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Updated 2024-11-21 08:00
‘A fork in the road’: laundry-sorting robot spurs AI hopes and fears at Europe’s biggest tech event
Humanoid called Digit fuelled boosterism at Web Summit, but also raised concerns about jobs, safety and climateThis year's Web Summit, in Lisbon, was all about artificial intelligence - and a robot sorting laundry.Digit, a humanoid built by the US firm Agility Robotics, demonstrated how far AI has come in a few years by responding to voice commands - filtered through Google's Gemini AI model - to sift through a pile of coloured T-shirts and place them in a basket. Continue reading...
The images of Spain’s floods weren’t created by AI. The trouble is, people think they were
The rapid growth of AI slop' - content created by artificial tools - is starting to warp our perception of what is, or could be, realMy eye was caught by a striking photograph in the most recent edition of Charles Arthur's Substack newsletter Social Warming. It shows a narrow street in the aftermath of the rain bomb" that devastated the region of Valencia in Spain. A year's worth of rain fell in a single day, and in some towns more than 490 litres a square metre fell in eight hours. Water is very heavy, so if there's a gradient it will flow downhill with the kind of force that can pick up a heavy SUV and toss it around like a toy. And if it channels down a narrow urban street, it will throw parked cars around like King Kong in a bad mood.The photograph in Arthur's article showed what had happened in a particular street. Taken with a telephoto lens from an upper storey of a building, it showed a chaotic and almost surreal scene: about 70 vehicles of all sizes jumbled up and scattered at crazy angles along the length of the street. Continue reading...
Elwood Edwards, voice of AOL ‘You’ve got mail’ greeting, dies aged 74
Edwards taped message that became catchphrase and served as title of 1998 film starring Tom Hanks and Meg RyanElwood Edwards, who voiced AOL's You've got mail" greeting, has died, aged 74.Edwards died on Tuesday at his home in New Bern, North Carolina, his daughter Heather said. The cause was complications from a stroke late last year, she added. Continue reading...
At 36 years old, I am once again obsessed with Pokémon cards – this time on my phone
The new smartphone version of the trading card game has captured me as effectively as a Master Ball - but I'm enjoying this daily nostalgia shotAny millennial - and any parent - will be familiar with Pokemon cards, newsagent pester-power mainstays since the turn of the century. Contained within shiny metallic plastic packaging are critter-adorned trading cards of varying rarity, from a humble Squirtle to a special-edition illustrated Snorlax. There have been a few attempts to bring these lucrative illustrated cards (and the competitive battling game that you can play with them) to smartphones, but until now, they've all been poorly received. Pokemon Trading Card Game Pocket, released last week, is by some distance the best yet. It has truly gotten its hooks into me.Here, for the first time since Pokemon Trading Card Game on the Game Boy Color in 1998, we have a decent virtual version of the incredibly popular card game. This is good news, because it's very entertaining, but also bad news, because it is worrisomely compelling. I've played for at least couple of hours every day this week, though I'm starting to run out of things to do now. I probably won't let my children play it, because if I am rendered this powerless by the prospect of shiny Charizards, they surely have no hope. Continue reading...
Elon Musk sued over $1m-a-day election giveaway
Complaint alleges Musk's America Pac deceived voters by falsely claiming prize winners would be chosen at random
Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery review – this frustrating documentary feels like a digital Agatha Christie tale
There are so many deep questions to tackle about the crypto-currency, yet this programme launches into a wild goose chase after its founder. It's impressively rigorous - but feels like a waste of timeBy the end of Money Electric's 100 minutes I understand fractionally more about bitcoin and the blockchain. This is no mean feat. I only downloaded my first app in 2021 and this is no word of a lie. You will, however, have to take my word about my increased knowledge of the digital currency because it is still nowhere near enough to put into words.Money Electric has plentiful graphics that try to make the abstract tangible enough for the non-cryptographically minded among us to grasp what I still want to call computer shenanigans" and they do help - but only to the extent that I now feel the sense of the blockchain and its strings and keys and coins and what not. Continue reading...
Meta to let US national security agencies and defense contractors use Llama AI
Company typically prohibits its use for military, warfare, nuclear industries or applications, [and] espionage'Meta announced Monday that it would allow US national security agencies and defense contractors to use its open-source artificial intelligence model, Llama. The announcement came days after Reuters reported an older version of Llama had been used by researchers to develop defense applications for the military wing of the Chinese government.Meta's policies typically prohibit the use of its open-source large language model for military, warfare, nuclear industries or applications, [and] espionage". The company is making an exception for US agencies and contractors as well as similar national security agencies in the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, according to Bloomberg. Continue reading...
TechScape: X reaches its final form: Elon Musk has bent it to his will
The evolution of Musk's X network is complete; why Reddit is profitable; and niche Halloween costumes Don't get TechScape delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereHello, and welcome to TechScape. I'm Blake Montgomery, technology news editor at Guardian US. Today in the newsletter: X's final form, learnings from a packed week of earnings, and niche online Halloween costumes. Thank you for joining me.With the US election, X's transformation into Elon Musk's weapon reaches its peak. He has succeeded in bending his social network to his will. Continue reading...
Keir Starmer says media firms should have control of output used in AI
PM says content creators must be paid and vows to ensure technology does not begin to chip away' at press freedomsKeir Starmer has said media outlets should have control over - and be paid for - their work as artificial intelligence technology transforms the economy and the UK.Calling journalism the lifeblood of democracy", the prime minister vowed to champion press freedoms" and ensure that the growing power of digital technology does not begin to chip away" at the ability of journalists and publishers to uphold democratic values. Continue reading...
Tesla shares jump on third-quarter earnings even as expected revenue is lower
After two slow quarters, Elon Musk's electric-vehicle maker reports higher-than-expected earnings per shareTesla shares saw a 12% jump after the company reported its third-quarter earnings on Wednesday. The electric-car manufacturer was able to bounce back from a tough second quarter, beating Wall Street expectations for earnings per share. The company reported an earnings-per-share of $0.72, surpassing investors' projection of $0.60.At the end of the second quarter, Tesla's chief executive, Elon Musk, said the nearly 50% drop in profits was temporary and due to difficulty competing with cheaper or price-slashed electric vehicles by rival companies such as BYD. We don't see this as a long-term issue," Musk said in July, but really fairly short term." Continue reading...
New iMessage feature allows children to report nudity to Apple
Change is part of a beta release in Australia that expands on existing detection defaulted for under-13 usersApple is introducing a new feature to iMessage in Australia that will allow children to report nude images and video being sent to them directly to the company, which could then report the messages to police.The change comes as part of Thursday's beta releases of the new versions of Apple's operating systems for Australian users. It is an extension of communications safety measures that have been turned on by default since iOS 17 for Apple users under 13 but are available to all users. Under the existing safety features, an iPhone automatically detects images and videos that contain nudity children might receive or attempt to send in iMessage, AirDrop, FaceTime and Photos. The detection happens on devices to protect privacy. Continue reading...
Norway to increase minimum age limit on social media to 15 to protect children
Prime minister wants young people to be shielded from power of the algorithm'Norway is to enforce a strict minimum age limit on social media of 15 as the government ramped up its campaign against tech companies it says are pitted against small children's brains".The Norwegian prime minister, Jonas Gahr Store, conceded it would be an uphill battle" but said politicians must intervene to protect children from the power of the algorithms". Continue reading...
Claude AI tool can now carry out jobs like filling forms and booking trips, says creator
Anthropic says model is able to carry out computer tasks - as fears mount such technology will replace workersAn artificial intelligence startup backed by Amazon and Google says it has created an AI agent that can carry out tasks on the computer such as moving a mouse cursor and typing text.US company Anthropic said its AI model, called Claude, could now perform computing tasks including filling out forms, planning an outing and building a website. Continue reading...
Fear the Spotlight review – engrossing, eerie and unexpectedly thought-provoking horror
PC, PS4/5, Nintendo Switch, Xbox; Cozy Game Pals/Blumhouse Games
Apple iPad mini A17 Pro review: the best small tablet gets faster
Chip upgrade breathes new life into compact slate ready for AI and better accessories while still in a class of its ownApple's premium tiny tablet gets a speed boost for 2024 with support for new accessories and imminent AI features, while providing the full modern iPad experience in a compact package.The revamped design of the iPad mini in 2021 was excellent so it is no surprise that Apple has kept it mostly the same with internal changes and a tweak to the side to support new accessories. But while it may be small in stature, the new iPad mini remains pricey, costing from 499 (599/$499/A$799), placing it in between the 329 base-model iPad and the 599 11in iPad Air.Screen: 8.9in 2266x1488 LCD display (326ppi)Processor: Apple A17 ProRAM: 8GBStorage: 128, 256 or 512GBOperating system: iPadOS 18Camera: 12MP rear and selfie camerasConnectivity: wifi 6E (5G optional eSim-only), Bluetooth 5.3, USB-C, Touch IDDimensions: 195.4 x 134.8 x 6.3mmWeight: 293g (4G version: 297g) Continue reading...
Child-safety case against Meta and CEO Mark Zuckerberg dismissed
Judge rules plaintiff, Matt Eisner, failed to show alleged inadequate disclosures hurt shareholdersMeta Platforms and its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, won the dismissal of a lawsuit claiming they misled shareholders in Meta's proxy statement about their ability to ensure the safety of children who use Facebook and Instagram.In a decision on Tuesday, the US district judge Charles Breyer in San Francisco said the plaintiff, Matt Eisner, failed to show that shareholders suffered economic losses from Meta's alleged inadequate disclosures. Continue reading...
Elon Musk’s pro-Trump Pac pouring millions into Facebook ads instead of X
America Pac is targeting users interested in the Boy Scouts of America, Kelsey Grammer, Kid Rock and Joe RoganElon Musk's Pac is spending far more on ads on Facebook and YouTube than on X, Musk's own social network.America Pac paid $201,000 to run dozens of ads on X, formerly Twitter, during the past three months. However, it spent $3m on thousands of advertisements on Facebook and Instagram in roughly the same time period. Musk founded the pro-Donald Trump Pac in July and has funded it to the tune of $75m, according to filings with the Federal Election Commission. Continue reading...
Thom Yorke and Julianne Moore join thousands of creatives in AI warning
Statement comes as tech firms try to use creative professionals' work to train AI modelsAbba's Bjorn Ulvaeus, the actor Julianne Moore and the Radiohead singer Thom Yorke are among 10,500 signatories of a statement from the creative industries warning artificial intelligence companies that unlicensed use of their work is a major, unjust threat" to artists' livelihoods.The statement comes amid legal battles between creative professionals and tech firms over the use of their work to train AI models such as ChatGPT and claims that using their intellectual property without permission is a breach of copyright. Continue reading...
X admits ‘error’ led to reinstatement of key suspect in Jamal Khashoggi murder
Saud al-Qahtani was first suspended before Elon Musk took over what was then Twitter, and was suspended again today after Guardian reportA key Saudi suspect in the murder of US-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi in 2018 had his account reinstated on X, the social media company controlled by Elon Musk, after it was permanently suspended under the company's previous owner.Saud al-Qahtani, a onetime key adviser to Mohammed bin Salman, had direct involvement" in the murder of Khashoggi, according to a US intelligence assessment released by the Biden administration in 2021. Continue reading...
‘I am valued here’: the extraordinary film that recreates a disabled boy’s rich digital life
Mats Steen had muscular dystrophy and died very young. But a touching new documentary has used animation and his own posts to reveal the fulfilling gaming life he led in World of Warcraft - right down to his first kissThe night after their son Mats died aged just 25, Trude and Robert Steen sat on the sofa in their living room in Oslo with their daughter Mia. They couldn't sleep. Everything was a blur," remembers Trude of that day 10 years ago. Then Robert said, Maybe we should reach out to Mats' friends in World of Warcraft.'"Mats was born with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a progressive condition that causes the muscles to weaken gradually. He was diagnosed aged four and started using a wheelchair at 10. By the end of his life, Mats could only move his fingers, and required a tube to clear his throat every 15 minutes. As he became increasingly disabled, he spent more time gaming: 20,000 hours in his last decade (about the same as if it were a full-time job). Continue reading...
‘I wanted both sides of the business to be as intimate as being in bed’: tech entrepreneur William Reeve
The co-founder of Secret Escapes and LoveFilm is now offering tech solutions to help out tenants and landlordsWilliam Reeve is what he terms a classic accidental landlord". The serial entrepreneur didn't intend to rent out his flat in central London, but had to give it up soon after gaining his first rung on the property ladder. I got married while I was there and, much as I thought it was the perfect place, it turns out that some compromise was required," he says.Instead of keeping it as a pied-a-terre, the flat now offers Reeve an insight into the needs of his customers at online platform Goodlord, which is designed to help lettings agents, landlords and tenants slash the admin time spent on renting. Continue reading...
Meta to use facial recognition technology in fight against celebrity investment scam ads
Social media company says it has seen promising results' in detecting the scam ads, which have included deepfake images of Gina Rinehart and Guy Sebastian
Rupert Murdoch’s Dow Jones and New York Post sue AI firm for ‘illegal copying’
Publishers file suit against Perplexity AI, accusing startup of brazen scheme' and freeriding on valuable content'The media baron Rupert Murdoch's Dow Jones and the New York Post filed a lawsuit against Perplexity AI on Monday, claiming the artificial intelligence startup engages in a massive amount of illegal copying" of their copyrighted work.The lawsuit is the latest salvo in a bitter ongoing battle between publishers and tech companies over how the latter may use copyrighted content without authorization to build and operate their AI systems. Continue reading...
Musk steers X disputes to conservative Texas courts in service terms update
Although choosing a venue is not uncommon, northern district stands out because it's not where X is locatedElon Musk's X has updated its terms of service to steer any disputes from users of the social media platform formerly known as Twitter to a federal court in Texas whose judges frequently deliver victories to conservative litigants in political cases.New terms of service that will take effect on 15 November specify that any lawsuits against X by users must be exclusively filed in the US district court for the northern district of Texas or state courts in Tarrant county, Texas. Continue reading...
AI mediation tool may help reduce culture war rifts, say researchers
System built by Google DeepMind team takes individual views and generates a set of group statementsArtificial intelligence could help reduce some of the most contentious culture war divisions through a mediation process, researchers claim.Experts say a system that can create group statements that reflect majority and minority views is able to help people find common ground. Continue reading...
Hike in capital gains tax will spark tech exodus from UK, investor says
Harry Stebbings says tax rules make Britain a bad place to do business' as he warns of entrepreneurs leavingTech entrepreneurs will leave the UK en masse" if the chancellor announces a significant increase in capital gains tax at this month's budget, according to a leading industry investor.Harry Stebbings, a British podcaster turned investor who raised a $400m (310m) fund this week, said the UK was a bad place to do business" because of its tax environment. Continue reading...
Meta fires staff for ‘using free meal vouchers to buy household goods’
Facebook and Instagram owner reportedly dismisses about 24 workers for abusing $25 meal credit systemMeta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, has reportedly fired about 24 staff at its Los Angeles offices for using their $25 (19) meal credits to buy items such as toothpaste, laundry detergent and wine glasses.The tech firm, which is worth 1.2tn and also owns the messaging platform WhatsApp, is said to have dismissed workers last week after an investigation discovered staff had been abusing the system, including sending food home when they were not in the office. Continue reading...
iPhone 16 review: more buttons and speed for Apple’s standard phone
Smallest and cheapest new model plays catchup to Pro iPhones with strong battery life but familiar designApple's latest iPhone bucks the trend of buttons vanishing from phones, gaining not one but two new controls on the outside, plus a big jump in chip performance and two-day battery life on the inside.The standard iPhone 16 is Apple's smallest and lowest-priced handset in the new 16 series, costing from 799 (959/$799/A$1,399) sitting below the bigger and more expensive 16 Plus and 16 Pro models.Screen: 6.1in Super Retina XDR (OLED) (460ppi)Processor: Apple A18RAM: 8GBStorage: 128, 256 or 512GBOperating system: iOS 18Camera: 48MP main + 12MP UW; 12MP front-facingConnectivity: 5G, wifi 7, NFC, Bluetooth 5.3, Thread, USB-C, Satellite, UWB and GNSSWater resistance: IP68 (6 metres for 30 mins)Dimensions: 147.6 x 71.6 x 7.8mmWeight: 170g Continue reading...
Elon Musk’s SpaceX accuses California of political bias over launch limits
Company sues after coastal commission cited CEO's spread of misinformation on X in rejecting company's proposalElon Musk's SpaceX has sued a California commission in federal court, accusing it of political bias in its decision to block the space venture company from increasing the number of rockets it launches from a US airbase in the state. The commission cited Musk's penchant for spreading misinformation on his social network Twitter/X in a meeting where commissioners rejected the company's proposal.SpaceX sued the California coastal commission on Tuesday in Los Angeles, seeking an order that would bar the agency from regulating the company's workhorse Falcon 9 rocket launch program at Vandenberg space force base in Santa Barbara. Continue reading...
‘It’s not me, it’s just my face’: the models who found their likenesses had been used in AI propaganda
London-based Synthesia's technology was employed to make deepfake videos for authoritarian regimesThe well-groomed young man dressed in a crisp, blue shirt speaking with a soft American accent seems an unlikely supporter of the junta leader of the west African state of Burkina Faso.We must support ... President Ibrahim Traore ... Homeland or death we shall overcome!" he says in a video that began circulating in early 2023 on Telegram. It was just a few months after the dictator had come to power via a military coup. Continue reading...
Pushing Buttons: With the safety of Roblox under scrutiny, how worried should parents be?
Millions of children play on this platform accused of having reams of troubling content and users, but there are hundreds of better alternatives that serve kids' curious minds Don't get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereRight before last week's newsletter went out, a short-selling firm called Hindenburg Research published an extremely critical report on Roblox. In it they accused the publicly traded company of inflating its metrics (and thereby its valuation) and, more worryingly for the parents of the millions of children who use Roblox, also called it a pedophile hellscape". The report alleges some hair-raising discoveries within the game. The researchers found chatrooms of people purporting to trade images and videos of children, and users claiming to be children and teens offering such material in exchange for Robux, the in-game currency. Roblox strongly rejects the claims that Hindenburg made in its report.Roblox, for those unfamiliar with the title, is not so much a game as a platform (or, as its corporate communications people would like you to think of it, a metaverse). It claims to have 80 million daily users (a number Hindenburg says is inflated). You log in, customise your avatar, and from there you can jump into thousands of different experiences" created by other users - from role-play cities to pizza-delivery mini games to cops-and-robbers games to, unfortunately, much less savoury things like Public Bathroom Simulator (which the creator said they made when they were 12 before I was aware bad people even existed"). Because games on Roblox are created by players, the site must be constantly moderated. The company's moderation team deals with a tsunami of content ever day. Continue reading...
Elon Musk gave $75m to his pro-Trump group in three months
America Pac said to be doing bulk of Trump's voter turnout work in battleground states, which may give Musk leverageElon Musk donated roughly $75m over the last three months to America Pac, the political action committee he founded that is supporting Donald Trump's 2024 presidential campaign, as he seeks to gain an outsized influence in Republican politics and a possible second Trump administration.Filings submitted by America Pac on Tuesday to the Federal Election Commission showed Musk donated $15m in July, $30m in August and another $30m in September. Musk remains the political action committee's only donor. Continue reading...
Californians want controls on AI. Why did Gavin Newsom veto an AI safety bill? | Garrison Lovely
AI lobbyists are fighting regulation because they know voters of both parties do not trust the sector to police itselfGovernor Gavin Newsom of California recently killed SB1047, a first-of-its-kind artificial intelligence safety bill, arguing that its focus on only the largest AI models leaves out smaller ones that can also be risky. Instead, he says, we should pass comprehensive regulations on the technology.If this doesn't sound quite right to you, you're not alone.Garrison Lovely (@GarrisonLovely) is a journalist who has contributed to The Nation, Jacobin, the New York Times, BBC Future, The Verge, Time, Vox, and elsewhere. He writes The Obsolete Newsletter" and is the author of a forthcoming book on the economics and geopolitics of the race to build machine superintelligence Continue reading...
Is it worse to have no climate solutions – or to have them but refuse to use them? | Rebecca Solnit
Tech barons are forever predicting some amazing new technology to fix the climate crisis. Yet fixes already existThere are so many ways to fiddle while Rome burns, or as this season's weather would have it, gets torn apart by hurricanes and tornadoes and also goes underwater - and, in other places, burns. One particularly pernicious way comes from the men in love with big tech, who are forever insisting that we need some amazing new technology to solve our problems, be it geoengineering, carbon sequestration or fusion - but wait, it gets worse.At an artificial intelligence conference in Washington DC, the former Google CEO Eric Schmidt recently claimed that [w]e're not going to hit the climate goals anyway because we're not organized to do it" and that we should just plunge ahead with AI, which is so huge an energy hog it's prompted a number of tech companies to abandon their climate goals. Schmidt then threw out the farfetched notion that we should go all in on AI because maybe AI will somehow, maybe, eventually know how to solve" climate, saying: I'd rather bet on AI solving the problem than constraining it."Rebecca Solnit is a Guardian US columnist. She is the author of Orwell's Roses and co-editor with Thelma Young Lutunatabua of the climate anthology Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility Continue reading...
Google to buy nuclear power for AI datacentres in ‘world first’ deal
Tech company orders six or seven small nuclear reactors from California's Kairos Power
Ofcom urged to act after US firm claims Roblox is ‘paedophile hellscape’
Campaigners say watchdog must ensure Online Safety Act is rigorous enough, after allegations about gaming platformChild safety campaigners have urged the UK communications watchdog to make a step-change" in its implementation of new online laws after a video game firm was accused of making its platform an X-rated paedophile hellscape".Roblox, a gaming platform with 80 million daily users, was accused of lax safety controls last week by a US investment firm. Continue reading...
Return of the landline: why gen Z – and scam artists – love old-fashioned phones
80% of elderly people have landlines, compared with just 50% of 18- to 29-year-olds. Will the joy of a great conversation lead to a revival?Name: Landlines.Age: 148 years old. Continue reading...
Sleep perfectionists: the exhausting rise of orthosomnia
The UK sleep-tracker industry is estimated to be worth 270m a year - and forecast to double by 2030. Could all this data be making our insomnia worse?The other day, I was plodding away on the treadmill at the gym when I overheard two blokes chatting.I had a great night last night," said one. Continue reading...
The anonymous, anything-goes forum at the heart of the Pelicot rape case
Before it was shut down this year, the illicit and unmoderated chat site Coco had been implicated in killings, child sexual abuse and homophobic attacksThe trial of a 71-year-old man has gripped France and horrified the world after he admitted to repeatedly drugging his wife and, over the course of decades, soliciting dozens of men online to rape her while she was unconscious. Dominique Pelicot's confessions as well as the public bravery of his wife Gisele have forced a nationwide reckoning over sexual assault and the double lives people lead through the internet.As a court in Avignon has heard Pelicot's case and allegations against 50 other defendants over the last several weeks, a pattern has emerged of men who lived publicly upstanding lives while allegedly engaging in abhorrent acts online and in private. As the men accused of mass rape have taken the stand, they have detailed how Pelicot found them and coordinated his abuse on an illicit chat forum called Coco. Continue reading...
Tesla’s value drops $60bn after investors fail to hail self-driving ‘Cybercab’
Analysts criticise lack of detail about the robotaxi' showcased by CEO Elon Musk
‘They don’t just fall out of trees’: Nobel awards highlight Britain’s AI pedigree
Recognition for Demis Hassabis and Geoffrey Hinton marks moment when important ingredients came togetherIt was more than even the most ardent advocates expected. After all the demonstrations of superhuman prowess, and the debates over whether the technology was humanity's best invention yet or its surest route to self-destruction, artificial intelligence landed a Nobel prize this week. And then it landed another.First came the physics prize. The American John Hopfield and the British-Canadian Geoffrey Hinton won for foundational work on artificial neural networks, the computational architecture that underpins modern AI such as ChatGPT. Then came the chemistry prize, with half handed to Demis Hassabis and John Jumper at Google DeepMind. Their AlphaFold program solved a decades-long scientific challenge by predicting the structure of all life's proteins. Continue reading...
Elon Musk unveils Tesla Cybercab self-driving robotaxi
Billionaire says autonomous car expected before 2027' will have a pricetag of less than US$30,000, with a Robovan' that can carry 20 people to followTesla CEO Elon Musk has unveiled the company's robotaxi, Cybercab, promising it will cost less than US$30,000, and announced plans to bring autonomous driving to its Model 3 and Model Y cars in California and Texas by next year.At the much-anticipated We, Robot event hosted at Warner Bros. Studios in Burbank, California, the billionaire arrived in the Cybercab in his trademark black leather jacket, accompanied by a man dressed in a space suit. Human-like robots mingled in the crowd, danced and served drinks to those gathered for the party. Continue reading...
iPhone 16 Pro review: Apple levels up its smaller ‘pro’ phone
Bigger screen, new camera control button, 5x optical zoom and faster chips squeeze flagship features into smaller frameApple has upgraded the iPhone 16 Pro by adding the 5x zoom camera from the big Pro Max line, making size its main differentiator and turning the smaller pro" into an instant candidate for the best small smartphone going.The 16 Pro costs the same - 999 (1,199/$999/A$1,799) - as last year's model, and sits between the 1,199 16 Pro Max and the vanilla iPhone 16, which starts at 799. That also puts it in direct competition with Google's 999 Pixel 9 Pro, which has the same-size screen.Screen: 6.3in Super Retina XDR (120Hz OLED) (460ppi)Processor: Apple A18 ProRAM: 8GBStorage: 128, 256, 512GB or 1TBOperating system: iOS 17Camera: 48MP main, 48MP UW and 12MP 5x zoom, 12MP front-facing cameraConnectivity: 5G, wifi 7, NFC, Bluetooth 5.3, Thread, USB-C, Satellite, UWB and GNSSWater resistance: IP68 (6 metres for 30 mins)Dimensions: 149.6 x 71.5 x 8.25mmWeight: 199g Continue reading...
Meta announces new AI model that can generate video with sound
Facebook owner claims Movie Gen can create realistic-seeming video and audio clips that rival competitors'Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, announced on Friday it had built a new artificial intelligence model called Movie Gen that can create realistic-seeming video and audio clips in response to user prompts, claiming it can rival tools from leading media generation startups like OpenAI and ElevenLabs.Samples of Movie Gen's creations provided by Meta showed videos of animals swimming and surfing, as well as clips using people's real photos to depict them performing actions like painting on a canvas. Continue reading...
Far-right extremists flee from Telegram to SimpleX over privacy features
App that doesn't require users' emails or phone numbers secured over $1m in funding with help from Jack DorseySome far-right extremists have fled Telegram for a new haven: SimpleX, a messaging service that just secured over $1m in funding with the help of Jack Dorsey, once the CEO of Twitter, now known as X.The migration from Telegram began after the app's founder and chief executive, Pavel Durov, announced a crackdown on illegal content and cooperation with law enforcement requests. Just weeks ago, Durov was arrested in France on a litany of charges that allege Telegram helped spread child sexual abuse material and fuelled criminal activities among its users. Continue reading...
Former Nintendo factory in Kyoto opens as nostalgia-fuelled gaming museum
Museum features consoles from 1983's Famicom to 2017's Switch, as well as honouring Nintendo's pre-video-game eraTraditionally, visitors to Kyoto in October come for momijigari, the turning of the autumn leaves in the city's picturesque parks. This autumn, however, there is a new draw: a Nintendo museum.The new attraction, which opens on Wednesday, is best described as a chapel of video game nostalgia. Upstairs, Nintendo's many video game consoles, from 1983's Famicom through 1996's Nintendo 64 to 2017's Switch, are displayed reverently alongside their most famous games. On the back wall, visitors can also peer at toys, playing cards and other artefacts from the Japanese company's pre-video-game history, stretching back to its founding as a hanafuda playing card manufacturer in 1889. Downstairs, there are interactive exhibits with comically gigantic controllers and floor-projected playing cards. Continue reading...
More than 9,000 scam Facebook pages deleted after Australians lose $43.4m to celebrity deepfakes
Meta's new Fraud Intelligence Reciprocal Exchange (Fire) tool to work with seven banks in a bid to tackle scams
Dump, post, repeat: how Instagram became a social media junkyard
Our photo dumps used to be an aesthetic disruption. Now we're just bending to the app's willLast year, I took 658 photos during my four-day trip to Venice. Fifteen years ago, I would have posted every single one of them to Facebook. And as I waited the three hours for them to upload, I would have opened another tab to look through all 500 photos in my second cousin's friend's FLORIDA 09 Facebook album, which would have included 48 shots of the same sunset and 16 of a chip flavor she didn't have back at home.Nowadays, with Instagram as our primary photo-sharing method, that packet of chips would end up on slide seven of what my second cousin's friend would call a dump: a retrospective of her summer compacted into a carousel of artfully artless images. Continue reading...
‘My mother never sat idle. My daughter is equally energetic’: Olga Ivanova’s best phone picture
The Russian photographer sees this as a portrait of a family where everyone makes room for one anotherThe two main characters in this image, the Russian photographer Olga Ivanova says, are her mother, Zinaida, andIvanova's seven-year-old daughter, Maria. Ivanova and her daughter were visiting Zinaida at her house inNizhny Novgorod, Russia, for her 62nd birthday when this photo was taken. Having trained in rhythmic gymnastics since she was three, Maria was performing aroutine for her grandmother, who wastaking pictures onher phone and reading celebratory text messages from friends.My mother has always had a desire for self-improvement and never sat idle; she ran her own business foryears, and even now in retirement she loves Nordic walking and travel, especially to learn about new cultures and customs. My daughter is equally energetic. She spends a lot of time training, rejoicing at every success, and is happy to show off her skills." The trio were joined by Ivanova's son, Roman, who can beseen watching in thewindow. Continue reading...
Norway: electric cars outnumber petrol for first time in ‘historic milestone’
Nordic country, paradoxically a major oil producer, has set target for all new cars sold to be zero emissionElectric cars now outnumber petrol cars in Norway for the first time, an industry organisation has said, a world first that puts the country on track towards taking fossil fuel vehicles off the road.Of the 2.8m private cars registered in the Nordic country, 754,303 are all-electric, against 753,905 that run on petrol, the Norwegian road federation (OFV) said in a statement. Continue reading...
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