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Updated 2024-04-30 00:49
UK children bombarded by gambling ads and images online, charity warns
Young people feel their internet activity is overwhelmed by betting promotions and similar content, says GambleAwareChildren are saturated" with betting promotions and gambling-like content while using the internet, despite restrictions on ad campaigns targeting young people, new researchreveals.GambleAware, the charity funded by donations from gambling firms, commissioned research that found the risks of online gambling were not understood by children because of the blurred line" between betting ads and popular online casino-style games. It warns gambling ads with cartoon graphics are likely to be strongly appealing to children. Last week, one gambling firm was promoting a new online slots game on social media with three cartoon frogs, urging people to take a dip" with the ribbiting rascals". Continue reading...
The Game Boy at 35: a portal to other magical worlds
The handheld console introduced millions to the joy of video games, and remains one of the best-selling consoles everOn April 21, 1989, Nintendo released a chunky grey game-playing rectangle to stores in Japan. It's fair to say that nobody expected much of it. Internally, at Nintendo's Kyoto HQ, the portable console was reportedly not a well-loved project. But within two weeks, it had sold out its entire 300,000-unit initial run. The Game Boy would arrive later that year in the US, and across the rest of the world over the next couple of years. Everywhere it went, it proved just as popular. Thirty-five years and almost 120m sales later, it is still the fourth best-selling games console in history.Like Sony's Walkman, the Game Boy is a tech design icon of its time, still instantly recognisable from its silhouette alone. Developed by a team led by Satoru Okada and Gunpei Yokoi in Kyoto, the Game Boy is perhaps the preeminent example of Yokoi's lateral thinking with withered technology" maxim, a do-more-with-less technological principle that endures at Nintendo to this day. It's so simply designed - with four buttons and a cross-shaped directional pad - that you already know how to use it as soon as you look at it. Thanks to its greyscale screen, the battery lasted for days of play. And most importantly for accident-prone kids of the 90s (and their parents), you could throw it off a bridge and it would probably still work. Continue reading...
Sex offender banned from using AI tools in landmark UK case
The decision could set a precedent for future monitoring of people convicted of indecent image offencesA sex offender convicted of making more than 1,000 indecent images of children has been banned from using any AI creating tools" for the next five years in the first known case of its kind.Anthony Dover, 48, was ordered by a UK court not to use, visit or access" artificial intelligence generation tools without the prior permission of police as a condition of a sexual harm prevention order imposed in February. Continue reading...
US House passes bill that could lead to total TikTok ban
Bill - with updated language that extends deadline to a year for ByteDance to divest of TikTok - to go before Senate next weekThe House of Representatives voted 360 to 58 on the updated divest-or-ban bill that could lead to the first time ever that the US government has passed a law to shut down an entire social media platform.The Senate is expected to vote on the bill next week and Joe Biden has said he will sign the legislation. Continue reading...
‘I was very nearly dead’: high achiever Martha Lane Fox is now on a mission to conquer mountains
After a car crash nearly killed her 20 years ago, the dotcom entrepreneur is climbing three peaks to make 300,000 for charityEven to the able-bodied, climbing Britain's three highest peaks might seem like a test of resolve. But Martha Lane Fox has had 47 operations, struggles with her balance, nerve damage and constant pain, and needs two sticks to walk anywhere - the legacy of a car crash 20 years ago that nearly killed her.On Saturday she completed the first leg of Martha's Mountain Mission" by reaching the summit of Snowdon, or Yr Wyddfa. England's highest peak, Scafell Pike, comes next, on 6 May, and she will be tackling Ben Nevis on 7 September. Continue reading...
The big tech firms want an AI monopoly – but the UK watchdog can bring them to heel | John Naughton
Microsoft, Meta and Google are snapping up small players in the burgeoning industry - but the Competition and Markets Authority is demanding fair playMonopoly," said Peter Thiel, Silicon Valley's answer to Darth Vader, is the condition of every successful business." This aspiration is widely shared by Gamman, the new acronynm for the Valley's giants - Google, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon and Nvidia. And the arrival of AI has sharpened the appetite of each for attaining that blessed state before the others get there.One symptom of their anxiety is the way they have been throwing unconscionable amounts of money at the 70-odd generative AI startups that have mushroomed since it became clear that AI was going to be the new new thing. Microsoft reportedly put $13bn (about 10.4bn) into OpenAI, for example, but it was also the lead investor in a $1.3bn funding round for Inflection, Deepmind co-founder Mustafa Suleyman's startup. Amazon put $4bn into Anthropic, the startup founded by refugees from OpenAI. Google invested $500m in the same outfit, with a promise of $1.5bn more, and unspecified sums in A121 Labs and Hugging Face. (Yeah, I know the names make no sense.) Microsoft has also invested in Mistral, the French AI startup. And so on. In 2023, of the $27bn that was invested in AI startups, only $9bn came from venture capitalist firms - which until recently had been by far the biggest funders of new tech enterprises in Silicon Valley. Continue reading...
What the Cybertruck’s many failures mean for Tesla
Recall represents another black eye' for the company, which saw its share prices fall this week, wiping away all its gains this yearTesla recalled all Cybertrucks Friday after federal safety regulators contacted the company over malfunctions with the vehicle's accelerator pedal. New Cybertruck orders have been reportedly cancelled or stalled. The news follows numerous reports of embarrassing Cybertruck failures.The recall represents a major blow to Tesla, which has weathered a difficult year, seeing poor earnings reports in recent quarters as competing Chinese electric vehicle manufacturers encroach on the electric vehicle market. Continue reading...
‘The model loved the departure from traditional portraiture’ – Kamzy Nuel’s best phone picture
The vibrant colours of Lagos take centre stage in this bold image by the Nigerian photographerWhen location scouting for this shoot, KamzyNuel was primarily hunting for colour. He settled on the National Stadium in Surulere, Lagos, Nigeria. There are so many vibrant colours around, giving room to have as much as possible in the frame to work with," theNigerian photographer says.Hoping to portray afine blend of modernism and culture" in the styling, Nuel chose the red and yellow outfit for his muse, Kommie, a professional model. This was the pair's first time working together; they have since become friends. She's a great person," Nuel says, and she loved the departure from traditional portraiture." Continue reading...
Where do we draw the line on using AI in TV and film?
Recent controversies, including Civil War posters and altered photos in a Netflix documentary, have led to concern over the growing use of artificial intelligence on screenThough last year's writers' and actors' strikes in Hollywood were about myriad factors, fair compensation and residual payments among them, one concern rose far above the others: the encroachment of generative AI - the type that can produce text, images and video - on people's livelihoods. The use of generative AI in the content we watch, from film to television to large swaths of internet garbage, was a foregone conclusion; Pandora's box has been opened. But the rallying cry, at the time, was that any protection secured against companies using AI to cut corners was a win, even if only for a three-year contract, as the development, deployment and adoption of this technology will be so swift.That was no bluster. In the mere months since the writers' and actors' guilds made historic deals with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), the average social media user has almost certainly encountered AI-generated material, whether they realized it or not. Efforts to curb pornographic AI deepfakes of celebrities have reached the notoriously recalcitrant and obtuse US Congress. The internet is now so rife with misinformation and conspiracies, and the existence of generative AI has so shredded what remained of shared reality, that a Kate Middleton AI deepfake video seemed, to many, a not unreasonable conclusion. (For the record, it was real.) Hollywood executives have already tested OpenAI's forthcoming text-to-video program Sora, which caused the producer Tyler Perry to halt an $800m expansion of his studios in Atlanta because jobs are going to be lost". Continue reading...
Oxford shuts down institute run by Elon Musk-backed philosopher
Nick Bostrom's Future of Humanity Institute closed this week in what Swedish-born philosopher says was death by bureaucracy'Oxford University this week shut down an academic institute run by one of Elon Musk's favorite philosophers. The Future of Humanity Institute, dedicated to the long-termism movement and other Silicon Valley-endorsed ideas such as effective altruism, closed this week after 19 years of operation. Musk had donated 1m to the FHI in 2015 through a sister organization to research the threat of artificial intelligence. He had also boosted the ideas of its leader for nearly a decade on X, formerly Twitter.The center was run by Nick Bostrom, a Swedish-born philosopher whose writings about the long-term threat of AI replacing humanity turned him into a celebrity figure among the tech elite and routinely landed him on lists of top global thinkers. Sam Altman of OpenAI, Bill Gates of Microsoft and Musk all wrote blurbs for his 2014 bestselling book Superintelligence. Continue reading...
Tesla recalls nearly 4,000 Cybertrucks over faulty accelerator pedal
US officials say pedal pad could come loose and get lodged in interior trim, causing vehicle to accelerate unintentionallyTesla is recalling all 3,878 Cybertrucks it has shipped since the vehicle was released in late 2023, according to a Friday filing from the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), following reports of a faulty accelerator pedal.Cybertruck owners reported the vehicle's accelerator pedal pad could come loose and get lodged in the interior trim, causing the vehicle to accelerate unintentionally, and increasing the risk of a crash, the auto safety regulator said in a notice. Continue reading...
FBI chief says Chinese hackers have infiltrated critical US infrastructure
Volt Typhoon hacking campaign is waiting for just the right moment to deal a devastating blow', says Christopher WrayChinese government-linked hackers have burrowed into US critical infrastructure and are waiting for just the right moment to deal a devastating blow", the director of the FBI, Christopher Wray, has warned.An ongoing Chinese hacking campaign known as Volt Typhoon has successfully gained access to numerous American companies in telecommunications, energy, water and other critical sectors, with 23 pipeline operators targeted, Wray said in a speech at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, on Thursday. Continue reading...
‘I was trying to create the sound of a really warm hug’: the poignant story behind Monument Valley 2’s music
Todd Baker composed the soundtrack for the indie puzzler as he was living through the loss of his mother. On the series' 10th anniversary, he reflects on the experienceThe part where the mother and child are separated on a red mountain, in a level quite early on in the game where you have to get back to the mother and find her ... I was completing the sound design and music for that in a hospital, right beside my mum when she was sleeping, recovering from open heart surgery."Todd Baker pauses for a second. He is recalling the development process of 2017's Monument Valley 2, an indie puzzler, the highly anticipated follow-up to the one of the biggest success stories in mobile game history. The second game is more experimental than the first; it has more of a story, which in turn changed its feel. Whereas the first title is all optical illusions and impossible objects, the sequel moves away from MC Escher-inspired towers and spires and towards non-Euclidean geometry and brutalism. Continue reading...
What is bitcoin halving – and will it affect the price?
Process has coincided with a rise in price in the past and is due to take place again on SaturdaySatoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of bitcoin, still has an influence on the cryptocurrency nearly 14 years after disappearing.This week the protocol designed by Nakamoto - an individual or group of individuals who went silent in December 2010 - will trigger what is known as a bitcoin halving", a process that has coincided with price increases in the past. The latest halving is expected to take place on Saturday. Continue reading...
Quarter of UK’s three- and four-year-olds own a smartphone, data shows
Campaigners express concern at new Ofcom figures, which also show that half of under-13s are on social mediaA quarter of three- and four-year-olds in the UK now own a smartphone, while half of children under 13 are on social media, according to new data that comes as ministers consider banning all children under 16 from owning a mobile phone.The figures, from the communications regulator Ofcom, show high and rising rates of online activity by children of infant-school age, with 38% of five- to seven-year-olds using social media, compared with 30% a year ago, and 76% of them using a tablet. Continue reading...
Terror watchdog condemns WhatsApp for lowering UK users’ minimum age to 13
Jonathan Hall, Britain's reviewer of terrorism legislation, says more children could be exposed to encrypted extremist contentThe UK's terror watchdog has criticised Mark Zuckerberg's Meta for lowering the minimum age for WhatsApp users from 16 to 13, warning that the extraordinary" move could expose more teenagers to extreme content.Jonathan Hall KC said more children could now access material that Meta cannot regulate, including content related to terror or sexual exploitation. Continue reading...
Meta steps up AI battle with OpenAI and Google with release of Llama 3
Tech firm released early versions of its latest large language model and a real-time image generator as it tries to catch up to OpenAIMeta Platforms on Thursday released early versions of its latest large language model, Llama 3, and an image generator that updates pictures in real time while users type prompts, as it races to catch up to generative AI market leader OpenAI.The models will be integrated into virtual assistant Meta AI, which the company is pitching as the most sophisticated of its free-to-use peers. The assistant will be given more prominent billing within Meta's Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger apps as well as a new standalone website that positions it to compete more directly with Microsoft-backed OpenAI's breakout hit ChatGPT. Continue reading...
Google fires 28 staff after protest against firm’s contract with Israeli government
Google workers linked to No Tech for Apartheid denounce flagrant act of retaliation' in dispute over $1.2bn cloud contractGoogle said on Thursday it had terminated 28 employees after some staff participated in protests against the company's cloud contract with the Israeli government. Employees staged sit-ins at their offices, some for more than eight hours.The Alphabet unit said a small number of pro-Palestine employees entered and disrupted work at a few unspecified office locations. They occupied the office of the chief technology officer of Google Cloud and held posters reading No cloud apartheid", Googlers against genocide" and Don't be evil, stop retaliation", a reference to Google's former corporate slogan. Continue reading...
The greatest Fender Stratocaster player you’ve never heard of | Brief letters
Rory Gallagher | Jim Perrin's Country Diary | Tory vacuum | A clear conscience | Smartphone addictionNice to see Andy Welch's article on the Fender Stratocaster reaching the age of 70 (With a Strat you can rule the world!' Nile Rodgers, Bonnie Raitt and John Squire on the electric guitar that changed everything, 10 April). It's a shame he omitted to mention the late Irish blues guitarist RoryGallagher, who played what was - and is - arguably the most iconically road-worn Stratocaster ever. He was a shy and modest musician, and remains underrated. When Jimi Hendrix was asked what it felt like to be the best guitarist in the world, he replied: Idon't know, ask Rory Gallagher."
Tell us: have you experiences last-minute cancellations on Airbnb?
We'd like to hear from people who have made a booking for accommodation on an online travel platform, only for their host to cancel it at the last minuteWe're interested in hearing from people who have made a booking for accommodation on an online travel platform, only for their host to cancel it at the last minute.Earlier this year, Taylor Swift fans in Australia were left without accommodation after Airbnb hosts cancelled their bookings. Airbnb's host cancellation policy" does not seem to have deterred hosts from then relisting their properties at a higher price. Has something similar happened to you? Are you a Swiftie whose plans to watch her European tour have been affected? Or have you made plans for a holiday elsewhere or another trip that have been thrown into disarray by a host's cancellation? Continue reading...
Reigns Beyond review – sci-fi silliness meets rock band road trip
iPad/iPhone, Nintendo Switch (version tested), PC; Nerial/Devolver Digital
Nothing Ear (a) review: cheaper, smaller, longer-lasting earbuds
Funky transparent design backed by good sound and noise cancelling make these budget buds winnersThe tech firm Nothing's latest set of cut-price Bluetooth earbuds offer great sound and noise cancelling for an even more competitive price, while continuing to stand out from the crowd through cool design.The London-based firm has launched the budget Ear (a), which keep almost everything that was great about previous Nothing earbuds and cost 99 (99/$99). That is 30 less than its previous offering and the new 129 (149/$149) Ear, which offer a few more customisations for sound and other features. Continue reading...
Best podcasts of the week: How one woman’s private paradise turned into her own personal hell
In this week's newsletter: Alice Levine's The Price of Paradise follows the story of Jayne Gaskin, and the Caribbean island that wasn't all it seemed. Plus: five of the best bad movie podcasts Don't get Hear Here delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereThe Price of Paradise
Students turning to cyberfraud as huge phishing site infiltrated, police reveal
LabHost enabled users to set up websites designed to trick victims into revealing personal information - with 70,000 allegedly duped in the UKUniversity students have turned to cyber fraud to boost their income, police have said, as they revealed they have infiltrated a huge phishing site on the dark web responsible for scamming tens of thousands of people.The site called LabHost was active since 2021 and was a cyber fraud superstore, allowing users to produce realistic-looking websites from household names such as the big banks, ensnaring victims around the world including 70,000 in the UK. Continue reading...
TikTok questioned by EU over Lite app that ‘pays’ users for watching videos
European Commission has concerns about app's impact on children, as well as addictionThe EU has given TikTok 24 hours to provide a risk assessment over a new service it has launched amid concerns it could encourage children to become addicted to videos on the platform.The watch-and-get-rewarded application, TikTok Lite, launched in France and Spain this month, in effect offers users prizes such as Amazon vouchers, gift cards via PayPal or TikTok's Coins currency for points earned through tasks". Continue reading...
Tesla asks shareholders to back $56bn pay for Elon Musk rejected by judge
Delaware court in nullified compensation deal based on carmaker's market value in January, calling it unfathomable sum'Tesla on Wednesday asked its shareholders to once again approve CEO Elon Musks record-breaking $56bn pay that was set in 2018. A Delaware judge rejected the pay package in January, calling it excessive and saying the company's board failed to justify it.The compensation includes no salary or cash bonus, but sets rewards based on Tesla's market value rising to as much as $650bn over the next 10 years. Tesla is now valued at over $500bn, according to LSEG data. Continue reading...
It’s not just children who are smartphone addicts, adults are too | Letter
Adults should stop setting a bad example to young people, says Nisha GandhiLike most articles on smartphone usage, your editorial (10 April) discusses phone addiction among young people. This strikes me as hypocritical because, in my experience, adults look at their phones just as much as, or perhaps even more than, children.Most adults I know have their phone in their line of sight at all times. My 60-year-old mother, who used to scold me in my teens for always being on my laptop, recently confessed to being addicted to YouTube. I remember one article about parents being told to stop looking at their phones and pay attention totheir children instead. Continue reading...
Child sexual abuse content growing online with AI-made images, report says
More children and families extorted with AI-made photos and videos, says National Center for Missing and Exploited ChildrenChild sexual exploitation is on the rise online and taking new forms such as images and videos generated by artificial intelligence, according to an annual assessment released on Tuesday by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), a US-based clearinghouse for the reporting of child sexual abuse material.Reports to the NCMEC of child abuse online rose by more than 12% in 2023 compared with the previous year, surpassing 36.2m reports, the organization said in its annual CyberTipline report. The majority of tips received were related to the circulation of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) such as photos and videos, but there was also an increase in reports of financial sexual extortion, when an online predator lures a child into sending nude images or videos and then demands money. Continue reading...
TechScape: How cheap, outsourced labour in Africa is shaping AI English
Workers in Africa have been exploited first by being paid a pittance to help make chatbots, then by having their own words become AI-ese. Plus, new AI gadgets are coming for your smartphones Don't get TechScape delivered to your inbox? Sign up for the full article hereWe're witnessing the birth of AI-ese, and it's not what anyone could have guessed. Let's delve deeper.If you've spent enough time using AI assistants, you'll have noticed a certain quality to the responses generated. Without a concerted effort to break the systems out of their default register, the text they spit out is, while grammatically and semantically sound, ineffably generated.The images pop up in Mophat Okinyi's mind when he's alone, or when he's about to sleep. Okinyi, a former content moderator for OpenAI's ChatGPT in Nairobi, Kenya, is one of four people in that role who have filed a petition to the Kenyan government calling for an investigation into what they describe as exploitative conditions for contractors reviewing the content that powers artificial intelligence programs. Continue reading...
As if Wes Anderson ran amok at Aardman: Harold Halibut, the visually stunning puppet adventure game
Fourteen years in the making, this character-driven sci-fi tale is a wonder of technology and imagination so texturally convincing you'll want to touch itTicktock, ticktock. In the dripping confines of the Fedora 1, an aquatic space colony of exquisite retro-futuristic design, it's not water but time that exerts an unmistakable pressure on inhabitants. A cataclysmic meteor looms on the horizon, threatening to wipe them all out. But this cast of lovably eccentric characters, including the titular Harold, hurry for no one, preferring to amble about their days while staring down the barrel of cosmic disaster.It's fitting that an adventure game as laid back in pacing as Harold Halibut should have been made by a team with a similarly leisurely approach to time. Fourteen years have passed since game director Onat Hekimoglu had the initial idea, while studying for an MA at Cologne Game Lab. Back then, it was a strange point-and-click adventure with earthy stop-motion visuals. Elements of that version persist today, namely protagonist Harold, a depressed caretaker who spends his days gazing out at the sea. But the intervening years have seen it become more mechanically refined, narratively expansive and visually beautiful. Continue reading...
Leisure centres scrap biometric systems to keep tabs on staff amid UK data watchdog clampdown
Firms such as Serco and Virgin Active pull facial recognition and fingerprint scan systems used to monitor staff attendanceDozens of companies including national leisure centre chains are reviewing or pulling facial recognition technology and fingerprint scanning used to monitor staff attendance after a clampdown by the UK's data watchdog.In February, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) ordered a Serco subsidiary to stop using biometrics to monitor the attendance of staff at leisure centres it operates and also issued more stringent guidance on the use of facial recognition and fingerprint scanning. Continue reading...
Creating sexually explicit deepfake images to be made offence in UK
Offenders could face jail if image is widely shared under proposed amendment to criminal justice billCreating a sexually explicit deepfake" image is to be made an offence under a new law, the Ministry of Justice has announced.Under the legislation, anyone who creates such an image without consent will face a criminal record and an unlimited fine. They could also face jail if the image is shared more widely. Continue reading...
‘Eat the future, pay with your face’: my dystopian trip to an AI burger joint
If the experience of robot-served fast-food dining is any indication, the future of sex robots is going to be very unpleasantOn 1 April, the same day California's new $20 hourly minimum wage for fast-food workers went into effect, a new restaurant opened in north-east Los Angeles that was conspicuously light on human staff.CaliExpress by Flippy claims to be the world's first fully autonomous restaurant, using a system of AI-powered robots to churn out fast-food burgers and fries. A small number of humans are still required to push the buttons on the machines and assemble the burgers and toppings, but the companies involved tout that using their technology could cut labor costs, perhaps dramatically. Eat the future," they offer. Continue reading...
Restaurant in Italy offers free bottles of wine to customers who hand in phones
Owner of Al Condominio in Verona says response to the initiative during meals has been very positiveAn Italian restaurant is offering a free bottle of wine to customers who relinquish their mobile phones during meals.Angelo Lella, the owner of Al Condominio, a restaurant that opened in the northern city of Verona in March, said the aim was to encourage diners chat to each other instead of constantly glancing at their phones. Continue reading...
Google blocking links to California news outlets from search results
Tech giant is protesting proposed law that would require large online platforms to pay journalism usage fee'Google has temporarily blocked links from local news outlets in California from appearing in search results in response to the advancement of a bill that would require tech companies to pay publications for links that articles share. The change applies only to some people using Google in California, though it is not clear how many.The California Journalism Preservation Act (CJPA) would require large online platforms to pay a journalism usage fee" for linking to news sites based in the Golden state. The bill cleared the California assembly in 2023. To become law, it would need to pass in the senate before being signed by the governor, Gavin Newsom. Continue reading...
Trump Media shares tank after company reveals plan to sell more stock
Shares of Truth Social parent company have fallen 60% since March market debut as ex-president under financial pressureShares of the former president Donald Trump's social media company slumped 12% on Monday, extending their string of losses, after the company said in a regulatory filing that it could sell millions of additional shares in coming months.The filing showed a potential sale of 146.1m shares in Trump Media & Technology Group, including 114.8m shares owned by Trump himself. Documents also listed an additional 21.5m shares that could be sold upon the exercise of certain warrants issued when the company went public through a blank-check merger with Digital World Acquisition Corp. Continue reading...
Battle lines drawn as US states take on big tech with online child safety bills
Nine states are hashing out bills to protect minors online. Tech companies are fighting the laws with everything they've gotOn 6 April, Maryland became the first state in the US to pass a Kids Code" bill, which aims to prevent tech companies from collecting predatory data from children and using design features that could cause them harm. Vermont's legislature held its final hearing before a full vote on its Kids Code bill on 11 April. The measures are the latest in a salvo of proposed policies that, in the absence of federal rules, have made state capitols a major battlefield in the war between parents and child advocates, who lament that there are too few protections for minors online, and Silicon Valley tech companies, who protest that the recommended restrictions would hobble both business and free speech.Known as Age-Appropriate Design Code or Kids Code bills, these measures call for special data safeguards for underage users online as well as blanket prohibitions on children under certain ages using social media. Maryland's measure passed with unanimous votes in its house and senate. Continue reading...
‘They even got a real jetpack in there!’: Todd Howard and Jonathan Nolan on Fallout
The director of the Fallout TV series and the director of the modern Fallout video games sit down together to talk about the audacity of video-game storytelling and hope in a post-apocalyptic wastelandIf you had asked director Jonathan Nolan what his favourite film of the year was in the late 00s, more often than not he would have given you the name of a video game instead. Having grown up with the entire history of the medium - I started playing Pong with my brother Chris many, many years ago - that was when games started to take on this level of audacity in their storytelling, their tone, the things they were doing," he says. That's what I felt with [2008's] Fallout 3: the audacity. Frankly I wasn't feeling that in the film and television business at that time."Nolan, who has just finished directing the first series of Amazon Prime's Fallout TV show, is sitting next to Todd Howard, the video-game director who led development on Fallout 3 and 4, talking to me a few hours before the premiere of the first two episodes. It is evident within minutes that Nolan understands games almost as well as Todd does. He says he's drawn to games where your options are open, you decide who you want to be and your decisions have an effect on the world around you: in other words, a game like Todd Howard's. The two come across like old friends, easy in each other's company, and enthusiastic about each other's work. Continue reading...
Tesla to cut 14,000 jobs as Elon Musk aims to make carmaker ‘lean and hungry’
Billionaire says there is nothing I hate more' than cutting staff as more than 10% of workforce to be affected
Apple loses mantle as world’s biggest phone seller to Samsung as China sales drop
South Korean firm regains pole position amid biggest drop in iPhone sales since Covid-19 lockdownsApple has lost its spot as the world's biggest mobile phone seller after a steep sales drop as South Korean rival Samsung retook the lead in the global market share.Samsung had been the biggest seller of mobile phones for 12 years until the end of 2023, when sales of Apple's iPhone models overtook it. Continue reading...
Now Play This 2024 review – the eccentricity is the point
Somerset House, London
How Neopets’ nostalgic revival tripled users in six months
An icon of millennials' childhoods languished for nearly two decades. Now it's attempting a comeback - banking on the fact that it hasn't changed at allIn the early 2000s, Olivia Packenham would get home from school, listen to the familiar sound of the dial up tone as her family computer connected to the internet, and navigate her AOL browser to the virtual gaming world of Neopets.Starting at the age of eight, Packenham played for years before losing interest when she was in high school. But in December 2023, after a nearly 15-year hiatus, she logged back on to neopets.com - and found the pets she had raised as a child waiting for her. Her favorite, a Bruce" (the Neopets version of a penguin) is more than 21 years old now. Continue reading...
One thing stops us from prising teens from their phones: peer pressure | Martha Gill
The rise in mental health problems in young people should force politicians to actAcross the rich world, a problem emerges. Children are spending more time hunched over iPhones working on their personal brands and less time building mud huts in the woods with their friends. Social stakes have got higher: the right post, message, or photo cangive you a huge blast of approval; one mis-step could make you an outcast.Playful and elastic real-life interactions have been replaced by unforgiving virtual hierarchies, in which your position is precisely quantified, recorded and made tomatter more. Continue reading...
Wafer-thin, stretchy and strong as steel: could ‘miracle’ material graphene finally transform our world?
The material, discovered in 2004, was meant to be revolutionary. But only now is the technology coming of ageTwenty years ago, scientists announced they had created a new miracle material that was going to transform our lives. They called it graphene.Consisting of a single layer of carbon atoms arranged in a hexagonal pattern, it is one of the strongest materials ever made and, for good measure, it is a better conductor of electricity and heat than copper. Continue reading...
From boom to burst, the AI bubble is only heading in one direction | John Naughton
No one should be surprised that artificial intelligence is following a well-worn and entirely predictable financial arcAre we really in an AI bubble," asked a reader of last month's column about the apparently unstoppable rise of Nvidia, and how would we know?" Good question, so I asked an AI about it and was pointed to Investopedia, which is written by humans who know about this stuff. It told me that a bubble goes through five stages - rather as Elisabeth Kubler-Ross said people do with grief. For investment bubbles, the five stages are displacement, boom, euphoria, profit-taking and panic. So let's see how this maps on to our experience so far with AI.First, displacement. That's easy: it was ChatGPT wot dunnit. When it appeared on 30 November 2022, the world went, well, apeshit. So, everybody realised, this was what all the muttering surrounding AI was about! And people were bewitched by the discovery that you could converse with a machine and it would talk (well, write) back to you in coherent sentences. It was like the moment in the spring of 1993 when people saw Mosaic, the first proper web browser, and suddenly the penny dropped: so this was what that internet" thingy was for. And then Netscape had its initial public offering in August 1995, when the stock went stratospheric and the first internet bubble started to inflate. Continue reading...
Who TF Did I Marry captivated millions. What made the TikTok series so relatable? | Lottie J Joiner
Reesa Teesa chronicled how she met, dated, married and divorced' a pathological liar', leaving viewers obsessedApril Reign watched all 50 parts of the viral TikTok series, Who TF Did I Marry?Reign, creator of the 2015 viral social media campaign, #OscarSoWhite, was among the millions and counting who tuned in to see Reesa Teesa, whose real name is Tareasa Johnson, talk about how she met, dated, married and divorced" a man who she described as a real pathological liar". Continue reading...
‘Smell is really important for social communication’: how technology is ruining our senses
Scientists say an overreliance on sight and sound is having a detrimental effect on people's wellbeing and that our devices should deliver a multisensory experienceWait a minute, wait a minute. You ain't heard nothing yet." So went the first line of audible dialogue in a feature film, 1927's The Jazz Singer. It was one of the first times that mass media had conveyed the sight and sound of a scene together, and the audience was enthralled.There have been improvements since: black and white has become colour, frame rates and resolutions have increased and sound quality has improved, but the media we consume still caters overwhelmingly, if not exclusively, to our eyes and ears. Continue reading...
‘The lone hand prompts us to ask what is going on behind the curtain’: Callie Eh’s best phone picture
The photographer was in Nepal when she happened upon a wedding ceremony and a once-in-a-lifetime imageJoyful, dancing wedding guests were following aceremonial procession and car through the streets ofBhaktapur, Nepal, when Callie Eh happened upon them. The Malaysian photographer was in the country for aphotography workshop.I try to attend themevery year or so," says Eh, who now lives in Switzerland. I can improve on existing skills and learn new ones, meet other photographers and exchange ideas." Continue reading...
House votes to reapprove law allowing warrantless surveillance of US citizens
Fisa allows for monitoring of foreign communications, as well as collection of citizens' messages and callsHouse lawmakers voted on Friday to reauthorize section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or Fisa, including a key measure that allows for warrantless surveillance of Americans. The controversial law allows for far-reaching monitoring of foreign communications, but has also led to the collection of US citizens' messages and phone calls.Lawmakers voted 273-147 to approve the law, which the Biden administration has for years backed as an important counterterrorism tool. An amendment that would have required authorities seek a warrant failed, in a tied 212-212 vote across party lines. Continue reading...
Suno AI can generate power ballads about coffee – and jingles for the Guardian. But will it hurt musicians?
Plug in some prompts and the ChatGPT for music' whips up a song in seconds - if you don't mind slightly silly lyricsHeralded as the ChatGPT for music, Suno AI is the latest iteration of generative artificial intelligence to flood social feeds, wowing users with its (ahem) lyrical prowess.Plug in the musical style you want, a genre and a prompt for lyrics and Suno can spit out a full song for you in a matter of seconds.Coffee, you're my fuel for the soul (oh-oh)
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