There’s also a lot more happening in tech, so read on!
In This Article:
Leaf and Core Rewind
Supreme Court Allows Anti-Apple Antitrust Lawsuit to Continue
iPhone Molds Show Disappointing Design
Things people don’t like about the iPhone design: rounded sides and a large camera bump. Things Apple’s going all in on for the next iPhone: rounded sides and a larger camera bump! Apple’s next iPhone will feature a comically large camera bump. The good news is that the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max sequels will get three cameras. The bad news is we’ll have a giant camera bump to thank for it. The iPhone XR will get a second camera… and also a large camera bump.
I’m on the “Upgrade every year” plan, and even I’m wondering if it would be worth it to keep my current iPhone, despite the fact that upgrading would cost me next to nothing up front.
iPhone sales are down, and Apple goes with this?
Wangiri! Or, “One Ring” Phone Scam
KBParadise V60 Vintage with Matias Quiet Click Switches Review
I love this little keyboard. It’s the first 60% keyboard I’ve ever used. After the initial break-in period, I got used to the smaller form factor. Now I love it. Check out the full review, one of my largest ever, for details on the Mattias Quiet Click switches, the KBParadise V60, and one of the most soothing sounding keyboard sound test videos I’ve ever done. Enjoy!
Around the Web
White House Launches Tool to Report Censorship on Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter: Makena Kelly, The Verge
I don’t re-write the titles from other authors. But if I did, this one would have been titled: ‘Donald Trump Launches Plan to Protect Hate Speech‘. Because that’s what this is about. Trump wants to make sure that “conservative voices” aren’t being “censored” on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and other sites. The problem? None of those sites are removing conservative voices. They are, however, banning hate speech and language that incites violence.
To Trump, there’s no difference between conservatism and violent hate speech.
Big words from the guy who should have been banned from these services when he called for the banning of all Muslims from entering the United States, in the most anti-religious rhetoric out of a world power since the 30’s.
You know who we’re talking about.
Let’s not forget that Twitter can’t ban the Nazis because their algorithms would ban a large number of Republicans. Almost as though the venn diagram of white supremacists and Republicans is a little too close to a circle.
San Francisco Passes City Government Ban on Facial Recognition Tech: Taylor Hatmaker, Techcrunch
San Francisco has become the first U.S. city to ban the use of facial recognition tech. Government organizations, including police, will not be allowed to use surveillance cameras set up through the city along with facial recognition. This is in interest of privacy and preventing government overreach. No more Big Brother in San Francisco.
Facial recognition is racially biased, and biased against women as well. Women of color are far more likely to be wrongly identified by the software. As such, police could wrongly target them for crimes they did not commit. Furthermore, everyone finds the practice of tracking people everywhere they go using facial recognition a little creepy, and to reminiscent of dystopian literature.
(Weak) Facebook Live Restrictions Introduced in Response to New Zealand Shooting Video: Ben Lovejoy, 9to5Mac
He live streamed all of it on Facebook.
In the wake of this, Facebook has not committed itself to better oversight on hateful content. However, they have announced a new “one strike” policy. Now, if a person posts something hateful, and one of their friends reports them, they won’t be able to share live video. The idea is that people like this often make hateful statements prior to their killing sprees, like “Ban all Muslims from entering the country,” or “LGBTQ people don’t deserve rights.” Those all too common utterances of hate could ban a person from ever using Facebook’s live streaming service again. Because hateful acts of violence always start off with hate speech.
Smartphone Shipments Hit a Five-Year Low in North America: Brian Heater, Techcrunch
The market is starting to feel that pinch. Global smartphone shipments are down 18% from last year, across many top brands. Apple itself saw a 19% decline in sales. LG suffered a 24% drop, and smaller brands, lumped together, saw a 65% drop.
People aren’t buying cellphones anymore. They’ve become too expensive and aren’t worth the upgrade. Companies are suffering. Rather than innovate, Apple has attempted to release a large number of services to hold the company over until the next great thing comes along. Until then, expect more boring smartphones.