Waiting times for black Seattle passengers were 35% longer, and Boston drivers cancelled rides for black passengers more than twice as frequently, study foundA new academic study has found “a pattern of discrimination†against passengers with African American-sounding names by Uber and Lyft drivers.The findings call into question a central narrative of ride-hail apps that they solve the entrenched and humiliating problem of hailing a cab for black passengers. Continue reading...
The famous Sega video game character will reportedly be brought to the big screen with a combination of CGI animation and live actionLess than two weeks after leaving the Deadpool 2 project after “creative differences†with star Ryan Reynolds, director Tim Miller has revealed he is working on bringing Sonic The Hedgehog to the big screen.The director is working on a film about the Sega character, according to the Hollywood Reporter, which claims it will be a hybrid of CGI animated and live action representation of the character who was first introduced to the world in 1991. Continue reading...
Rights groups such as the ACLU expressed deep concern over censorship in letter to Mark Zuckerberg, particularly when posts are removed at the request of policeA coalition of more than 70 civil rights groups have written to Facebook demanding that the company clarifies its policies for removing content and alleging that it has repeatedly removed posts documenting human rights violations.In a letter addressed to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, the rights groups – including the ACLU, Center for Media Justice, SumOfUs and Color of Change – express deep concern over the censorship, particularly when posts are removed at the request of police. Continue reading...
I am very happy that the rights of Uber drivers are being protected by the courts, but it is worth remembering that Uber isn’t just successful because it is cheap, it also offers a remarkably convenient service which is head and shoulders above what was available before (Uber is misleading drivers about its legal defeat, claims union, 30 October).It is a joy to be able to see my car coming down the street rather than wandering the high street looking for a black cab or engaging in repeat conversations with a minicab operator (“he’s just coming, love – he’ll be there in three minutes, definitelyâ€), followed by a 25-minute wait, occasionally a total no show. It is amazing to be driven from point A to point B in a foreign city without having to have the right cash or speak the language. I was wary at first, because of the social implications of the gig economy, but conversations with drivers have all been remarkably positive too. Continue reading...
A pair of tweets promoting the game caused outcry and ridicule at the insensitive nature of the campaignEA games has removed a pair of tweets promoting its new world war one-set first person shooter Battlefield 1 after they sparked outcry and ridicule at the tone-deaf nature of the campaign.Accompanied with the hashtag “#justWWIthingsâ€, the two tweets were sent over the weekend. The first, posted on Friday, contained an animated gif of a number of WW1-era soldiers posing in front of a collapsing airship, captioned “when your squad is looking on point #justWWIthingsâ€; the second, posted on Sunday, was an animated gif of a soldier being burned with a flamethrower, captioned “When you’re too hot for the club #justWWIthingsâ€. Continue reading...
The first-person shooter returns with a bunch of new multiplayer modes and a lone campaign that seeks to add emotional weight to the thundering actionIt’s always worth remembering where Titanfall developer Respawn Entertainment came from. The studio was founded by the creators of Call of Duty and staffed by some of the most skilful stalwarts in the first-person shooter genre; from the best entries in Activision’s behemoth franchise all the way back to 2002’s Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, Respawn’s collective has made great cinematic shooters, and this team knows how to reinvent, rethink and reignite the genre. Titanfall 2 expands the multiplayer concept established by the original sci-fi shooter two years ago, adds an incredible single-player campaign and acts as a bold reminder of how brilliant this band of veteran gunslingers really is.As with the original game, Titanfall 2’s core ideas exist on two parallel playing fields. Firstly, there’s the Pilot, a superhuman soldier capable of hyper athletic wall-running and double-jumping, with split-second reflexes that make for unrivalled marksmanship. They are the masters of any gun, the ultimate commander of any squad, and they treat the battlefield more like a jungle gym than a place of warfare. Obstacles and debris are not safe cover in the eyes of a Pilot. Instead they are opportunities for movement in order to turn impossible odds into a cakewalk. Continue reading...
Reader mode is a Safari feature, which strips out most of the formatting from a webpage, removing adverts, navigation links and commentsTwitter is testing a new feature on its iOS app which turns on Apple’s “Reader†mode by default on every link opened in its in-app browser.First introduced in 2010, and ported to iOS in 2011, Reader mode is a oft-forgotten feature in Safari that strips out most of the formatting from a webpage, removing adverts, navigation links, comments, and almost everything else except for the main content of a text-based article. Continue reading...
Left yourself with nothing to do this Halloween? Go on one of these spooky adventures and ensure you get absolutely no sleep at allIf you’ve already had your Halloween party this weekend and were planning a quiet night in front of the TV, hiding from trick or treaters, we’ve got another idea for you.All of the following horror titles are easily available for download on console or PC, so by early this evening you could be scaring the bejesus out of yourself, looking for ghosts in an abandoned castle, or running into a poorly lit bathroom to escape a clown doll. Continue reading...
At one time it was used for diagnostics, but the world moved on. Now Apple finally has too with its new laptop, the first of a brave new line of chimeless MacsApple has finally put one of the most annoying and potentially embarrassing aspects of the MacBook Pro to bed: the Mac startup chime is no more.
Facebook has repeatedly tried to take on Snapchat by replicating its features or by buying them inFacebook has been trying to steal Snapchat’s thunder for a while, but this weekend the social network beat even its own covetous record.On Friday came the news that Facebook is testing a new camera in its main app that offers Snapchat Lens-style photo and video filters to users. The camera, available to users in Ireland for now, is accessed by swiping right on the homescreen of the Facebook app. Continue reading...
The victory against Uber by drivers and the GMB is an important one, and not just for the many workers suffering the effects of bogus self-employment and poverty wages at the hands of big companies (Uber drivers triumph in rights battle, 29 October). The rise of Uber has affected the livelihoods of traditional taxi firms all over the country and the pressure to drive down fares has compromised passenger safety.Hedge-funded Uber’s success started with the Tory-Liberal coalition government’s deregulation legislation, which received the royal assent 18 months ago. While the consultation around the bill was going on, I supported the taxi trade here in Medway and many other drivers’ associations and their trade unions who lobbied against deregulation because they knew it would drive down wages and weaken the powers of local councils to determine how many cabs were licensed, or to maintain safe working practices. Continue reading...
After a long period as a mid-market manufacturer, rapid shift signals a reaction to the changing shape of the PC marketApple released its latest laptops on Thursday, a new range of computers to replace the ageing range of Retina MacBook Pros. They are thinner and lighter than their predecessors, with a new touch bar at the top of the keyboard and a fingerprint sensor replacing the power button.They are £750 more than the machines they replace were – though their price has also gone up. The larger of the two new MacBook Pros, the 15in with Touch Bar, is the first laptop the company has released with a starting price of more than £2,000 for more than a decade: it begins at an eye-watering £2,349, with build-to-order options taking it well north of £4,000. Continue reading...
Whether you’re struggling to get gig tickets or being fat-shamed by an app – AI is calling the shots. Weren’t these algorithms supposed to be on our side, not making thing worse?
Reporter Alan Yuhas highlights the bogus stories, clickbait and disinformation framed as trending ‘news’ by one of the world’s most powerful companiesLast month Facebook announced it would join a coalition with Twitter and more than 20 news organizations to tamp down on the proliferation of fake news on the social network. Since that announcement, conspiracy theories and explicitly fake news have continued to slip past Facebook’s algorithm.The company did, however, confront a September 11 conspiracy theory post that it had circulated around the anniversary of the attack. It took down the entire trending topic – including on the anniversary itself – rather than selectively edit out the false stories. Adam Mosseri, the company’s News Feed product vice-president, insisted earlier this month that Facebook is not a publisher or media company. Continue reading...
Internet security is time-consuming and increasingly useless. Now, technology firms are racing to find a new universal ‘open sesame’ to our digital livesI’m old enough to remember a life in which you could confidently expect your skill for guessing passwords to be redundant by about the age of nine. That was when your mate down the road finally overcame his love of spy games and his obsessive desire not to allow you past his front door or into his garden shed without you first establishing his favourite crisp flavour. Unfortunately, however, it seems that mate, who subsequently spent his lunch hours in the school’s windowless computer room, up to his knees in punch cards, has long since taken over the world.Related: Banks' online security is failing customers, says Which? Continue reading...
Discover your inner aviator, from the entry level Parrot Mambo to the high-spec DJI PhantomWe all have our own way of transcending the banality of everyday life. A good book, going to the gym, watching our football teams struggle to reach the heights or avoid the lows. Taking to the sky with a drone is peak escapism, an adrenaline blast that, for a few short minutes, raises the pulse, puts a stupid grin on your face and revives childhood dreams.With so many jostling for your attention, though, which drone do you choose? Some drones are small and cheap, can be used to terrorise pets and are controlled only with your smartphone. Others have fancy cameras, the range of a light aircraft and can get you in trouble with the law… but how on earth do you choose which one to buy? Continue reading...
Internet luddite Werner Herzog offers a sporadically fascinating glimpse of a vast and complex subjectThe entire scope of the digital age – from the birth of the internet, to artificial intelligence, to catastrophist predictions of the end of days – is crammed into 96 idiosyncratic minutes in this latest documentary by Werner Herzog. And while Herzog’s defiantly esoteric line of commentary works with some subjects – suicidal penguins, for example, in Encounters at the End of the World – he does seem out of his depth at times while navigating this vast and complex subject. Herzog’s USP here is that, as a luddite who doesn’t even carry a mobile phone, he is essentially a technological tourist, an outsider looking into the digital world. It’s a sporadically fascinating film that dips its toe into many different themes where perhaps it should have chosen to immerse itself in just one or two. Continue reading...
Users of the platform remind us what we stand to lose when this weird and wonderful corner of the internet ceases to existTwitter’s announcement on Thursday that it would be discontinuing Vine prompted a public outpouring of grief in six-second, endlessly looped increments.We shared some of the classics of the genre on Friday but social media users have continued to nominate their favourites over the weekend, serving only to remind us of how much we stand to lose when this weird and wonderful corner of the internet closes down. Continue reading...
Volvo fears that other road users could drive erratically in order to take advantageThe first self-driving cars to be operated by ordinary British drivers will be left deliberately unmarked so that other drivers will not be tempted to “take them onâ€, a senior car industry executive has revealed.One of the biggest fears of an ambitious project to lease the first autonomous vehicles to everyday motorists is that other road users might slam on their brakes or drive erratically in order to force the driverless cars into submission, he said. Continue reading...
The room-rental website, now worth $30bn, faces a critical year as city authorities clamp downIn the back room of a pub in Kentish Town, a group of middle-class Londoners are perched on velvet-covered stools, eating hummus and talking about property. On the wall, above a pile of empty beer kegs, a slide presentation is in progress. A video of Airbnb’s recent advert shows smiling hosts opening their front doors and declaring their support for Sadiq Khan’s post-Brexit “London is open†campaign.The audience of Airbnb hosts are there after receiving individual invitations from the company to a “home sharers†meet-up – a concept largely unfamiliar to the slightly bemused crowd. Jonathan, an enthusiastic Californian Airbnb employee, who was recently seconded to London to set up the clubs, is happy to explain: “Homesharing clubs are simply a way of organising this into something … that has a unified voice … then actually takes actions as a collective,†he says, in a less than clear answer. Continue reading...
Tesla chief executive Elon Musk addresses an audience in Los Angeles as he unveils his company’s newest energy product - solar roof tiles. Musk outlined the benefits of an “integrated future†which would allow consumers to charge electric vehicles with renewable solar power, showcasing the tiles on homes once used as the set for US drama Desperate Housewives
I used the horn so much that I can now do a passable impression of it, like David Attenborough and the woodpeckerThe Toyota hybrid range is like a variety of bird – there’s the one you see everywhere, the Prius, and for some reason that makes the rarer ones more exciting. The Rav4, as handsome a hybrid as I’ve seen in a while, has a sporty cousin, the C-HR. I can’t, if I’m honest, tell you what’s better about it (the styling is a bit boxier and more aggressive) but I can tell you that not one but two delivery guys clocked the Rav, said, “Nice car, but…†and got their phones out to show me the C-HR. In a lesson for progressives everywhere, the hybrids have shed their do-gooding image just by being so very new.Related: Honda Jazz car review: ‘Like driving your regular car after packing it for a holiday’ Continue reading...
Employment tribunal judge’s ruling will send shockwaves through companies using the same business modelYaseen Aslam. James Farrar. Remember those two names, because they are giant-killers. This summer the men took on not just one £50bn multinational, but an entire business model. On Friday, they won.As minicab drivers for Uber, Aslam and Farrar were deemed to be self-employed. The status meant they were denied the most basic rights that other workers take: no minimum wage, no sick pay, no paid holiday. But as an employment tribunal judge heard over several days in July, that classification was both wrong and unfair. And he agreed.
Topline profits down 80% for the dating site as more internet daters opt for mobile-based Tinder and other free appsThe dating website Match.com suffered a collapse in profits last year as fickle Britons turned to free smartphone apps to find a date.Topline operating profits at the UK’s biggest dating website plunged by 80% to £1.6m in the year to 31 December. Turnover was also down more than 10% at £38.2m as apps such as Tinder changed the nature of online dating. Continue reading...
Landmark employment tribunal ruling states firm must also pay drivers national living wage and holiday pay with huge implications for gig economyUber drivers are not self-employed and should be paid the “national living wageâ€, a UK employment court has ruled in a landmark case which could affect tens of thousands of workers in the gig economy.The ride-hailing app could now be open to claims from all of its 40,000 drivers in the UK, who are currently not entitled to holiday pay, pensions or other workers’ rights. Uber immediately said it would appeal against the ruling. Continue reading...
Uber drivers James Farrar and Asif Hanif gives their reactions on Friday after a court ruled in favour of drivers being classified as workers, not self-employed. The change in title means that Uber’s workers will have to be paid the national living wage. Uber workers were not entitled to holiday pay and other rights because they were classified as self-employed. Now as workers they will receive both
This story of idealism, legal wrangling and vast profits reveals a fascinating moment in cultural historyTetris is a phenomenon. Created in 1984 by Russian programmer Alexey Pajitnov, it was initially passed hand to hand by floppy disk. Soon it was crossing national borders and generations like no game before or since. Sales and downloads are now in the hundreds of millions, and the first film of a sci-fi trilogy based on its ever-descending blocks is due in 2018.The story behind its creation – a tale of idealism, legal wrangling, murder and vast profits starring amateur game designers, Soviet bureaucrats, Japanese and American electronics companies and Robert Maxwell – is compelling. Brown chronicles Tetris’s spread and the software giants’ desperate dance around the rights for various markets, and ponders humanity’s need for games. The result is a decent introduction to a fascinating moment in cultural history, touching on Nintendo’s backstory and the 1980s revolutions that made gaming one of the world’s biggest creative industries. But the artwork is forgettable and the characters are flat, leaving the book feeling – in contrast to the game – all too putdownable. Continue reading...
Richard Fox, a senior solicitor and head of Kingsley Napley Solicitors, hails the legal ruling in favour of two Uber drivers that they should be classified as workers, not as self-employed. Speaking on Friday, Fox says employment law is now catching up with the way people work and emphasises that this is a comprehensive decision with further ramifications likely to happen. With drivers classified as workers, not as self-employed, Uber must now pay the national living wage
I am concerned about the planned move towards paperless receipts (Tesco to trial paperless receipts on smartphone, 26 October). There are still shoppers who do not have, and perhaps do not want, a “smart†phone. The most important function of a paper receipt provided at the till is that it proves the customer has paid. This is doubly important given that large supermarket chains can ban from their stores anyone they believe has left without paying. If, as/after I leave a shop without a paper receipt, the shop makes a mistake and accuses me of shoplifting, how do I prove that I did pay? I have never been in this position, but always ask for a receipt as proof. This also means that if I then go into another shop selling the same item I can prove I bought it elsewhere, a situation I have encountered.
Judges who ruled that Uber drivers are not self-employed make scathing assessment of the companyThe employment tribunal judges who ruled that the Uber drivers are not self-employed and should be paid the “national living wage†were scathing in their assessment of the company. Among the most unequivocal sections of the judgment were the following:Any organisation ... resorting in its documentation to fictions, twisted language and even brand new terminology, merits, we think, a degree of scepticism. Continue reading...
by Keith Stuart and Jordan Erica Webber on (#1ZKWJ)
The Guardian is hosting a daily chat show at GameCity festival in Nottingham National Videogame Arcade. Here are the first two episodesEvery year, the GameCity festival in Nottingham provides a showcase for new and innovative game developers and thinkers. Now based at the National Videogame Arcade (NVA) and in shops and cafes around the city centre, the event is a celebration of independent development and a focal point for thinking about what games are and can be.Each morning of the festival, the Guardian has been running a chat show in the NVA toast bar, meeting some of the developers showing their new projects, as well as academics analysing the place of games in modern culture. Luckily we’ve been recording the audio, so more people can get to hear them. Continue reading...
Article 29 Working Party pan-EU privacy regulator has serious concerns over WhatsApp data and warns Yahoo over data breach and US authority email scanningWhatsApp has been warned by the pan-European privacy watchdogs over its sharing of information with Facebook and asked to pause the transfer of personal data.The gathered European Union data protection authorities, collectively known as the Article 29 Working Party, said they had serious concerns over WhatsApp’s recent privacy policy change and the sharing of user phone numbers with its parent company Facebook. Continue reading...
The constraint of the format fostered a new type of creativity for comedians, actors and artists, who have to move on to new platforms now that Vine is deadThe closure of the video-sharing app Vine was met with sadness but some amount of inevitability by an elite group of social media stars who found their six seconds of fame on the app.Vine, at one time, had 100 million people watching videos every month and 1.5 billion daily video loops. The constraint of the six-second video format fostered a new type of creativity for comedians, actors and artists, which gave rise to Vine stars – internet celebrities who could make a decent living from the platform. Continue reading...
New thinner, lighter Apple laptops have Touch ID fingerprint scanners, but drop standard USB-A ports and SD card slot for four Thunderbolt 3 USB-C ports
New laptops significantly more expensive and already-existing machines have prices raised by hundreds of pounds as Apple adjusts for new US dollar-pound sterling rateIf you’re a Mac user, everything just got a lot more expensive. Apple used the cover of introducing three new MacBook Pros at its latest event to quietly raise the prices of every single computer in its line.It’s the latest example of the Brexit effect, with prices updated to account for the new low exchange rate between the US dollar and pound sterling. While the new laptops introduced on 27 October are significantly more expensive than the ones they are replacing, even machines that have seen no change at all have had their prices raised, in some cases by many hundreds of pounds. Continue reading...
A security expert sounded the alarm after he was sent the personal details of more than half a million Australian blood donorsA Microsoft regional director and security developer, Troy Hunt, was contacted early on Tuesday morning by an anonymous person on Twitter who told him he had obtained personal information about him and his wife.“This guy reached out to me and said, ‘Here’s your personal data,’†Hunt said. Continue reading...
Ryan Collins ran a two-year phishing scam to gain the passwords of more than 100 people, including Jennifer Lawrence, Rihanna and Avril LavigneThe hacker who stole nude photos of female celebrities in 2014 has been sentenced to 18 months in federal prison, officials announced on Thursday.In a court in May, Ryan Collins, a 36-year-old from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, plead guilty to federal hacking charges and admitted to a two-year phishing scam to gain passwords of more than 100 people, including actors Jennifer Lawrence and Aubrey Plaza and singers Rihanna and Avril Lavigne.
Alphabet, alongside Facebook, is dominating the fast-growing mobile ad market and has benefited from robust sales on mobile devices and YouTubeGoogle’s parent Alphabet defied expectations to report a 20.2% rise in quarterly revenue on Thursday, while retail giant Amazon slightly missed predicted predicted forecasts due to spending on preparations for the holiday season.Indicating an end to its record-breaking profits streak, Amazon reported profit of $252m or 52 cents per share, though analysts had predicted 85 cents per share. Revenues reached $32.71bn but are predicted to reach between $42bn and $45.5bn for the busy fourth quarter. Continue reading...
Company report describes network of aircraft that can take off and land vertically and lays out plan in support of companies attempting to build themUber’s eyes are on a new prize: flying cars.Outlined in a white paper published this week, the company’s chief product officer, Jeff Holden, describes a network of small, electric aircraft that can take-off and land vertically (VTOL, or vertical take-off and landing, aircraft) to enable speedy and reliable commuting that it claims will ease congestion in cities. Continue reading...
Werner Herzog’s documentary about how the internet has changed civilisation is thorough and thoughtful, if not conclusiveThis week, the prolific film-maker Werner Herzog has also released a Netflix documentary called Into the Inferno, about the terrible might of active volcanoes. Here is his second new film this year (there’s a third to come, called Salt and Fire). It’s another catastrophist study of a colossal force that is indifferent to humans’ puny and irrelevant moral judgement. His subject is the internet and our new world of digital interconnectivity, and he takes a sombre, quite censorious line.Related: Savage kingdoms: Werner Herzog takes us from the Earth’s core into cyberspace Continue reading...
Apple’s CEO Tim Cook reveals the latest MacBook Pro on Thursday from the company’s headquarters in Cupertino, California. The new MacBook Pro will add a fingerprint security reader - similar to the one found on iPhones now - along with other system updates. Most noteworthy is the addition of a touchscreen bar of keys named ‘Touch Bar’, which can contain emojis as. Cook described the new product as incredible
AT&T, Verizon and other companies claim new measure, which includes browsing history, apps and location data, will hamper advertising revenueUS regulators have approved new broadband privacy rules that make internet providers such as Comcast and Verizon ask their customers’ permission before using or sharing much of their data.The move is designed to give citizens more control of their own data, but internet companies claim it will make it more difficult for them to grow their advertising businesses. Continue reading...