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Updated 2024-11-30 05:16
Polls suggest Iceland's Pirate party may form next government
Most analysts are confident that the radical democrats – in favour of legalising drugs and offering asylum to Edward Snowden – will win 18-20 MPs in OctoberOne of Europe’s most radical political parties is expected to gain its first taste of power after Iceland’s ruling coalition and opposition agreed to hold early elections caused by the Panama Papers scandal in October.Related: Iceland PM steps aside after protests over Panama Papers revelations Continue reading...
Pentagon's Pokémon orders: game must go (outside) for security reasons
Defense officials restrict playtime to outside the building, citing the risks of spies tracking facilities and information via the appThe Pentagon has a message for its staff: Pokémon stop.Anyone working at the Arlington, Virginia, headquarters of the US Department of Defense searching for Squirtles and Snorlaxes on the Pokémon Go app has been told to do it outside the building, according to a memo obtained by the Washington Times. Continue reading...
Instagram Stories: who cares about your commute or cleansing routine? | Hannah Jane Parkinson
Instagram is challenging Snapchat with Stories, but … can we spice it up a bit? Videos of lunches and office carpets are as boring as they soundI don’t hate Instagram Stories, but Instagram Stories hates me.I also don’t know what I’ve done to deserve such brilliant friends in life, but, equally, I don’t know what I’ve done to deserve their banal videos of facial cleansing routines or them making a peace sign on a busy road as a lorry roars by or a macro shot of a bug they found in the bathroom. Continue reading...
Apocalypse soon: videogame visions of world cities in 2029 – in pictures
From sky gardens over Rio to sprawling slums in Blackpool, artists at the game development studio Eidos-Montréal have reimagined global cities as part of their Deus Ex universe Continue reading...
Apps, Gwyneth Paltrow and $10m: what's up with Apple's new TV show?
The reaction to Planet of the Apps, in which app developers compete for investment under the guidance of Paltrow and Will.i.am, has been lukewarmWhen you hear the name Gwyneth Paltrow, what is the first thing that comes to mind? Perhaps it’s her Oscar-winning acting, her neurotic eating habits as documented on her lifestyle blog Goop, or her praise for steam-cleaning one’s vagina (not recommended by doctors). You might also think of her appearance in Glee, her “conscious uncoupling” from Coldplay singer Chris Martin or her pint-sized fitness guru Tracy Anderson.What probably won’t immediately come to mind is app development. So it comes as quite the surprise that she’s been selected as a mentor on Apple’s new reality TV show about apps and their creators, called Planet of the Apps. Continue reading...
No Man's Sky review: beautifully crafted galaxy with a game attached
Hello Games has created a gorgeously realised, constantly regenerating universe for players to get lost in, where the incredible journey trumps the destinationNowadays it seems difficult to consider a game separately from the months or years of expectation that preceded its release. Just as science fiction is built on speculation, so too was the conversation surrounding this science-fiction video game. Two-and-a-half years ago, the team at Hello Games presented their concept for a practically infinite procedurally generated galaxy, and since then they’ve been suffering the consequences of that pitch’s success, faced with the task of creating a real game that would somehow measure up to thousands of different imagined ones. Continue reading...
Millions of cars at risk as keyless entry systems can be hacked, report says
Cars that use Volkswagen’s remote keyless entry system are vulnerable to theft using equipment costing £30, researchers claimTens of millions of cars are made vulnerable to theft by their keyless entry systems, according to a report by computer security experts.The paper claims many of the 100m Volkswagen vehicles sold over the past 20 years are vulnerable and can be hacked using cheap tools. Audi, Seat and Skoda models sold since 1995 are also said to be affected as they share Volkswagen’s remote keyless entry system. Alfa Romeo, Citroen, Fiat, Ford, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Opel, and Peugeot models are also at risk from a similar exploit, the researchers claim. Continue reading...
Harambe: the meme that refused to die
When a meme goes mainstream it usually means it isn’t funny any more and it’s over. So how has the Harambe gorilla meme endured so long?When it comes to memes, there’s a rule: it is dead as soon as the thinkpieces come out.The thinkpieces happened months ago with Harambe, so why can’t the internet let him rest in peace? Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Friday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterYay, it’s Friday! Continue reading...
Facebook v Adblock: the anti-ad empire strikes back
Facebook thought it had thwarted ad-blockers on its network. Facebook was wrong
Deliveroo couriers demonstrate against new contract
Takeaway delivery service would like to do away with paying its workers an hourly rate, paying instead by number of orders deliveredDeliveroo is embroiled in a pay row with its couriers after more than 100 riders staged a protest outside the company’s London offices in a dispute over a new wage structure.Related: Deliveroo riders protest in London against changes to pay structure Continue reading...
Brain training technique offers new possibilities for paraplegic people –video report
Dr Miguel Nicolelis explains the findings of the Walk Again Project, the collaborative project aimed at helping paraplegic people regain control of their lives using robotics. The project published its findings after ten months’ research into the use of virtual reality and exoskeleton technology with paraplegic people. However, it was found that the pairing of technologies lead to unexpected positive results for patients, all of whom reported increased movement on command and greater sensation after 2000 hours of training with the systems
Dear Mr President: Facebook users can contact Obama via Messenger
The tech-savvy administration added a private message feature to the White House Facebook page to allow users to write to the president through a chatbotGetting a message to Barack Obama just got easier. Just hit him up on Facebook.The White House unveiled a new feature on Wednesday that allows Facebook users to contact him via Messenger – just like they would any of their other friends on the site – using a chatbot. Continue reading...
Espionage arrest of nuclear engineer fuels US suspicions of Chinese tactics
Szuhsiung Ho of China General Nuclear Power Company becomes latest case to fan US fears that Chinese firms will do anything for a hi-tech leg-upSzuhsiung Ho is not the first person of Chinese origin to be arrested in the US over industrial spying.A string of cases have fuelled suspicions in the US and beyond that some Chinese firms will resort to any measures to obtain valuable intellectual property that could give them a technological leg-up.
Nancy Pelosi calls DNC email breach 'an electronic Watergate' – video
The House minority leader stated at a press conference on Thursday, ‘It is the Russians,’ referring to the security breach affecting the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee that led to the resignation of Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the former chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee Continue reading...
Shaking things app – how smartphones revolutionised Nigerian music
You don’t need a record company or a promo campaign to reach the huge audience of the Nigerian diaspora – just a WhatsApp account
John Hearle obituary
My friend and colleague John Hearle, who has died aged 90, was emeritus professor of textiles and former dean of technology at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (Umist). Until recent months he was still making important contributions to understanding how fibres behave.When he left Cambridge University in the 1940s with a first in physics, little was known about the structure of fibres. Through hundreds of peer-reviewed papers, and many books and articles, John was successful in promoting an “engineering design culture”. Continue reading...
Hoax sends Twitter into panic as #savetwitter rumours say site will shut in 2017
Horror and confusion descended on users as the rumour spread, but there is no need to #savetwitter – the site is definitely not shutting downAn internet hoax has sent some Twitter users into meltdown, as rumours spread that the site would be closing in 2017.In case there were any doubt: it’s not. Everyone seems to be panicking for no good reason. Continue reading...
No Man's Sky's cultural influences, from Dune to post-rock
Hello Games’ title is one of the most visually interesting games of the past decade. But where does its approach to sci-fi come from?From the very beginning, No Man’s Sky has looked unlike any other modern science-fiction video game. With its bizarre creatures, hallucinogenic skylines and polychrome environments, it eschews the gritty, steel-grey aesthetics of Mass Effect, Halo and Gears of War.The themes of the game, too, hark back to a different form of sci-fi literature, less interested in galactic wars and more concerned with the philosophical and psychology elements of space exploration. Continue reading...
This Beautiful Creature Must Die: what is Morrissey's animal rights game like?
Peta has launched a game approved by the Smiths frontman, complete with a bleepy rendition of Meat Is Murder – but is it any good?Can anyone remember magician Paul Daniels’seminal retro computer game Rabbits? Maybe, on the grounds that it was one of the worst computer games ever set to code, you can’t. But I do. I do because I spent minutes that turned into hours that turned into days trying to complete it.I was reminded of that precious lost time – time I could have spent reading À la recherche du temps perdu in its original French, or learning to salsa dance, or basically doing anything that wasn’t trying to make a crudely drawn rabbit collect “magic items” for no discernible reason – when I was asked to test-run Morrissey’s new vegetarian computer game, This Beautiful Creature Must Die. Continue reading...
Google Maps Palestine row: why neutrality in tech is an impossible dream | Leigh Alexander
Just as there is no single, standardised world map, our digital maps take various forms – and it matters who is drawing them and how they’re drawnImagine if it would have more of an impact for Palestine to be recognised as a sovereign country by Google than by the UN. It’s a suggestion that’s caught fire – a five-month-old online petition demanding Palestine be labeled and bordered in Google Maps has gained more than 250,000 signatures just over the past few days.The issue is far more nuanced than the instantaneous outrage about Google “wiping Palestine from the map” would suggest. Google has never actually labeled the country, which isn’t officially recognised by the US or much of the west. The swiftness of the backlash, though, is not just about the wish for justice on behalf of an occupied people, but about the belief – now punctured – that our technology is neutral, that it presents an unbiased, infallible version of the world.
The 19-year-old guy who made the chatbot that beat 160,000 parking fines is now using it to help homeless people
Creator of DoNotPay, which overturned 160,000 tickets in London and New York, expands service to assist those dealing with housing problems in the UKThe chatbot lawyer that overturned hundreds and thousands of parking tickets is now tackling another problem: homelessness.London-born Stanford student Joshua Browder created DoNotPay initially to help people appeal against fines for unpaid parking tickets. Dubbed “the world’s first robot lawyer”, Browder later programmed it to deal with a wider range of legal issues, such as claiming for delayed flights and trains and payment protection insurance (PPI). Continue reading...
Do you work as a driver for Uber? Share your experiences
If you work for Uber as a driver we’d like to hear from you. Share your experiences with us
Housing official in Silicon Valley resigns because she can't afford to live there
Even the lawyer and her software engineer husband can’t buy a home in the area due to the intensifying housing crunch that the tech boom has exacerbated
Drone and plane in 'near miss' close to Newquay airport
Police are investigating reports of a drone flying close to a passenger plane with 62 people onboardPolice are investigating reports of a near-miss between a drone and a passenger plane in Cornwall.The incident took place shortly before 3pm on Wednesday as the Flybe flight with 62 people onboard was going in to land at Newquay airport. Continue reading...
Can I still use Windows Mail and Windows Live Mail?
Microsoft’s ‘simple’ naming system has created a lot of confusion about Windows Live Mail, but not much is actually changing Continue reading...
Taxi boss uses Wyatt Roy's election loss to warn MPs against legalising Uber
Yellow Cabs boss Neill Ford claims taxi industry campaign against Roy responsible for loss in Queensland seat of LongmanAn influential taxi company boss has invoked the fate of the former federal MP Wyatt Roy as a measure of the political risk of backing Uber, after the Queensland government moved to legalise it.Neill Ford, the managing director of Queensland’s largest taxi company, Yellow Cabs, claimed an industry campaign against Roy over his public support of Uber was the key factor in his upset loss in the seat of Longman in the July election. Continue reading...
Your next computer should be a laptop-tablet hybrid. Really
When Microsoft first floated the two-in-one hybrid idea, many balked at the suggestion. But after years of improvements, they’re worth serious considerationThe PC and tablet industry is currently going through a bit of a revolution. At one stage tablets were the new hotness – the device to replace the PC as your default computing platform. But now Windows PCs are having a resurgence, this time in a new, 21st-century skin: the two-in-one.
Chatterbox: Thursday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Thursday! Continue reading...
Queensland to legalise Uber within weeks under 'sweeping' transport reforms
Annastacia Palaszczuk announces $100m taxi industry assistance package including $4m of waived fees over the next yearUber drivers will be allowed to operate legally in Queensland from September.The premier, Annastacia Palaszczuk, said on Facebook her government would legalise the service from 5 September, with “sweeping reforms” that would create a level playing field. Continue reading...
New powers to cut off illicit mobile phones used in prisons
Jails in England and Wales can seek orders requiring mobile network operators to blacklist handsets and disconnect sim cardsNew powers to cut off illicit mobile phones used by prisoners to run criminal operations have been introduced in jails across England and Wales.
San Francisco judge dismisses suit accusing Twitter of supporting Isis
The family of two men shot and killed in Jordan claimed Twitter contributed to their deaths by allowing Isis to sign up for and use Twitter accountsA federal judge in San Francisco has dismissed a lawsuit accusing Twitter of supporting the Islamic State group.The family of two men shot and killed in Jordan claimed that Twitter had contributed to their deaths by allowing the group to sign up for and use Twitter accounts. Continue reading...
Snapchat faces backlash over filter that promotes racist stereotypes of Asians
App introduced and took down a filter that turned selfies into Asian caricatures, prompting accusations that the feature was an example of ‘yellowface’
World’s largest online travel company Expedia severs ties with Alec
Company has become the latest tech firm to sever ties with the rightwing lobby group with a history of fighting against progressive causesExpedia, the world’s largest online travel company, has become the latest tech firm to sever ties with Alec, the rightwing lobby group with a history of fighting against climate change legislation and other progressive causes.The company had previously been a sponsor of Alec (American Legislative Exchange Council), a lobby group that promotes conservative legislation at state level across the US. But in an email to advocacy group Common Cause this week the travel firm, which also owns Hotels.com, Hotwire.com and trivago among others, confirmed it had severed ties.
Pokémon Go players banned from Cambodia genocide museum
Director of Tuol Sleng museum bans game after players pursued characters around the former Khmer Rouge torture centrePokémon Go has caused distress in Cambodia, where some players have been chasing its virtual characters around a genocide museum that was a torture centre in the 1970s.The director of the Tuol Sleng genocide museum, Chhay Visoth, said on Wednesday that he had put up signs at the site’s entrance and inside banning the game, which made its Cambodian debut last weekend. He has also asked his staff to watch out for anyone playing it. Continue reading...
US turns to Interpol for help in latest movie piracy crackdown
Greek woman added to list of Interpol’s most-wanted criminals as she faces charges of uploading Hollywood films to NinjaVideo, a relatively small siteThe US government has asked Interpol to help coordinate a fresh crackdown on foreign nationals engaged in movie piracy, adding their names to the list of the world’s most wanted criminals.
Teefax: a nostalgic return to the days of teletext
Want to relive the days of Ceefax? All you need is a Raspberry Pi computer, an analogue TV and a computing degree ...
Disputed territories: where Google Maps draws the line
Outrage has followed the (misleading) news that Google had removed label for Palestine from its map service – but borders are rarely as simple as cartographers might likeStick, say, “Wales” into Google Maps: a solid red outline shows the country’s borders, the interior is given a red tint and the word “Wales” shows up in bold red letters. Wales is Wales is Wales.Now search for “Palestine” to get a sense of how fraught cartography has become in the digital age. This time we get a dotted grey line, no red tinting and no “Palestine”. Continue reading...
Internet access is now a human right: part 3 - Chips with Everything tech podcast
In part three of four of our series, we look at the threats to an open and democratic webOn 1 July the United Nations resolved that access to the internet is to be considered a basic human right. While this decision may seem straightforward, with the complex nature of human rights law considered, the resolution is far from simple.In the face of the UN’s resolution, in part three of our series, we flip the coin and look at the the threats to net neutrality and unrestricted internet access. For this deep dive, we consult with the CEO of the World Wide Web Foundation, Anne Jellema and director of strategy for Free Press, Tim Karr. Continue reading...
North Korea says new 3D printer can make bones for surgery and dentistry
The country’s state media broadcasts footage of machine that it claims can reassemble a human jaw, NK News reportsNorth Korea has unveiled the latest in its range of medical inventions: a 3D printer to reproduce bone that can be used in cosmetic surgery and dentistry.A news segment on KCTV claimed that the printer would help North Korean doctors work with detailed images and models, saving time and improving the precision of medical procedures. Continue reading...
Extra life: retro video game references are all over fashion
With Anya Hindmarsh and Louis Vuitton getting on board, will Doom and Pac-Man designs usurp band T-shirts as the new wave of hipster signifiers?While upscale grunge – the trend for current pop stars to wear old band T-shirts – shows no sign of stopping, and neither does the use of Gothic fonts that has been the mainstay of 2016’s merchandise and fashion confluence (from Vetements to The Life Of Pablo and beyond), the cyclical nature of fashion means things move on quickly to a new craze.
Facebook removes controversial Bloke's Advice group after complaints
Complaints from campaigners led to removal of Facebook group which made light of violence against womenA Facebook group for men, which posted women’s personal information and had posts making light of rape and domestic violence, has been removed after complaints from campaigners.The invitation-only “Bloke’s Advice” group had more than 200,000 members before it was shut down by Facebook. Screenshots from the group show members posting women’s phone numbers and other contact details and encouraging others to send abuse or graphic pictures. There were also posts which made light of domestic abuse. Continue reading...
Donald Trump 'writes angrier and more negative Twitter posts himself'
Republican candidate uses words such as ‘crazy’, ‘weak’ and ‘dumb’ on Android device, while staff post calmer tweets on iPhone, data suggests
Canada's Toronto Star cuts 45 newsroom jobs after £14m loss
Audience for the newspaper’s tablet edition reaches plateau after initial surge of interest... and advertising continues to declineThe newspaper retrenchment in Canada has taken another turn with the announcement that one of the country’s biggest-selling titles, the Toronto Star, is to cut 45 newsroom jobs.In addition, seven other posts will go, according to a Torstar Corp spokesman, Bob Hepburn, quoted by the Globe & Mail. The cuts include 26 temporary positions on the Star’s tablet edition. Among the permanent staff being laid off are 10 reporters and five editors. Continue reading...
Google Maps accused of deleting Palestine – but the truth is more complicated
Condemnation leads to outrage about Google ‘removing’ country from map – but the country has never been labelled on the mapping serviceGoogle has been accused of deleting Palestine from Google Maps – but the truth is, it was never labelled by Google in the first place.When searching for Palestine on Google Maps, it shows an outline, but with no label for Palestine and Israel labelled alongside it. While 136 members of the United Nations recognise Palestine as an independent state, the US and much of the west does not. Continue reading...
Chatterbox: Wednesday
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Wednesday. Continue reading...
Why is Russia so distrustful of Pokémon Go?
Authorities have branded it ‘satanic’ but the augmented reality game could help Russians reconnect with history, argues The Calvert Journal While much of the world has been enthralled by the charms of Pokémon Go for the past month, there have been certain international pockets of resistance. Continue reading...
Pokémon Go can boost health by making gamers exercise, says GP
Anecdotal evidence suggests app, which encourages users to walk for miles in search of fictional creatures, could ease obesityPokémon Go has a “tantalising side-effect” of increased exercise for players, according to an article in a leading medical journal.
Someone made a smart vibrator, so of course it got hacked
The We-Vibe 4 Plus is a vibrator with a computer inside it – but hackers say it also phones home, telling its makers when it’s being usedThe Internet of Things That Can Be Hacked grows daily. Lightbulbs, trucks, and fridges all have computers inside them now, and all have been hacked by someone. But at least you don’t put those inside your body.Two years ago, someone had the good idea to put a bluetooth connection inside a vibrator, and the We-Vibe 4 Plus was born. The vibrator can connect with a smartphone app that its makers say “allows couples to keep their flame ignited – together or apart”: that is, it can be controlled remotely, while, say, making a video call. Continue reading...
They quite literally don't make games the way they used to
The days of two developers making games in a shed are over. Newcastle’s Ubisoft-owned Reflections shows that studio collaboration is key to 21st-century titlesSpend any time with your grandparents and at some stage the age-old phase “they don’t make them like they use to” will pop up as nostalgia gets the better of them. Usually it’s just the rose-tinted glasses talking, but for video games it’s a fact: they quite literally don’t make them like they used to.Back in the 1980s, when the industry was in its infancy, games were often created by two-person teams consisting of one programmer and one artist. In the 1990s, sprites gave way to 3D modelling, and development teams mushroomed in size, hoovering up specialists in disciplines across animation, level design, character modelling and artificial intelligence. Continue reading...
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