Can't We All Just Watch Along?
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Can't We All Just Watch Along? | |
Number | 2545 |
Broadcast Date | JULY 27, 2015 |
Episode Length | 29:42 |
Hosts | Peter Wells |
Guests | Raj Deut, James Croft |
Peter Wells, Raj Deut and James Croft of Reckoner Magazine in Australia fill in for Tom Merritt who’s on assignment. Jennie’s audio drivers and Australian internet conspire against them, but with the help of Roger Chang, they persevere!
Guest
Headlines
- VentureBeat reports that your Google+ profile will no longer be your identity in all Google products. The first product to get the change will be YouTube. The move means users will soon be able to use your standard Google account to share content, communicate with contacts, create a YouTube channel, and so on. Unlike your public Google+ profile, your Google account is not searchable or followable. If you already created a Google+ profile but don’t plan to use it, the company says it will “offer better options for managing and removing” your public profile. The change will be rolling out across other Google properties in the coming months.
- The Wall Street Journal reports that the Apple Watch will be sold at Best Buy stores. Apple says the smartwatch will be available for sale at more than a 100 Best Buy stores in the US and will expand to more than 300 outlets for the holiday shopping season. Best Buy stores will carry Apple Watch Sport and Apple Watch as well as a wide range of straps and other accessories. It will not carry Apple Watch Edition, the gold-cased model whose price starts at $10,000. Apple Watch is now available in 19 countries, and will be available in Russia, Turkey and New Zealand – this week.
- Razer has confirmed it has acquired Ouya’s software assets including its content catalog and online retail platform. According to Venture Beat, Ouya CEO Julie Uhurman has left, and Razer purchased Ouya for a mere $10 million. Razer has plans to add OUYA’s digital platform assets and content to its product offerings and eventually relaunch the store as Cortex for Android TV for its Forge TV game console. There are no plans to retain Ouya hardware.
- If you’re an Android phone or tablet owner be warned! According to Ars Technica, 950 million Android mobile devices are susceptible to hacks that can execute malicious code via a SMS text or visiting a malicious website. Joshua Drake VP of platform research at security firm Zimperium says the vulnerability resides in the “Stagefright” Android code library used for media processing. Drake is set to demonstrate the six additional techniques at the Black Hat security conference next month. Same vulnerability also affects Firefox except on Linux and Firefox OS. Firefox devs have patched the flaw in version 38. All versions of Android 2.2 and after are affected. So far, few of the devices have been patched including Google’s own Nexus 5 and 6 handsets.
- Tech Dirt has a rather stunning update on Google’s ongoing legal battle with Mississippi State Attorney General Jim Hood. Quick background: The US Motion Picture Association of America has had a long running campaign to discredit Google as "an enabler of copyright infringement and content piracy", and now Google wants to know just how much the MPAA was involved with Mississippi's investigation. Obviously the MPAA and the Hollywood studios are resisting Google's subpoena attempts, but Google's legal team has unearthed an email between the MPAA and two of Jim Hood's top lawyers in the Mississippi AG's office, discussing the big plan to "hurt" Google including: influencing other state AG's, saying "Google's stock will lose value in the face of a sustained attack by AGs". The plan also calls for paying for fake anti-Google research, and developing plans to place an editorial in the Wall Street Journal as well as helping to craft an anti-Google piece on the Today Show. It's worth reading the entire email excerpt when you get a chance, because HOW ARE THESE PEOPLE STILL USING EMAIL TO MAKE THEIR SECRET PLAN TO FIGHT THE GOOGLE?????
- VentureBeat reports that Samsung has unveiled the the SE370 monitor, which the company claims is the first monitor with an integrated wireless charging function for mobile devices. The monitor works with all mobile devices that use the Qi wireless charging standard. Samsung didn’t provide timing or pricing for the SE370, but it did provide its actual monitor specs which include an “eye-saver mode” that reduces the harmful effects of blue light on viewers’ eyes and associated eye strain. It does this by “monitoring and optimizing picture quality to match specific environmental settings.”
- A few quick updates to some stories Tom covered on DTNS last week: Forbes reports that the Windows 10’s policy of automatic updates has run into its first major problem, a flaw that involves Nvidia graphics cards. Some users are writing in to Nvidia’s forums that Windows Update is automatically installing new drivers which break multimonitor setups, SLI (dual card) configurations and can even stop PCs booting entirely which pushes Windows 10 into its emergency recovery mode. The fault lies in a conflict between Windows Update and Nvidia’s own driver and software management tool the ‘Nvidia GeForce Experience’. Forbes suggests several options including waiting for the 'Slow Ring' of once a month updates.
- Computer World reports that Chrysler is set to mail 1.4 million USB drives to fix a software hole that allowed hackers to wirelessly break into some vehicles and electronically control vital functions. Security researchers Charlie Miller and Chris Valasek collaborated with Wired magazine to demonstrate how they could remotely hack into -- and control -- the entertainment system and more vital functions of a 2015 Jeep Cherokee. Miller and Valasek shared their cyber security work with Chrysler.
- Remember last week when Google released a study saying removing full screen interstitial ads was totally a good thing and why would anyone complain? Well, Recode reports that mobile app Yelp feels a bit differently. Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman tweeted "Google says stop pushing App downloads yet its own teams push apps using same "bad" designs" and added "is this about protecting consumers or protecting their search monopoly?" The concern is that Google may be trying to replicate its Web search position with apps, leaving less room for other companies. Yelp and Google are rivals in the restaurant search space (Google owns Zagat) and Yelp is a major complainant in the EU comparative shopping antitrust case against Google.
- And for Android users who were wondering when they TOO might be able to lose hours of sleep and productivity, GOOD NEWS! Engadget reports that Fallout Shelter is coming to Android smartphones August 13th.
News From You
- Wired has a piece about Websites Blocking Password Managers. The author joseph cox argues that many websites don’t allow pasting of passwords from password managers out of a misplaced sense of security. PayPal makes the argument that disabling that functionality “is a proven some forms of malware. We regret any inconvenience this may cause, however the safety and security of our customers is our top priority.” but cox’s argument is accounts aren’t broken into by repetitive copy and pasting. One hacker told WIRED that disabling paste on a webpage does not stop him from using automated tools to speedily gain access to users’ accounts. What is more worrying is that when password managers are blocked on websites, a user might be more likely to just enter in a garbage, previously memorized password that has been used somewhere else. its 2015 websites should stop blocking password managers.
- Submitted by dj_fission
- The Verge reports that leading artificial intelligence researchers have warned that an "AI arms race" could be disastrous for humanity, and are urging the UN to consider a ban on "offensive autonomous weapons.” In an open letter signed by the likes of Stephen Hawking, Elon Musk and Noam Chomsky, the Future of Life Institute that weapons that automatically "select and engage targets without human intervention" could become the "Kalashnikovs of tomorrow," fueling war, terrorism, and global instability. The letter also warns that the development of autonomous weapons could tarnish the field of artificial intelligence and create a "major public backlash" that would impede potentially beneficial AI research.
- Submitted by hometownrival
- Producer Jennie would like to call your attention to a Fast Company article which does a nice job describing the huge contribution reddit moderators make to their respective subreddits, so thanks to the DTNS mods scottierowland, tomgehrke, KyldeThe Janitor & sebgonz.
- Submitted by Jennie Josephson
Discussion
- The Great Australian TV Delay: 2015 Edition
- Foxtel looks to govt for salvation in piracy battle
- Watching TV in Australia: The Australian Delay Under The Microscope
- Louis CK, Culture, And Why We Pirate All The Things
- Australian Government hopes to untangle NBN migration mess
- NBN: network set for hiring frenzy as staff morale lifts
- Different release times of films and TV shows boost global piracy
- HBO Now users outside US to be 'cut off'
- Five Reasons Why Regional Delays Still Exist
Pick of the Day
- An OSX clipboard manager that is super simple to use, and now I cannot live without. It keeps the past n items (I have it set to 20) you cut or copied in a stack - and you can paste any item from the stack.
Press CMD + V, it pastes normally. Press CMD + SHIFT + V, and you can cursor through your stack of items. Brilliant. - Submitted by Matt Jenkins
- An OSX clipboard manager that is super simple to use, and now I cannot live without. It keeps the past n items (I have it set to 20) you cut or copied in a stack - and you can paste any item from the stack.
YouTube
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Preceded by: "Driving Me Up the Firewall" |
Can't We All Just Watch Along? |
Followed by: "XP Safe Unsafe" |