Fourth quarter sees revenues from services such as iCloud and Apple Music hit all-time high of $10bnApple, the world’s first company to be valued at $1 trillion, continues to grow at speed and has announced a double-digit increase in revenue.Slightly exceeding projected revenues, with $62.9bn, the tech giant is up roughly 20% over last year. Continue reading...
Attacker tried to sell certain materials on the internet but shipbuilder insists there is no evidence of theft of national security informationDefence shipbuilder Austal’s Australian business has been hit with a data breach and extortion attempt but insists there is no evidence of theft of national security information.Some staff email addresses and mobile phone numbers were accessed in the breach. The attacker tried to sell certain materials on the internet and engage in extortion. However, Austal said the company does not intend to respond to such threats. Continue reading...
by Matthew Weaver and Alex Hern in London, Victoria B on (#421AE)
Thousands of employees from Tokyo to California stage demonstrations targeting workplace cultureThousands of Google staff across the world have staged a series of walkouts in protest at claims of sexual harassment, gender inequality and systemic racism.Demonstrations at the company’s offices around the world began at 11.10am in Tokyo and took place at the same time in other time zones. Continue reading...
Hilary wants to upgrade to a 15.6in laptop with a 256GB SSD, but they are too expensive. Would a smaller drive be OK?I need to replace an old 15.6in Acer Aspire laptop with a Core i3 processor. I want to go down the SSD route, but do I need 128GB or 256GB? I use a laptop for documents, photos, emails, Facebook etc, and some Excel stuff, hence the need for Microsoft Office. No gaming.My local computer shop has an HP 250 G6 laptop with a Core i5-7200U, 4GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD, for £425, which they said they could upgrade to 256GB in the future if needed. I’ve also looked at a Lenovo IdeaPad 330S with a Core i5-8250U, 8GB of RAM and 256GB SSD for £579, which seems way too expensive for what I need.The laptop industry is slowly changing from PCs with traditional hard disk drives (HDDs) to ones with chip-based solid-state drives (SSDs). The problem, as you have found, is the cost. SSDs are more responsive, but they are also much more expensive per gigabyte of storage space. Continue reading...
Web inventor says Silicon Valley firms have too much clout and ‘optimism has cracked’Tech giants such as Facebook and Google have grown so dominant they may need to be broken up, unless challengers or changes in taste reduce their clout, Tim Berners-Lee has said.Berners-Lee, the computer scientist who invented the world wide web in 1989, said he was disappointed with the current state of the internet, following scandals over the abuse of personal data and the use of social media to spread hate. Continue reading...
Joint hearing will try to force Facebook chief to appear over Cambridge Analytica scandalThe UK and Canadian parliaments are joining forces in an attempt to force Mark Zuckerberg to answer their questions over Facebook’s role in the Cambridge Analytica scandal.The House of Commons digital, culture, media and sport select committee has announced its intention to hold a highly unusual joint hearing with its Canadian equivalent in an attempt to pressure the social network’s chief executive into appearing in front of parliament. Continue reading...
The greatest horror titles are haunted by marauding monsters, eviscerating aliens and little girls in red coats. Steel yourself to meet some of the most chilling ghosts in the machineVideo games are the perfect medium for horror. They offer a unique sense of immersion, of being trapped within an interactive nightmare, and this has proven irresistible to players and developers since the industry began. Some have faded with time – you’re unlikely to shiver with terror at the sight of 1987 Spectrum adventure Jack the Ripper, the first game to receive an 18 certificate thanks to its “gory†visuals. But many classic horror titles still leave us cowering helplessly behind our joypads.Here then are 13 unforgettably terrifying video game moments. Feel free to add your own chilling favourites in the comments section. Continue reading...
With Face ID and a decent screen, this phone attempts a happy medium between quality and price – but £750 still isn’t a bargainThe iPhone XR looks to offer most of what made the iPhone XS a knockout for £250 less – but with a colourful body and a slightly larger screen is this the iPhone to buy?With the iPhone XS and XS Max starting at £999 and £1,099 respectively, Apple has room to shoehorn a slightly lower cost, but still expensive, model in underneath. Continue reading...
It started out as an in-joke, then the trailer went viral. The team behind the game in which you play a naughty goose takes Guardian Australia behind the scenesUntitled Goose Game has a very simple pitch: you are a horrible goose and your aim is to ruin everybody’s day.“We thought this was a funny thing, with niche appeal,†says programmer Nico Disseldorp of House House, the four-person Melbourne-based development studio behind Untitled Goose Game. “We thought, ‘Oh, we’d love a game about a naughty animal.’ Continue reading...
Company announces 33% revenue growth over last year as CEO reports more than 2bn daily usersMark Zuckerberg admitted that Facebook “may be close to saturated in developed countries†as the social media giant posted a 33% increase in revenue.Despite controversies including the Cambridge Analytica data privacy scandal, the quarterly results showed Facebook continuing to grow, although Zuckerberg cautioned that revenue could slow in the future. Continue reading...
Christin Evans’ Twitter conversation with Salesforce’s Marc Benioff led to his role as a key advocate for San Francisco’s Prop CIt was a late-night Twitter argument that Christin Evans never planned to have. The San Francisco bookstore owner and homeless advocate used the platform to voice her frustration over a comment from the Salesforce CEO, Marc Benioff – but she never thought he’d reply.“Is this for real?!†she wrote above a retweeted comment attributed to Benioff referring to San Francisco as the “Four Seasons of homelessnessâ€. Tagging him in the tweet, she added: “How out of touch can a billionaire be?!?!†along with a plug to support Proposition C – a city initiative going to voters in November that would tax San Francisco’s highest-earning companies to fund new strategies to combat homelessness. Continue reading...
Protest held outside court in London as firm appeals against employment tribunal rulingUber has launched a court challenge against a landmark legal ruling that set a precedent for millions of gig economy workers.The attempt to overturn the employment tribunal ruling that the company’s drivers were workers came as a former driver involved in the case claimed that if the taxi-hailing app were to win its appeal, Uber’s business model could expand into every sector of the economy. Continue reading...
Prime Wardrobe delivers three to eight clothing items with no upfront chargeAmazon is launching its “try before you buy†fashion service in the UK, marking the online retailer’s latest push into the clothing market.Prime Wardrobe delivers a bag of three to eight clothing items with no upfront charge and free delivery for people signed up to Amazon’s subscription service. Continue reading...
Bungie’s billion-dollar shooter game is winning back players by investing its alien prey with personality – and providing plenty to do when the gunfire stopsThe difficulty with games such as Destiny – continually evolving online worlds and communities with whims that change week on week – is that you never really know how well those changes have worked out until some time down the line. Destiny 2’s Forsaken expansion came out last month, bringing with it new modes and features intended to win back players who felt the game had become facile and too predictable. It’s now enjoying an excellent Halloween-themed seasonal event, the Festival of the Lost.The third expansion pack to the first sequel of a billion-dollar game is an odd place to rip up the rule book and start afresh. But time and again, that’s what Destiny 2: Forsaken does, and as a result Destiny has never been stronger. Continue reading...
Supplier under fire after vocational degrees were withheld unless students undertook factory workApple is investigating a factory in southwest China after a labour rights group said the tech giant’s supplier forced student workers to work “like robots†to assemble its popular Apple Watch.Many were compelled to work in order to get their vocational degrees and had to do night shifts, according to an investigation by Hong Kong-based NGO Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehaviour (SACOM). Continue reading...
Redesigned tablet with USB-C and potentially a new MacBook Air expected to be launched at New York event on TuesdayApple is expected to unveil a redesigned iPad Pro with Face ID and no home button, alongside new Mac computers, at an event in New York on Tuesday afternoon.The long-rumoured iPad Pro redesign will be the first significant change to Apple’s iOS-based tablet since the release of the 12.9in iPad Pro in 2015. Continue reading...
Miniature console to be released in December, packaged with popular games, including Resident Evil, Ridge Racer, Tekken – and the original Grand Theft AutoSony has released the full list of games for its forthcoming PlayStation Classic, a miniature version of the iconic 1997 games console announced last month.Related: 14 classic PlayStation games that are still fun today Continue reading...
PayPal, Stripe and Joyent abandon support of social media site that hosted posts by Robert BowersGab, the social media site popular with the far-right, has been forced offline by its service providers after it became clear that the alleged Pittsburgh shooter Robert Bowers had a history of anti-semitic postings on the site.Formed in August 2016 after Twitter began cracking down on hate speech on its social network, Gab has been labelled “Twitter for racists†by the website Salon but describes itself as “a free speech website and nothing moreâ€. But the platform has proved popular among white supremacists, neo-Nazis and the “alt-rightâ€, including the man accused of opening fire on a synagogue in Pennsylvania on Saturday, killing 11. Continue reading...
With in-display fingerprint and 3D face scanning, triple camera and long battery life, Huawei has pulled off something specialHuawei has made really good phones for years, but the Mate 20 Pro is the Chinese firm’s first truly cutting-edge device with a triple camera, 3D face unlock and an in-screen fingerprint sensor.The Mate series of phones has always delivered one thing above all else – battery life. This year Huawei has gone out of its way to deliver even more. Continue reading...
Investment means value of firm behind popular game has risen threefold in six monthsThe company behind the Fortnite video game has been valued at almost $15bn (£11.7bn) after receiving a $1.25bn cash injection led by the private equity firm KKR.The game, which has been described as a cross between The Hunger Games and Minecraft, has proved hugely popular since its release last year by Epic Games. Continue reading...
Musk and Tesla fined $20m each for misleading investors over privatisation plansElon Musk, the billionaire chief executive of Tesla, has said the tweet that cost him and the company $20m (£16m) each in fines by the US Securities and Exchange Commission was “worth itâ€.Worth it Continue reading...
The new technology, being tested in Salford, is the network of the future. But what practical uses will it offer?Last week, Vodafone launched a test of the UK’s first full 5G service, available for use by businesses in Salford. It is part of its plan to trial the technology in seven UK cities. But what can we expect from the next generation of mobile technology?One thing we will see in the run-up to launch is lots of stunts with the new tech. Earlier this year, operators paid almost £1.4bn for the 5G wavelengths being auctioned off by the government, and to recoup that cash, they will need to catch the eye of consumers. In September, Vodafone used its bit of the spectrum to demonstrate the UK’s first holographic call. The England and Manchester City captain Steph Houghton appeared as a hologram in Newbury to give football tips to an 11-year-old girl while remaining at Vodafone’s Manchester office. Continue reading...
It may once have been synonymous with writing, but it’s time to seek the uncorrupted writing experience elsewhereIn a grim political season, there are signs that journalists are successfully challenging at least one odious tyrant.In Slate, Rachel Withers has reported that in newsrooms throughout the United States, Microsoft Word is finally giving way to other programs, including Google Docs. Continue reading...
A lawsuit brought against Facebook for sexist job advertisements exposes the discriminatory nature of the online marketingIn September, a group of people searching for work in the US filed charges against Facebook and 10 other companies for discriminating against women by targeting certain job advertisements only at men. The employers, from sectors such as labouring and lorry driving, had used Facebook’s ad-targeting tools to direct the opportunities at those they thought most suitable – and this did not include women. Although the outcome of the case has not yet been decided, it could – along with similar cases – have a seismic impact on the future of digital advertising and, consequently, on the future of the net.Allegations of discrimination have been made against Facebook’s advertising before. An investigation by ProPublica and the New York Times at the end of last year found that dozens of employers had used the platform to target job ads at particular age groups, meaning that those outside those ages did not see them. Around the same time, the Washington State attorney general’s office launched a sting operation, to show how straightforward it was to use Facebook’s targeting tools to prevent certain ethnic groups from seeing ads in the US: it placed 20 phoney ads for jobs, apartments, insurance and other services and deliberately excluded one or more ethnic minority groups from receiving the notification. Continue reading...
The retailer has launched five clothing labels in a year and has ambitions to be a serious player in fashionBright red lacy dresses, cosy coats and ripped jeans fill a chic central London boutique decorated with neon signage and stripped wood floors. Shoppers bustle and admire the clothes – but they are not in a hip designer shop; they are in Amazon’s first pop-up fashion store in Europe.Last week, at the opening night of the Baker Street store, the models Lara Stone and Maddi Waterhouse, the actress Gemma Chan and socialites Pixie Geldof and Rafferty Law brought a sprinkling of stardust to a collection that the US online retailer hopes will make it a major player in British fashion. Continue reading...
GMB union says 40,000 drivers are worse off through missing holiday and sick pay, despite a court ruling in 2016Uber drivers are estimated to be more than £18,000 out of pocket because the ride hailing company refuses to recognise a two-year-old ruling entitling them to holiday pay, a minimum wage and rest breaks.The law firm Leigh Day – acting for the GMB union, which brought the action against the tech giant – calculates that its 40,000 drivers are all owed almost £11,000 in wages and more than £8,000 in holiday pay. But Uber is continuing to appeal the ruling, made two years ago at the central London employment tribunal. Continue reading...
It was once Jessica Powell’s job to defend Google. Now she’s taking her industry to task in a ‘totally fictional but essentially true’ bookIn September, Jessica Powell tapped on her phone’s contact list and texted her old boss, the Google CEO, Sundar Pichai. She also called a former co-worker at the company’s roughly 200-person communications team that, until last September, she led. Powell’s news: she was about to release a satirical novel about Silicon Valley, which readers would be likely to interpret as being about Google. The book, The Big Disruption, was billed as “a totally fictional but essentially true Silicon Valley storyâ€. In public relations terms, it was a rogue turn – going from burnishing the company’s image to lampooning a company that looked suspiciously like it.Powell, 40, nursed some eleventh-hour nerves about the transition. Until last fall, Powell was on Google’s management team as vice-president of global communications, crafting strategy on how its policies and products should be presented and defended. After a career as the behind-the-scenes puppet master of corporate messaging and a bout of wanting to publish anonymously, she decided to put her name front and center. She didn’t want to irk Google friends, and even penned an introductory essay that argues you can love tech and still see its flaws. Powell insists the book is not a thinly veiled “tell-all†and that her distancing the book from Google is not one final act of PR. Continue reading...
Dozens of accounts posting politically charged content reached more than a million users, company saysFacebook has uncovered and deleted dozens of accounts and pages originating in Iran that were intended to provoke division in the US and the UK.The accounts, which posed as US and UK residents, posted frequently about politically divisive subjects, including race relations, opposition to Donald Trump, and immigration. More than a million Facebook users had engaged with the 82 pages, groups and accounts that were identified, most of them in the US, and Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of cybersecurity policy, said they were created to deliberately “sow discordâ€. Continue reading...
Democracies around the world now face an even bigger threat than in 2016. But there are ways to fight backWhether it is in the movies, media or politics, discussions of election security typically focus on the sexy story of hackers hacking into voting machines. While this is a well-founded fear that certainly requires better defence, the reality is that there is no example of this kind of cyber-attack ever being attempted or working on a national scale.By contrast, there is another kind of attack, one which has not just been repeatedly attempted but has been proven to work. It has struck everywhere from the 2016 election in the US and the Brexit vote in the UK, to the Syrian civil war and the Myanmar genocide. This threat doesn’t come in the form of hacking networks (aka “cyberwarâ€) but rather hacking the people on them, by making ideas viral through a mix of “likes†and lies on social media (what we call “like warâ€). Continue reading...
Rockstar Games hopes new game will eclipse success of Grand Theft AutoHundreds of people queued outside branches of the retailer Game on Thursday evening to pick up a copy of Red Dead Redemption 2, the wildly anticipated new title from the creators of Grand Theft Auto series.Stores in Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh and London were among those that opened at midnight. Large numbers of gamers wanted to buy the title, the first release by Rockstar Games since 2013’s record-breaking Grand Theft Auto V. Continue reading...
by Presented by Jordan Erica Webber and produced by E on (#41MEH)
Jordan Erica Webber finds out how two scientists are employing green technology in very different ways to help curb environmental issuesCurrent estimates suggest that there are 7.5 billion people living on Earth, which is putting a strain on biodiversity. With increased need for solutions to environmental issues, people from the world of technology are also stepping in to do what they can to help redress the balance between humanity and the natural world.But are we wasting time and money on experimental technology that might not make it past the finish line? And can the use of technology at a grass-root level actually increase awareness and influence those with the power to make real change? Continue reading...
Class action could increase pressure on corporation following report of payout for exec accused of sexual misconductA group of women who sued Google for pay discrimination are advancing a class-action lawsuit in California that could affect more than 8,000 current and former employees, the plaintiffs’ lawyer said.Jim Finberg, a civil rights attorney for the women behind the high-profile gender pay gap litigation, told the Guardian on Thursday that the Silicon Valley corporation has confirmed that the proposed class action would cover roughly 8,300 women who have worked for Google in California. Continue reading...
Parent company’s results as a report says Google gave executive $90m payoff but kept sexual misconduct allegations quietOn the day Google was engulfed by concerns about its handling of sexual misconduct allegations, Alphabet, its parent company, announced third-quarter earnings of $33.7bn.The results fulfilled predictions for continued growth despite controversy over a recent data breach on the company’s social network, Google+. Continue reading...
Google reportedly found credible allegations Andy Rubin forced employee to perform oral sex but paid him millions after he leftGoogle gave a $90m severance package to Andy Rubin, the creator of the Android mobile software, but concealed details of a sexual misconduct allegation that triggered his departure, the New York Times has reported.Related: Google abandons Berlin base after two years of resistance Continue reading...
Parenting blogger goes viral after former NFL player tweets: ‘I rock pink nails all the time’Having gone out of his way to help raise his children in a gender stereotype-free household, a father from Massachusetts was appalled to discover that his five-year-old son was being bullied at kindergarten for wearing nail polish.Over 30,000 retweets and 60,000 likes later, Aaron Gouveia had not only comforted his upset son, but also used Twitter to create a full-blown social media campaign against toxic masculinity. Continue reading...
Company sees fourth quarter of profits greater than $1bn but revenue growth is lower than expectedAmazon has announced a record profit for the last three months of close to $3bn. But the news on Thursday of a $1bn-a-month bonanza was not enough for Wall Street and shares sank on lower-than-expected revenue growth.The online retail and cloud computing giant long worried investors by losing cash quarter after quarter but now appears to be raking in money, thanks largely to its cloud computing services. In the last quarter the company made a profit of $2.88bn, the fourth quarter that Amazon’s profits have been greater than $1bn. Continue reading...
Airline says customers affected by data breach will be contacted by Friday, as investigation continuesBritish Airways has revealed that another 185,000 customers may have had personal details stolen in a data breach.Customers who made reward bookings using a payment card between 21 April and 28 July this year may be at risk, British Airways owner International Airlines Group (IAG) said in a statement to the stock market. Continue reading...
Jane has read that Microsoft is removing the screen-capture utility in Windows 10 and would like a free alternativeThe next Windows 10 update will remove the Snipping Tool, and I wonder if there is an alternative free tool you would recommend. Apparently the workaround is to use OneNote, but not for me. JaneTaking screen grabs is now such an important part of personal computer use that Microsoft is certain to provide a good alternative. In fact, you will get to keep Snipping Tool alongside its replacement while Microsoft analyses the telemetry data that it uses to track mass (not individual) behaviour. Continue reading...
Fears stance on GCHQ’s alleged hacking of Belgacom could damage diplomatic relationsThe UK government has been accused of endangering diplomatic relations with Belgium after its “exceptional†refusal to cooperate with an inquiry into GCHQ’s alleged hacking of Belgacom, the country’s biggest telecoms company.For at least two years ending in 2013, the British intelligence service was probably spying within the state-owned company’s networks on the instruction of UK ministers, according to leaks from a judicial inquiry presented to Belgium’s national security council this week. Continue reading...
Decision by information commissioner comes after Cambridge Analytica scandalFacebook has been fined £500,000 by the Information Commissioner’s Office in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, after allowing third party developers to access user information without sufficient consent.The ICO announcement on Thursday upholds its initial decision in July. The fine, which represents a drop in the ocean for a company that brought in $40.7bn (£31.5bn) in global revenue in 2017, was the maximum available to the regulator under old data protection legislation. Continue reading...
Company says millions of images removed in a few months with help of machine learning toolFacebook has said its moderators have removed 8.7m child abuse images in the past three months, as the company battles pressure from regulators and lawmakers worldwide to speed up removal of illicit material.It said on Wednesday that previously undisclosed software automatically flags images that contain both nudity and a child, helping its reviewers. A similar machine learning tool was also revealed that it said caught users engaged in “grooming†of minors for sexual exploitation. Continue reading...
by Dominic Rushe in New York and Julia Carrie Wong in on (#41GVD)
Company made profit of $312m and revenues were at $6.82bn in period where Musk called diver ‘pedo’ and was fined by SECThe past three months have been the worst of times and the best of times for Tesla. The troubled electric car company announced a surprisingly high profit on Wednesday for the same quarter in which its founder, Elon Musk, spun out of control.Related: Elon Musk says 'Teslaquila' is 'coming soon' as Tesla files trademark Continue reading...
Airline confirms passport numbers, email addresses and credit card data were accessedThe airline Cathay Pacific has announced that it has suffered a major data leak affecting up to 9.4 million passengers.The Hong Kong flag carrier admitted that personal information including passport numbers, identity card numbers, email addresses and credit card details had been accessed. Continue reading...
Responses vary around the world when you ask the public who an out-of-control self-driving car should hitMoral responses to unavoidable damage vary greatly around the world in a way that poses a big challenge for companies planning to build driverless cars, according to new research.The researchers, from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and other institutions, presented variations of the classic “trolley problem†thought experiment almost 40m times to millions of volunteers from all around the world. Continue reading...