|
Used to be a king, you know, |
|
but I abdicated the throne |
|
for one very simple reason. |
|
I wanted to focus on bringing you the tech news. |
|
Still gonna tax you, though. |
|
Mozilla has ignited controversy among Firefox users this week by, |
|
primarily, |
|
being bad at marketing. |
|
See, the company's been trying to build a new framework for online advertising |
|
that depends less on collecting people's personal information. |
|
They acquired Anonym, a company working on just that, in June, |
|
before announcing Privacy Preserving Attribution in August. |
|
PPA supposedly encrypts and aggregates data |
|
about how many users engage with an ad |
|
without collecting any info about those users, |
|
preserving privacy while still letting websites generate revenue. |
|
And I think it sounds good |
|
when you say it like that. |
|
Unfortunately, yesterday, |
|
Mozilla's relatively new CEO |
|
started off her blog post about PPA by saying the company is |
|
going to be more active in digital advertising, |
|
while an official forum post talked about making ads and privacy coexist, |
|
causing concern among the particularly ad-averse |
|
that Mozilla was going through that phase |
|
when you think Don Draper is a good guy in Mad Men. |
|
You don't like the first five seconds of the first episode? |
|
While some Firefox users simply want no ads on the internet, period, |
|
others are trying to explain how PPA could balance privacy and sustainability. |
|
The problem is, this isn't even Mozilla's first marketing blunder for PPA. |
|
Adblock users were already mad about PPA being enabled by default in July's Firefox 128.0 release, |
|
which led EU privacy organization, NOIB, |
|
which stands for NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS, |
|
the spit is silent, |
|
to file a complaint over Firefox's new feature which tracked users. |
|
Side note, |
|
NOIB is no joke. |
|
Another of their complaints just led to a top EU court imposing limits on Meta's data collection. |
|
Do not rub NOIB the wrong way. |
|
But they do appreciate it if you rub them the right way. |
|
They call it NOIBing. |
|
Turns out that early PPA rollout was a limited developer test |
|
and did not collect any user data, |
|
but Mozilla did admit last week |
|
they could have been more open about what they were doing, |
|
only to fumble the ball again this week, |
|
the same week they flagged the uBlock Origin Lite Firefox add-on |
|
as collecting user data and using machine generated code, |
|
causing developer Raymond Hill to pull it from the add-on store |
|
after getting fed up with Mozilla support. |
|
Listen, I want Firefox to be better at marketing |
|
so more people use it, |
|
but right now they're at like 7% market share. |
|
So proportionally, I spent way too much time talking about this. |
|
YouTube has announced a bunch of changes to how shorts work, |
|
starting with how they're not gonna be so short. |
|
You still have to put them on one leg at a time. |
|
Starting October 15th, shorts can be up to three minutes. |
|
Meaning any video with a square aspect ratio or taller |
|
that's less than three minutes |
|
will be seen as a short by YouTube. |
|
The change will only apply to videos uploaded after that date though, so don't worry, |
|
vertical doom scrollers won't suddenly be hit with your experimental artsy student film. |
|
The square is a box that represents society. |
|
And the black and white represents my soul. |
|
In an ode to TikTok's CapCut templates, |
|
YouTube's also adding a remix ability |
|
with the use template button, |
|
which will let you participate in that most storied of human traditions. |
|
Doing it for the meme. |
|
There's also a new trends page for shorts, |
|
and later the shorts feed itself will show previews |
|
of comments before you even click through to the video. |
|
Which comments? |
|
Oh, the worst ones, obviously. |
|
YouTube's obviously hoping the new features will help it compete with TikTok, |
|
and it's already beating it in at least one way, |
|
the new YouTube feature that lets you |
|
temporarily hide shorts from your YouTube home feed altogether. |
|
I wish I could do that on TikTok. |
|
I also wish I wouldn't be spied on by the Chinese government. |
|
Meta has revealed Meta MovieGen, |
|
its own photorealistic video generator |
|
capable of creating 16 second videos with a twist, or else I wouldn't be telling you about it. |
|
Though it's not available to the public, |
|
Meta's demos showcase the ability |
|
to edit existing videos using only text, |
|
as well as impressively realistic simulations of bad, Halloween costumes. |
|
But here's the twist. |
|
With a single photo, |
|
MovieGen can make a video deep fake of anyone DJing an impromptu set next to a cheetah. |
|
Only that scenario. |
|
But is the cheetah dancing? |
|
No. |
|
Is it Chester Cheetah? |
|
Maybe. |
|
I'm out. |
|
I hate that guy. |
|
And even more impressively to me, |
|
it can generate music and audio synced up to the action in the video. |
|
Meta says MovieGen could usher in a new AI-enabled era of content creators. |
|
As an example, |
|
they ask you to imagine sending your friends some fresh-baked AI slop for their birthday. |
|
That'll be kind of funny. |
|
The first time I made this for you. |
|
No, you didn't. |
|
You bitch. |
|
What about using AI to help you edit a nice heartfelt note instead? |
|
Using our sponsor, |
|
Not many people know this, |
|
but QuickBits is actually a nickname. |
|
It's short for Quitchard Bits Gerald. |
|
Now, you know, |
|
A man I killed in 1973. |
|
Microsoft has finally killed WordPad, |
|
the rich text editing word processor |
|
that debuted on Windows 95. |
|
Microsoft has added it to its list of removed features and functionality. |
|
It'll be gone from all editions of Windows, |
|
starting with Windows 11 version 24H2, |
|
which started rolling out this week. |
|
We are witnessing the death of a legend, so pour one out, |
|
but not just any drink, |
|
something classy. |
|
Something fit to celebrate the life of a program born in the 90s, |
|
an aged can of Surge. |
|
A few days ago, |
|
Amazon's Ring sent an email out to Protect Plus subscribers, |
|
reminding them that they would be migrated to the Protect Pro plan next year, |
|
doubling their subscription fee. |
|
That reminder comes with heavy air quotes |
|
because The Verge tracked down when Ring sent its original notification, |
|
which turned out to be a tiny fine print footnote |
|
in a September 2021 email with the subject line, |
|
important, your plan name has changed. |
|
The email said, quote, |
|
don't worry, everything else is staying the same. |
|
Ring sent a similar email to Canadian Ring Home Standard subscribers this week |
|
with the heading, new name, new features, same great price. |
|
The email then informs users that their subscription |
|
will no longer include alarm professional monitoring and SOS emergency response, |
|
because now calling the cops costs extra. |
|
Do you think calls to the police grow on trees? |
|
Mm. |
|
Someone's got to pay him. |
|
The government, who? |
|
Google is testing the use of blue check marks |
|
as a way to protect users |
|
from fraudulent links in search results. |
|
Hovering over the check mark explains |
|
that Google is pretty sure the business is who they say they are. |
|
An example of this, also from The Verge, |
|
depicts a notice that says, |
|
Google can't guarantee the reliability of this business or its products. |
|
But to be fair, the business in question was Apple. |
|
Ba-doom. |
|
Fruits! |
|
Oh, the symbol, I needed the symbol. |
|
Ba-doom. |
|
That's a new rim shot. |
|
Ba-doom, fruits! |
|
Speaking of unreliable products, |
|
Google searches AI overview feature |
|
will now be getting ads that are relevant to your question. |
|
Finally, |
|
Gemini won't just tell you to eat rocks, |
|
but also recommend the tastiest ones. |
|
I like igneous rocks the best. |
|
Samsung issued a faulty software update two days ago |
|
that bricked many older Galaxy smartphones globally. |
|
Even worse, the issue seemed to have been caused by an update to Samsung's SmartThings Framework app, |
|
an automatically installed app |
|
for controlling compatible smart devices. |
|
I feel like users still rocking Galaxy phones from 2019 |
|
aren't splurging on a smart fridge. |
|
We're not sure whether this was necessary. |
|
They're buying sensible things, |
|
like basically anything else you can buy. |
|
Cabbage. |
|
which you put in a dump fridge |
|
But the smart fridge enthusiasts watching this video may be excited to know |
|
that Apple fixed the update that was bricking M4 iPads. |
|
What a transition. |
|
I'm not saying only smart fridge owners own M4 iPads, |
|
but I'm pretty sure they could afford one. |
|
I want a fridge I can watch TikTok on. |
|
And a court has dismissed a shareholders lawsuit |
|
against Tesla over Elon Musk's exaggerated claims about its full self-driving feature. |
|
Of course, the case wasn't dismissed |
|
because those claims were true, |
|
but rather because, according to Tesla's own lawyers, |
|
the statements were nothing more than corporate puffery, |
|
AKA bullshit that no reasonable investor would have taken seriously. |
|
I mean, come on guys, |
|
we're all just, this is just locker room talk, like. |
|
But Elon had less success in Australia, |
|
where a court upheld a $418,000 fine against Twitter, |
|
which the corporation formerly known as Twitter |
|
fought on the grounds that, |
|
following its merger with X Corp, |
|
Twitter no longer exists. |
|
Twitter, who's that? |
|
Twitter, I never even met her. |
|
Twitter, I never even met her. |
|
Look, Elon, |
|
just because somebody gets married |
|
and changes their name, |
|
doesn't mean they no longer exist. |
|
And it definitely doesn't mean they don't owe me money. |
|
Like how you owe it to yourself |
|
to come back on Monday for more tech news. |
|
You also owe it to me, like a little bit. |
|
I mean, I gave up a crown for you. |
|
I was bossing people around, it was great. |
|
Few assassination attempts. |
|
I was executing peasants. |
|
|