10 True-Crime Podcasts You Probably Haven't Binged Yet

Way back in 2014 (a millennia ago in internet years), the podcast Serial began, and the whole world stopped to listen. Today, the show is widely regarded as one of the most influential podcasts in history, a cultural phenomenon that popularized the true-crime genre, advanced the conversation around criminal justice…

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Source: LifeHacker – 10 True-Crime Podcasts You Probably Haven’t Binged Yet

Coinbase Is Suing the Feds for Once

Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the world, is no stranger to U.S. courts, federal investigations, or lawsuits. But usually, the crypto company is defending itself, not filing the legal complaints. In a rare twist on the classic, Coinbase has sued the Securities and Exchange Commission. And,…

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Source: Gizmodo – Coinbase Is Suing the Feds for Once

AMD Unveils Ryzen Z1 Chips With Zen 4 And RDNA 3 Firepower For Gaming Handhelds

AMD Unveils Ryzen Z1 Chips With Zen 4 And RDNA 3 Firepower For Gaming Handhelds
Both of AMD’s latest-generation architectures, those being Zen 4 for CPUs and RDNA 3 for GPUs, can offer significant performance-per-watt benefits over previous-generation parts. That’s most important in power-constrained battery-powered devices, and little is more power-constrained than a gaming handheld.

That’s exactly what the Ryzen

Source: Hot Hardware – AMD Unveils Ryzen Z1 Chips With Zen 4 And RDNA 3 Firepower For Gaming Handhelds

Major Tech Firms Face Hefty Fines Under New Digital Consumer Bill

Major tech firms face the threat of multibillion-pound fines for breaching consumer protection rules under new legislation that will tackle issues including fake online reviews and subscriptions that are difficult to cancel. From a report: The digital markets, competition and consumers bill will empower the UK’s competition watchdog to tackle the “excessive dominance” that a small number of tech firms hold over consumers and businesses. Firms that are deemed to have “strategic market status” — such as tech firms Google and Apple, and online retailer Amazon — will be given strict rules on how to operate under the bill and face a fine representing up to 10% of global turnover if they breach the new regime.

Without naming these companies, the government said firms could be required to open up their data to rival search engines or increase the transparency of how their app stores and review systems work. Oversight of major tech firms will be carried out by an arm of the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), the Digital Markets Unit, which will also decide which firms receive strategic market status. The bill, which will be tabled in parliament on Tuesday, is expected to become law next year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Major Tech Firms Face Hefty Fines Under New Digital Consumer Bill

Twitch Streamer Immediately Denied From Bank After Accidentally Applying As An ‘Adult Entertainer’

United Kingdom-based variety streamer Poopernoodle, or Lou, wasn’t exactly sure whether or not being a human adult with a Twitch channel qualified her as an “online adult entertainer” until she described herself as such on a bank application and was swiftly denied.

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Source: Kotaku – Twitch Streamer Immediately Denied From Bank After Accidentally Applying As An ‘Adult Entertainer’

Kraven the Hunter Is Sony's First R-Rated Marvel Movie

Kraven the Hunter is a Marvel movie grounded heavily in the real world,” said star Aaron Taylor-Johnson. “And anyone who is familiar with the comics and the character of Kraven, they know that he’s a fierce hunter with the skill of a highly trained killer. So, I figure now’s a good time to answer the Internet’s…

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Source: Gizmodo – Kraven the Hunter Is Sony’s First R-Rated Marvel Movie

Netflix Is Trying To Make Henry Cavill's Last Season In The Witcher Last As Long As Possible

On Tuesday, Netflix revealed the teaser trailer for the third season of its live-action adaptation of The Witcher. Although the teaser didn’t reveal much in terms of what trouble Geralt, Ciri, and Yeneffer will get themselves into, it did tell us that this season is gonna drip-feed fans Henry Cavill’s final moments as…

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Source: Kotaku – Netflix Is Trying To Make Henry Cavill’s Last Season In The Witcher Last As Long As Possible

Why You Shouldn't Trust AI Detectors

Many teachers aren’t happy about the AI revolution, and it’s tough to blame them: ChatGPT has proven you can feed AI a prompt, say for a high school essay, and the AI can spit out a result in seconds. Of course, that essay might be riddled with errors, but, hey, the homework’s done. So, when AI checkers advertise…

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Source: LifeHacker – Why You Shouldn’t Trust AI Detectors

Magic: The Gathering YouTuber Says Pinkertons Threatened Him With $200k Fines, Jail

Yesterday, Kotaku reported that Magic: The Gathering maker Wizards of the Coast had sent Pinkerton detectives after a YouTuber after he had erroneously purchased an upcoming booster box for the collectible card game ahead of its release date. Today, the streamer revealed more details about exactly what these…

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Source: Kotaku – Magic: The Gathering YouTuber Says Pinkertons Threatened Him With 0k Fines, Jail

Watch Live As Japan's Ispace Attempts To Land A Private Spacecraft On The Moon Today

Watch Live As Japan's Ispace Attempts To Land A Private Spacecraft On The Moon Today
A Japanese company called ispace is attempting to be the first private company to land a spacecraft on the moon today, and you can watch live. It launched its Hakuto-R lander onboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in December of last year.

After launching the Hakuto-R lander on December 11, 2022, ispace had the spacecraft take a three-month journey

Source: Hot Hardware – Watch Live As Japan’s Ispace Attempts To Land A Private Spacecraft On The Moon Today

Cruise self-driving taxis can now operate around the clock in San Francisco

You won’t necessarily have to hail one of Cruise’s robotaxis at night in San Francisco. Company chief Kyle Vogt has revealed that Cruise now has permission to operate 24 hours a day, seven days a week across all of San Francisco. Only employees will have access to the whole region for those hours. However, Cruise is also opening daytime rides to public “power users” for the first time. While you’ll only have access to a limited portion of the city at first (mainly Pacific Heights, Richmond and Sunset), it’s now just a question of where you are, not when you’re going.

Staff have already been riding during the daytime for months. San Francisco officials have resisted expanding access to robotaxis from Cruise and Alphabet’s Waymo over concerns the companies are moving too quickly. There have been incidents where the driverless cars blocked traffic, including emergency vehicles. The city’s Transportation Authority has instead pushed for limited rollouts with gradual expansions.

There’s no timeline for wider deployments elsewhere, but Vogt promises that operations will “soon” grow in other cities. Successful use in San Francisco is a “litmus test” for robotaxis in other cities, the executive claims. The city’s challenging terrain, unusual roads and wet weather are daunting for self-driving car sensors.

The wider access could help the GM-owned brand claim an edge over Waymo. Cruise was the first to start charging for self-driving rides in San Francisco. Now, it can tout non-stop service for some passengers. Waymo still has an advantage in areas like Phoenix, where it has charged for public rides for a while, but it clearly has a more difficult fight ahead.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cruise-self-driving-taxis-can-now-operate-around-the-clock-in-san-francisco-144419506.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Cruise self-driving taxis can now operate around the clock in San Francisco

Xerox Gives Legendary PARC Lab To SRI International

In a strange twist to the long history of the Palo Alto Research Center, Xerox has announced the donation of the lab’s Silicon Valley headquarters and related assets to SRI International, another well-established tech research center. From a report: Opened in 1970, PARC was a pioneering developer of technologies like the graphic user interface, laser printing and Ethernet networking. PARC has recently been doing work in areas like artificial intelligence, the internet of things, clean tech and 3-D printing.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Xerox Gives Legendary PARC Lab To SRI International

You Should Put Your Coffee Table on Casters

We’re all struggling to keep our spaces clean, and at the same time, living in smaller spaces with rooms that pull double duty. The tables in your house are functional in ways that go beyond being the place you put the tableware: Most serve as staging spaces for projects, too. The problem is, they’re also largely…

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Source: LifeHacker – You Should Put Your Coffee Table on Casters

Spotify reaches more than half a billion users for the first time

Spotify has released its earnings report for the first quarter of 2023 and the headline figure is the number of users the company has. As of March 31st, 515 million people were using the audio streaming service. That’s the first time Spotify has had more than half a billion users. Q1 was also Spotify’s second-biggest quarter for user growth to date — its audience increased by five percent from the previous quarter and 22 percent year over year. The user base grew by 26 million, which is 15 million more than Spotify had expected. The company said it saw growth in both developed and developing markets, as well as almost every age group.

Most of that growth is based on folks who use the free, ad-supported version of the Spotify service. Premium subscriptions didn’t keep pace with the overall growth, as they rose by two percent from the previous quarter and 15 percent year over year from 205 million to 210 million. Still, premium subscribers grew by 3 million more than Spotify had indicated in its guidance to investors.

Overall, Spotify posted a net operating loss of €156 million ($172 million) for the quarter. That’s far more than the €6 million ($6.6 million) loss it saw in the first quarter of 2022, though it’s an improvement over the €270 million ($297 million) Spotify lost the previous quarter.

While overall revenue was up by 14 percent year over year from €2.66 billion ($2.93 billion) to €3.04 billion ($3.34 billion), it dipped by four percent from the previous quarter. Revenue from paid subscribers didn’t change significantly from Q4 2022, but it dropped by 27 percent on the ad-supported side from €449 million ($494 million) to €329 million ($362 million) — though revenue from free users rose by 17 percent year over year. The quarter-to-quarter drop is perhaps a result of advertisers tightening their belts somewhat, leading to lower ad spend.

Advertisers aren’t the only businesses trying to rein in costs. Spotify, like many other major tech companies in recent months, has laid off a sizable proportion of its staff. In January, the company laid off six percent of workers, which equates to around 600 people based on the 9,800 that Spotify employed as of the end of 2022.

Additionally, Spotify seems to be placing a bigger focus on the core parts of its business. It recently announced plans to shut down both its live audio app, Spotify Live, and Heardle, the Wordle-style song-guessing game it bought last summer.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/spotify-reaches-more-than-half-a-billion-users-for-the-first-time-142818686.html?src=rss

Source: Engadget – Spotify reaches more than half a billion users for the first time