog rescue: A helicopter 1,000 feet above snow happens to spot a stranded pup and gives him a lift

by Carla Sinclair

During a winter-training outing in a helicopter 1,000 feet above a snowy region in Scotland, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency happened to spot a dog perched on the ledge of a mountain, stranded in the snow below. Turns out the dog had been missing for two days.

According to AP:

They couldn’t fly away and leave the dog in trouble, so winchman Mark Stevens on Wednesday was lowered to the ground, scooped up the cold and frightened animal, and both were raised back to the helicopter.

The dog, named Ben, was cuddled and warmed on board before being rushed to a veterinarian.

Ben "has recovered from exposure" and is back home with its owner.

Image: Maritime & Coastguard Agency

13 Mar 17:07

A delightful snail takes a magic carpet ride full of wonder and joy

by David Pescovitz

I can open your eyes
Take you wonder by wonder
Over sideways and under
On a magic carpet ride

Credits: Hiskm and Dahlek88 (r/Aquariums, thanks Dustin Hostetler!)

12 Mar 19:52

One company bought all the retail outlets for glasses, used that to force sales of all the eyewear companies and jacked up prices by as much as 1000%

by Cory Doctorow

If you wear glasses, you might have noticed that they've been getting steadily more expensive in recent years, no matter which brand you buy and no matter where you shop.

That's because a giant-but-obscure company called Luxottica bought out Sunglass Hut and Lenscrafters, then used their dominance over the retail side of glasses to force virtually every eyewear brand to sell to them (Luxxotica owns or licenses Armani, Brooks Brothers, Burberry, Chanel, Coach, DKNY, Dolce & Gabbana, Michael Kors, Oakley, Oliver Peoples, Persol, Polo Ralph Lauren, Ray-Ban, Tiffany, Valentino, Vogue and Versace); and used that to buy out all the other eyewear retailers of any note (Luxottica owns Pearle Vision, Sears Optical, Sunglass Hut and Target Optical) and then also bought out insurers like Eyemed Vision Care and Essilor, the leading prescription lens/contact lens manufacturer.

Controlling the labs, insurers, frame makers, and all the major retail outlets has allowed Luxottica to squeeze suppliers -- frames are cheaper than ever to make, thanks to monopsony buying power with Prada-grade designer frames costing $15 to manufacture -- while raising prices as much as 1000% relative to pre-acquisition pricing.

It's even worse for lenses: a pair of prescription lenses that cost $1.50 to make sell for $800 in the USA.

LA Times columnist David Lazarus wrote a column about skyrocketing eyewear prices and was approached by Charles Dahan, who once owned one of the largest frames companies in America, Custom Optical, which supplied 20% of the frames sold at Lenscrafters prior to the Luxottica acquisition. Dahan describes how Luxottica cornered the horizontal and vertical markets for eyewear and pushed out or bought out every other company (Oakley refused to sell or lower prices, so Luxottica boycotted it from its retailers, forcing the company into such a precarious position that it Luxottica was able to buy it for a fraction of its peak book-value just a few years later).

This is a good example of how decades of far-right ideologically driven antitrust malpractice has hurt everyone. After all, glasses aren't just a fashion item: they're a necessity for people with poor vision, a prerequisite for driving, walking, cycling, reading, getting an education or doing your job.

Luxottica grew through acquisition, by buying up its competition. This was banned under classic antitrust law, until the Reagan years. This pattern has been repeated in many other domains: beer, whiskey, retail pharmacies, and so on. In every one of those domains, we are getting screwed, as are small businesspeople and the families they serve.

Luxottica purchased Sunglass Hut in early 2001. It promptly told Oakley it wanted to pay significantly lower wholesale prices or it would reduce its orders and push its own brands instead.

Within months, Oakley acknowledged to shareholders that the talks hadn’t gone well and that Luxottica was slashing its orders.

“We have made every reasonable effort to establish a mutually beneficial business partnership with Luxottica, but it is clear from this week's surprising actions that our efforts have been ignored,” Oakley’s management said in a statement at the time.

The company’s stock immediately lost more than a third of its value.

Luxottica acquired Oakley a few years later, adding it to Ray-Ban, which Luxottica obtained in 1999.

“That’s how they gained control of so many brands,” Dahan said. “If you don’t do what they want, they cut you off.”

How badly are we being ripped off on eyewear? Former industry execs tell all [David Lazarus/LA Times]

(via /.)

12 Mar 14:03

These otherworldly caves in Bermuda were the birthplace of Fraggle Rock

by David Pescovitz

In Bermuda, the enchanting Crystal Caves attract tourists with their huge stalactites and stalagmites above the clear water pools. As a child, Michael K. Frith frequently visited the caves and never forgot their weird, otherworldly beauty. Those caves would eventually inspire Frith, working with puppeteer Jim Henson, to co-create Fraggle Rock, a beloved muppet TV series that premiered in 1983. From Jennifer Nalewicki's lovely piece about Frith and the Crystal Caves in Smithsonian:

...It wasn’t simply the caves themselves that inspired Frith; it was also the way they were discovered. During the last Ice Age, roughly 1.6 million years ago, the Crystal Caves formed as a result of rainwater eroding the surrounding limestone, but they remained unknown to Bermudians up until 1907, when Carl Gibbons and Edgar Hollis, two local boys, accidentally discovered them. As the story goes, during a game of cricket their ball rolled next to a small crevice that was emitting warm gusts of air. Curious, the duo began digging with their hands, dropping a rock through the narrow opening to see how far down the hole went. Hearing a "plink," Gibbons ran the short distance home and grabbed a crowbar and a kerosene lamp, and they continued digging only to find a subterranean world beneath them....

“The thing that got me about the story [of their discovery] is the idea that these kids were suddenly in a place where no human being had ever been before,” says Frith, who is now retired. “I always felt that must have been an astonishing thing to be standing there with a flashlight and tracing its beam and hitting the stalactites, stalagmites and the glitter of the water running down them. And then there’s that amazing sound of the drips coming down, and you hear the plink plink as the drops hit the [pool of] water, and there is no other sound...”

“Caves are really like one’s imagination,” he says. “You’re in a place, and you see it and recognize it and understand it, but you know that a tunnel can lead you off somewhere else. It’s something that is absolutely unlimited and every one of those different tunnels can be a different adventure. And at the end of each one there can be a different story.”

"These Caves in Bermuda Inspired the ‘80s TV Show 'Fraggle Rock'" (Smithsonian)

(top image: Crystal Cave by Andrew Malone, CC)

12 Mar 14:01

Dachshund enjoys snuggling bunny

by Xeni Jardin

Because it's nice to cuddle up with a friend sometimes.

“Poppy the dachsie tucking himself in.”

Prepare to say awww....

[Source]

12 Mar 13:57

Google Doodle celebrates 30th anniversary of World Wide Web

by Abner Li

In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee submitted “Information Management: A Proposal” to CERN. Thirty years later, the web has had a revolutionary impact on the world, and Google.com is marking the occasion today with a quaint Doodle.

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The post Google Doodle celebrates 30th anniversary of World Wide Web appeared first on 9to5Google.

11 Mar 18:19

Listen to the last song John Lennon recorded

by David Pescovitz

On November 14, 1980, John Lennon recorded three rough songs at the apartment he shared with Yoko Ono in New York City's The Dakota apartments. "You Saved My Soul (With Your True Love)" was the last demo he recorded before he was murdered on December 8, 1980 outside his home. Listen above.

11 Mar 18:18

Cute at any size

by Jason Weisberger

Nothing like a giant breed dog who won't stop growing.

10 Mar 00:15

10 new and notable Android apps and live wallpapers from the last week including Playground: Japanese Phrases, Bolo: Learn to read with Google, and One Hand Operation + (3/2/2019 - 3/9/2019)

by Matthew Sholtz

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications and live wallpapers that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. Today I have a Japanese language Playground release from Google, an India-specific reading app that can help users learn English and Hindi, and a one-handed gesture app for Samsung devices. So without further ado, here are the most notable Android apps released in the last week.

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10 new and notable Android apps and live wallpapers from the last week including Playground: Japanese Phrases, Bolo: Learn to read with Google, and One Hand Operation + (3/2/2019 - 3/9/2019) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

08 Mar 23:49

Groggy cats recovering from anesthesia are pretty funny

by Xeni Jardin

These kitties are coming off of anesthesia, and their tongues are hanging out kind of adorably.

“Quick pet their soft bellies while they can’t defend themselves.”

Cats recovering from anesthesia

07 Mar 14:10

Zuckerberg announces a comprehensive plan for a new, privacy-focused Facebook, but fails to mention data sharing and ad targeting

by Cory Doctorow

Mark Zuckerberg's 3,000 word blog post about his plan to create a parallel set of Facebook services that contain long-overdue privacy protections has plenty to please both the regulators who are increasingly ready to fine the company billions and possibly even break it up, but also privacy advocates who will rightly cheer the announcement that the service will be increasing its end-to-end encryption offerings, only storing data in countries with good track records on human rights and the rule of law, and allowing users to mark some of their conversations as ephemeral, designed to be permanently deleted after a short while.

But Zuckerberg's promises contain one important omission, as Wired's Issie Lapowsky and Nicholas Thompson point out: Zuck does not mention his company's future plans for data sharing and ad-targeting, two of the company's most controversial and potentially compromising activities.

It's likely that Facebook plans to earn money from its end-to-end encrypted services by analyzing the metadata -- who sends things to whom, where, and in what context -- while ignoring the payloads of the messages, which it will no longer be able to access. This will severely limit the service's userfulness to law enforcement, spies, and other parties who might nonconsensually seek access to your conversations, but it still affords an enormous wealth of metadata that Facebook will likely mine to target ads to you.

After all, the NSA's primary bulk-data collection focuses on metadata, not "data" (though in truth there is no firm line delineating the two) -- computers are really good at analyzing the kinds of metadata that other computers generate, after all, and struggle with the messy, unstructured data that messy, unstructured human beings generate.

A cynic might wonder whether Facebook's much-vaunted AI-based text analysis tools have born little fruit and so Facebook can safely jettison all the "sentiment analysis" and "natural language parsing" stuff that it sells to advertisers and focus on tried-and-tried inferences from metadata -- scoring a huge PR win and gracefully exiting an expensive R&D boondoggle.

But that said, a Facebook of ephemeral conversations and encrypted payloads would be a massive game-changer in global privacy, affecting billions of people.

...If Facebook goes through with it. These are announcements of future plans, not product rollouts with firm dates, and there is plenty of wiggle room in Zuckerberg's "promises" -- for example, will the metadata from ephemeral conversations be just as ephemeral, or will it stick around forever?

What's more, Zuckerberg and Facebook have a well-deserved reputation for reneging on their promises and lying about their privacy practices, and unless they institute independent, third-party audits and open their client sourcecode to public scrutiny, we'll have to take their word for it.

So we need to hold their feet to the fire. The company is battered and demoralized and frankly terrified of what regulators in California, the EU and elsewhere might do to them. These concessions are not enough, but they are a start.

Zuckerberg listed six privacy principles, but there was one glaring omission: He said nothing about how Facebook plans to approach data sharing and ad targeting in this privacy-focused future. The free flow of data between Facebook and third-party developers is, after all, the issue that caused the jaws of the national media to snap onto the company’s leg. One year ago this month, news broke that a man named Aleksandr Kogan had misappropriated the data of tens of millions of users and sent it to a shady political consulting firm called Cambridge Analytica. It soon became clear that Cambridge Analytica was not alone and that Facebook had allowed thousands of developers to collect data for years.

The company’s loose policies on data collection over the years are also what allowed it to build one of the most successful advertising businesses in history. All the data the company collects helps advertisers segment and target people. And it’s the relentless pursuit of that data that has led to Facebook being accused of making inappropriate deals for data with device manufacturers and software partners. This is a history that Zuckerberg knows well, and one that he acknowledged in his post. “I understand that many people don’t think Facebook can or would even want to build this kind of privacy-focused platform—because frankly we don’t currently have a strong reputation for building privacy protective services,” he wrote.

Facebook's Pivot to Privacy Is Missing Something Crucial [Issie Lapowsky and Nicholas Thompson/Wired]

05 Mar 19:42

Google paid out $9.7m in wage adjustments after finding it paid men less than women for same job

by Ben Schoon

It’s sadly not uncommon in today’s working world for a woman to get paid less than a man for the same job, but that’s been changing slowly in recent years. Google, however, recently discovered that it was actually paying some men less than women for the same job and paid out wage adjustments to compensate.

more…

The post Google paid out $9.7m in wage adjustments after finding it paid men less than women for same job appeared first on 9to5Google.

05 Mar 19:37

Cat bravely fights invisible dream attackers

by Xeni Jardin

An hero cat of unknown origin bravely fights off invisible attackers.

Hang in there kitteh, you can do it.

Fighting off your dream attackers.

[via]

05 Mar 19:36

Baby and dog sneak cuteness attack

by Xeni Jardin

Dog: Prepare for my sneak attack.
Baby: 👶

Brutal sneak attack caught on video by IMGURian OctopussSevenTwo, with extra cuteness points for the presence of pigtails!

"Sneak attack!"

05 Mar 19:35

The eyeglass industry is a ripoff, with "markups often approaching 1,000%"

by Mark Frauenfelder

I buy my eyeglasses online, paying about $30 a pair (I use Optical4Less, though there are many other online prescription eyeglass stores with equally low prices). I've always suspected brick and mortar eyeglass shops to be a ripoff, and this excellent LA Times article by David Lazurus confirmed my suspicions.

[E. Dean Butler, the founder of LensCrafters] said he recently visited factories in China where many glasses for the U.S. market are manufactured. Improved technology has made prices even lower than what Dahan recalled.

“You can get amazingly good frames, with a Warby Parker level of quality, for $4 to $8,” Butler said. “For $15, you can get designer-quality frames, like what you’d get from Prada.”

And lenses? “You can buy absolutely first-quality lenses for $1.25 apiece,” Butler said.

Yet those same frames and lenses might sell in the United States for $800.

Butler laughed. “I know,” he said. “It’s ridiculous. It’s a complete rip-off.”

Image: Iryna Inshyna/Shutterstock

03 Mar 18:14

16 best new Android games released this week including Skylanders Ring of Heroes, Mister Kung-Fu, and A Life in Music

by Matthew Sholtz

Welcome to the roundup of the best new Android games that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so. Today I have a collectible hero Skylanders title, a new take on a classic Kung-Fu game, and a beautifully illustrated story-driven game that revolves around music. So without further ado, here are the most notable games released this week.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.
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16 best new Android games released this week including Skylanders Ring of Heroes, Mister Kung-Fu, and A Life in Music was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

02 Mar 22:24

Comcast assigned every mobile customer the same unchangeable PIN to protect against SIM hijack attacks: 0000

by Cory Doctorow

If someone wants to steal your phone number -- say, to intercept the two-factor authentication SMSes needed to break into your bank account or other vital service -- they hijack your SIM by impersonating you to your phone company (or by bribing someone at the company to reassign your phone number to them), and this has made the security of phone numbers into a top concern for security experts and telcoms companies, as there are millions of dollars at stake.

Enter Comcast, all-time champion "most-hated company in America," whose Xfinity Mobile cellular service assigns the same unchangeable PIN to every customer: 0000.

But don't worry, Comcast says that this only puts you at risk if you recycle user-names and passwords, and nobody does that.

Because of that 0000 PIN, getting a victim's Xfinity Mobile account number was the main obstacle for attackers. A Comcast spokesperson told Ars that this account number is available only by logging into the Xfinity Mobile Web portal and is therefore protected by a Comcast's user's password. Comcast told Ars that it does not send out paper bills for Xfinity Mobile and does not include that account number in emails to customers, cutting off two potential ways that attackers could get the account number.

Comcast indicated that the number-porting attack affected only customers who reused passwords across multiple sites.

Comcast set mobile pins to “0000,” helping attackers steal phone numbers [Jon Brodkin/Ars Technica]

(Image: Specious, CC-BY-SA)

(via /.)

02 Mar 22:23

Study that claimed majority of Copyright Directive opposition came from the US assumed all English-language tweets came from Washington, DC

by Cory Doctorow

Members of the European Parliament have been carpet-bombed with a "report" claiming that the historically unprecedented opposition to the pending Copyright Directive was the result of "US meddling in the EU lawmaking process," with 21 pages of alarming charts and figures to support this conclusion.

However, the report is completely wrong, because it relied on analytics provided by Talkwalker, without understanding the assumptions that Talkwalker uses to fill in missing data.

Specifically, when Talkwalker encounters a tweet whose location field is blank, it guesses which language the tweet is in, then assigns the capital city of the most populous country where that language is spoken as the account-owner's location. Every German-language tweet is reported as originating in Berlin, and every English-language tweet is reported as originating in Washington, DC.

The opposition to the Directive's Article 13 is correlated with technical knowhow, and that is correlated with privacy consciousness (hence opponents of the Directive are likely to have blank location fields) and also with discourse in English. Also, English is the most-widely spoken language in the United Kingdom, which is one of the 28 member states of the European Union (for now). These tweets are in English, and have no location specified, and will all be classified as originating in DC.

So Talkwalker's analytics falsely reported vast numbers of opponents to Article 13 were voicing their opposition from Washington D.C., including Julia Reda, the German MEP who has led the Parliamentary opposition to the Directive from her offices in Brussels and Strasbourg (the analytics also claim that Reda is based in Berlin, because she also tweets extensively in German, of course).

This vast, easily avoidable, obvious and sloppy error was compounded by still more outrageous instances of analytic malpractices. For example, the report's authors measured the location of tweeters who included English-language hashtags, rather than those in other European languages.

The document's authors are lobbyists with the German industry group Interessenverband des Video- und Medienfachhandels in Deutschland e.V., and they have posted their report for your own inspection. One of the authors is co-owner of the filedefense.de service.

02 Mar 17:55

14 new and notable Android apps and live wallpapers from the last two weeks including Serial Box, Playground: Love, and NBC Sports (2/16/19 - 3/2/19)

by Matthew Sholtz

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications and live wallpapers that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous two weeks or so. Today I have reading app filled with fictional serials, a Valentine-themed sticker app from Google, and a new sports streaming app from NBC. So without further ado, here are the most notable Android apps released in the last two weeks.

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14 new and notable Android apps and live wallpapers from the last two weeks including Serial Box, Playground: Love, and NBC Sports (2/16/19 - 3/2/19) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

01 Mar 23:27

The Beatles: absolutely wonderful recording studio "bloopers"

by David Pescovitz

The fun is contagious.

"I'll try to remember, John, and if I don't it's just too bad INNIT!?"

01 Mar 14:31

Amazon killed Seattle's homelessness-relief tax by threatening not to move into a massive new building, then they canceled the move anyway

by Cory Doctorow

Seattle's immensely popular business tax was designed to do something about the city's epidemic of desperate homelessness, but then Amazon threw its muscle around to get the tax canceled, mostly by threatening not to occupy its new offices in Ranier Square, a 30-story building currently under construction that Amazon was to be sole tenant of, with 3,500-5,000 employees working out of the building.

Now, Ranier Square is advertising for new tenants to fill its 722,000 square feet, because Amazon has canceled its plans (though not the lease - the new tenants will sublease from Amazon, likely for 10-15 years). Unconfirmed reports have it that Amazon will instead expand its rentals in neighboring Bellevue.

Seattle has upcoming municipal elections and some city councillors are signalling that they'll campaign on reinstating the tax and raising money to help fix the city's housing crisis.

When Mayor Jenny Durkan and a council majority sought to compromise with business leaders in May by passing a smaller version of the tax, Amazon announced it would move ahead with Block 18, one of several new buildings going up in the Denny Triangle. But the company never recommitted to the Rainier Square space, even after an effort to nix the measure through a referendum, backed by Amazon and other local businesses, pressured the council into repealing the tax less than a month later.

The annual tax of $275 per employee on companies grossing at least $20 million per year would have raised about $47 million in 2019 for low-income housing and homeless services. Kshama Sawant, one of two council members who opposed the repeal, described Amazon’s Rainier Square announcement Wednesday as a “told you so” moment.

“This is a good reminder for us that backing down to the bullying of corporations never stops their bullying,” said Sawant, praising activists in New York City who protested tax breaks for Amazon, causing the company to pull out from its campus plans there. (Two Seattle council members, Teresa Mosqueda and Lisa Herbold, spoke at a New York event organized by Amazon opponents in January.)

“As the next step, people in Seattle should gather courage and renew our fight to tax big business for social housing,” Sawant said.

Amazon abandons plan to occupy huge downtown Seattle office building [Benjamin Romano and Mike Rosenberg/Seattle Times]

Amazon backs out of massive Seattle office tower as questions swirl about growth plans [Monica Nickelsburg/Geekwire]

01 Mar 14:28

Oregon becomes first state to pass statewide rent control

by Xeni Jardin

SALEM, OREGON: State lawmakers today voted to make Oregon become the first U.S. state to have statewide limits on how much landlords can raise rents.

“There is no single solution — not one entity, or one person — that can solve Oregon’s housing crisis,” Governor Kate Brown (Democrat) said in a statement Tuesday.

“This new legislation is one of many actions Oregon needs to take to address our housing crisis. While it will provide some immediate relief, we need to focus on building supply in order to address Oregon’s housing challenges for the long term.”

From the New York Times:

The legislation would generally limit rent increases to 7 percent annually plus the change in the Consumer Price Index, a measure of inflation. Some smaller and newer apartment buildings would be exempt.

The Democrat-controlled House of Representatives passed the bill by a vote of 35 to 25, largely along party lines. It had already been approved by the State Senate, and Gov. Kate Brown, a Democrat, plans to sign the bill, a spokeswoman said Tuesday.

The median rent in Oregon has increased by over 14% statewide in recent years. Rents in Portland rose by 30 percent since 2011, adjusted for inflation.

IMAGE: Oregon House of Representatives

01 Mar 14:26

iPhone and Android hacking tool used by FBI and DHS on sale on eBay for as little as $100

by 9to5Mac

The Cellebrite Universal Forensic Extraction Device (UFED) is a smartphone hacking tool commonly used by the FBI, Department of Homeland Security and other law enforcement agencies in the US and elsewhere. It’s the most powerful tool yet created by the Israeli company, able to extract a huge amount of data – even data which has been deleted from phones.

A brand new one normally costs $5,000 to $15,000 depending on the model, but older models can be found on eBay for as little as $100 …

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The post iPhone and Android hacking tool used by FBI and DHS on sale on eBay for as little as $100 appeared first on 9to5Google.

01 Mar 14:24

Energizer PowerMax P18K Pop hands-on: A ridiculous powerbank with a display attached [Video]

by Damien Wilde

Often we complain about device battery life, well, the battery company Energizer listened and has answered our prayers with a literal powerbank attached to a phone in the form of the Energizer PowerMax P18K Pop.

more…

The post Energizer PowerMax P18K Pop hands-on: A ridiculous powerbank with a display attached [Video] appeared first on 9to5Google.

28 Feb 01:02

Google Clock musical alarms now support YouTube Music and Pandora

by Abner Li

Last July, Google Clock added support for custom musical alarms from third-party streaming services. Spotify was the first partner at launch, with YouTube Music and Pandora following today in the latest update.

more…

The post Google Clock musical alarms now support YouTube Music and Pandora appeared first on 9to5Google.

28 Feb 00:52

The latest marble chain reaction video is the best so far

by Mark Frauenfelder

Blue Marble 3 is Kaplamino's latest marble chain reaction video. I like the way that many parts of the track are formed as needed by the energy of rubber bands, deflating balloons, magnets, and even a firecracker.

From the YouTube description:

I present you my most ambitious project so far, blue marble 3 ! I'm out of my comfort zone this time because the chain reaction is taking place on two tables, and with 0 fidget spinners. It is the longest in terms of duration and the one that takes up the most space in my room. I tried to use a little bit of everything like rubber bands, magnets, and elements. I had so many failures that I stopped counting, as always only a few tricks were responsible for the majority of failures, can you guess which ones?

Image: YouTube

28 Feb 00:50

Fox hit with $179m (including $128m in punitive damages) judgment over shady bookkeeping on "Bones"

by Cory Doctorow

Fox has been ordered to pay $179m to profit participants on the longrunning TV show Bones; the judgment includes $128m in punitive damages because the aribitrator that heard the case found that Fox had concealed the show's true earnings and its execs had lied under oath to keep the profit participants from getting their share of the take.

The arbitrator singled out Fox execs Dana Walden, Gary Newman and Peter Rice for "giving false testimony to conceal their wrongful acts."

The suit turned on Fox's "self-dealing," whereby one division would make a program and sell it to another division at well below market rates, then claim that the show hadn't earned very much money, thus denying payouts to those with a share of the profits: the show's stars, the author of the novels the show was adapted from, and the show's exec producer.

Fox has vowed to appeal.

Two of the Fox execs singled out by the arbitrator are set to move into executive roles at Disney after the Disney acquisition of Fox is complete. Disney CEO Bob Iger gave a statement in their defense.

Liguori headed Fox at the time the series debuted in 2005. In 2009, he wrote a memo that may have outlined Fox’s efforts to avoid self-dealing liability as Fox considered giving “Bones” a three-season renewal in 2009. Quotations from what is described as the “Legal Action Plan” memo are heavily redacted in the arbitration filing. Liguori left his post as chairman of Fox Broadcasting in 2009, amid a shakeup in the TV division.

Lichtman also held that Fox executives were deceptive in testifying about the process of determining a license fee for “Bones.”

“The testimony of both Mr. Newman and Ms. Walden regarding ‘marketplace information’ is not only troubling but extremely disconcerting,” the arbitrator states. “The more these individuals testified the more incredulous their testimony appeared.”

Fox Ordered to Pay $179 Million to ‘Bones’ Profit Participants [Gene Maddaus/Variety]