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List of All Articles with Tag 'tec'

Sony’s Bungie Game Unit Cuts Staff Following Delayed Titles
Sony’s Bungie Game Unit Cuts Staff Following Delayed Titles
Bungie, the Sony-owned game studio behind Destiny 2, let go an undisclosed number of staffers, according to people
1970-01-01 08:00
Telegram to ban channels that called for anti-Semitic riots in Russia's Dagestan - founder
Telegram to ban channels that called for anti-Semitic riots in Russia's Dagestan - founder
MOSCOW The popular messaging platform Telegram will block channels that called for anti-Semitic violence in Russia's Dagestan region,
1970-01-01 08:00
Apple’s ‘Scary Fast’ event updates: How to watch as Apple set to unveil new Macs
Apple’s ‘Scary Fast’ event updates: How to watch as Apple set to unveil new Macs
Apple is set to hold its latest event – and is promising that it will be “scary”. The event will begin the day before Hallowe’en and is rumoured to be bringing a host of new Macs. The company teased it with an invitation reading “Scary Fast” and apparent references to the Mac operating system. It is Apple’s third major event of the year, after the iPhone launch in September and its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June. At WWDC, Apple revealed its new augmented reality headset, which might also feature in the upcoming launch. Otherwise, Apple is rumoured to be updating its iMac with a new chip, and putting new processors in its high end, 14- and 16-inch MacBook Pro. It will begin at 5pm local pacific time, which is 8pm eastern or 1am in the UK. It will be livestreamed on YouTube as well as Apple’s website.
1970-01-01 08:00
Novogratz Reiterates That He Expects Spot Bitcoin ETF Approval This Year
Novogratz Reiterates That He Expects Spot Bitcoin ETF Approval This Year
Michael Novogratz reiterated that he expects the US Securities and Exchange Commission will finally approve exchange-traded funds that
1970-01-01 08:00
Meta launches paid-for version of Instagram and Facebook
Meta launches paid-for version of Instagram and Facebook
Meta will launch a paid-for, subscription-based version of Facebook and Instagram. The company will allow people to pay up to €13 to have no ads appear on those apps. The change has been made to comply with European Union regulations, it said. As such, it will only be available to people in the EU, the European Economic Area and Switzerland. The monthly subscription plans for users in the EU, European Economic Area and Switzerland, will cost 9.99 euros ($10.58) for web users, while iOS and Android users will have to shell out 12.99 euros a month. The difference is to account for the fees taken by Apple and Google for payments on its platforms, Meta said – a move that follows a similar price difference for Twitter’s premium offering. The EU regulations threaten to curb Meta’s ability to personalize ads for users without their consent and hurt its major revenue source. Users across the world will continue to be able to use the site for free, and will see no change to their experience as a result, Meta said. But offering the paid-for subscription version allows Meta to comply with “the requirements of European regulators”, the company said, after a recent ruling. Having the option of paying for a version of Facebook and Instagram with no ads means that people will have more clearly consented to having their data used for marketing, Meta suggested it in its announcement. That in turn means it will better comply with European regulations, it said. The world’s most popular social media network has been under antitrust pressure in the EU. In July, it lost its fight against a German data curb order as Europe’s top court backed the German antitrust watchdog’s power to also investigate privacy breaches. Offering a choice between a free, ad-supported plan and an ad-free paid subscription might lead to users opting for the former, helping Meta to comply with the regulations without affecting its ad business. Meta was fined 390 million euros earlier this year by Ireland’s Data Privacy Commissioner, and was told it cannot use the so-called “contract” as a legal basis to send users ads based on their online activity. The company later said it intended to ask users in the EU for their consent before allowing businesses to target ads in order to address evolving regulatory requirements in the region. Additional reporting by agencies Read More Threads is not dying, Mark Zuckerberg insists Letitia James and 32 other attorneys general sue Meta for ‘harming youth’ People’s Instagram posts are showing where they are not expected
1970-01-01 08:00
Ford to add more Tesla EV chargers to its network
Ford to add more Tesla EV chargers to its network
(Reuters) -Ford Motor said on Monday it would add more of Tesla's Superchargers to its electric-vehicle charging network, higher than
1970-01-01 08:00
White House unveils wide-ranging action to mitigate AI risks
White House unveils wide-ranging action to mitigate AI risks
By Jeff Mason U.S. President Joe Biden will take wider-ranging action on artificial intelligence (AI) on Monday by
1970-01-01 08:00
Britain to push ahead with rules for cryptoassets
Britain to push ahead with rules for cryptoassets
LONDON Britain said on Monday it would put forward legislation to implement its first set of rules to
1970-01-01 08:00
Apple Looks to Capitalize on Computer Sales Comeback With New Macs
Apple Looks to Capitalize on Computer Sales Comeback With New Macs
Apple Inc. is set to capitalize on a computer market resurgence when the company unveils two new Macs
1970-01-01 08:00
Quants With $23 Trillion See AI Takeover Even as They Hold Back
Quants With $23 Trillion See AI Takeover Even as They Hold Back
The financial world’s computer-loving crowd is preparing for the dawn of a new AI-powered era — but that
1970-01-01 08:00
Elon Musk says X posts with misinformation are now ‘ineligible for revenue share’
Elon Musk says X posts with misinformation are now ‘ineligible for revenue share’
Posts on X carrying any misinformation that is corrected by the platform’s crowd-sourced fact-checking system will now be “ineligible for revenue share”, the social media company’s owner Elon Musk has said. “Any posts that are corrected by Community Notes become ineligible for revenue share,” the multibillionaire posted on X on Sunday. Mr Musk said the change aims to “maximise the incentive for accuracy over sensationalism”. The Tesla titan also noted that any attempts to “weaponise Community Notes to demonetise people will be immediately obvious, because all code and data is open source.” Some users were quick to criticise the change, observing that the feature is used not just to correct misinformation, but also to add essential context even if there is nothing wrong with the initial post. The Community Notes feature was first launched by Twitter co-founder and former chief Jack Dorsey in 2021 as a way to debunk misleading tweets. Currently, eligible users on the social media platform can sign up to contribute to Community Notes, which involves sharing a short note of context for any post, including correcting an error or providing essential information that has been omitted. An account can sign up for Community Notes, according to X, if the user has not recently violated the platform’s rules and has been on the platform for at least 6 months. Other users who view the note can then rate the helpfulness of notes with the note garnering the largest consensus surfacing to the top. Then earlier this year, Twitter/X started paying creators on the platform for the first time via a revenue-sharing program that provided them compensation for the ads appearing in their reply threads. But the social media platform has come under increasing scrutiny for its handling of misinformation since Mr Musk bought Twitter for $44bn last year and cut nearly two-thirds of the company’s workforce. The platform’s handling of misinformation has particularly been on focus following the conflict in Israel and Gaza. The European Union also raised concerns that amid the conflict Twitter was not quick to take down problematic content even when it had been flagged by relevant authorities. EU commissioner Thierry Breton noted that Twitter was hosting “fake and manipulated images and facts ... such as repurposed old images of unrelated armed conflicts or military footage that actually originated from video games”. The EU has also opened an investigation into X on the issue, while the company maintained that it has removed hundreds of Hamas-linked accounts in response to the concerns. Read More Twitter takeover: 1 year later, X struggles with misinformation, advertising and usage decline Tesla’s profits dip as Elon Musk goes on rant against staff working from home ‘He brought so much joy’: Heartbroken Friends stars among those paying tribute to Matthew Perry Twitter adds video calling – and lets strangers ring you Elon Musk was ‘almost in tears’ on Tesla earnings call, analyst claims Slack to retire its status account on Elon Musk’s X
1970-01-01 08:00
Toyota’s Global Sales, Output Reach Record 5.6 Million Vehicles
Toyota’s Global Sales, Output Reach Record 5.6 Million Vehicles
Toyota Motor Corp.’s global sales climbed 8.3% in April to September from a year earlier to a record
1970-01-01 08:00
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