Could Google really leave Australia?

Found on BBC News on Tuesday, 26 January 2021
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The proposed law would mandate that Google has commercial agreements with every news organisation - or enter forced arbitration, something Google says is "unworkable".

It's possible that Google could redirect Australian Google users to the US (or another) country's version of Google. That would likely strip out localised search results, but keep the service accessible.

But it may also be that Google would block Australian users based on their geographic location as determined by an IP (internet) address.

Sure it could. It has done so before in Belgium and Spain.

'Anti-Facebook' MeWe social network adds 2.5 million new members in one week

Found on ZD Net on Thursday, 21 January 2021
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There has been a growing movement away from social media giants such as Facebook and Twitter recently.

Users are getting fed up with relentless privacy violations, surveillance capitalism, political bias, targeting, and newsfeed manipulation by these companies.

Users are becoming disillusioned by the data gathering from platforms such as Facebook. MeWe gives users total control over their data along with privacy no ads, no targeting, no facial recognition, no data mining, and no newsfeed manipulation.

"Too big to fail" does not exist. The sooner Facebook goes down, the better.

DuckDuckGo surpasses 100 million daily search queries for the first time

Found on ZD Net on Wednesday, 20 January 2021
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The achievement comes after a period of sustained growth the company has been seeing for the past two years, and especially since August 2020, when the search engine began seeing more than 2 billion search queries a month on a regular basis. The numbers are small in comparison to Google's 5 billion daily search queries but it's a positive sign that users are looking for alternatives.

Plus, results from Google are getting worse. It's trying to be smart and thinks it knows what you really are looking for, but that fails way too often.

Australia rebukes Google for blocking local content

Found on BBC News on Sunday, 17 January 2021
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The Australian government has urged Google to focus on paying for Australian content instead of blocking it.

After media reports said Australian news websites were not showing up in searches, Google confirmed it was blocking the sites for a small number of users.

“The digital giants should focus on paying for original content, not blocking it. That’s my message to those digital giants,” said Australian Treasurer Josh Frydenberg.

If a company does not want to do any more business with Australia, then it's just like that. Yes, politicians make the rules in Australia, but if you do not like these laws, you pull out. Simple as that.

The NSA warns enterprises to beware of third-party DNS resolvers

Found on Ars Technica on Saturday, 16 January 2021
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On Thursday, however, the National Security Agency said in some cases Fortune 500 companies, large government agencies, and other enterprise users are better off not using it. The reason: the same encryption that thwarts malicious third parties can hamper engineers’ efforts to secure their networks.

“DoH provides the benefit of encrypted DNS transactions, but it can also bring issues to enterprises, including a false sense of security, bypassing of DNS monitoring and protections, concerns for internal network configurations and information, and exploitation of upstream DNS traffic,” NSA officials wrote in published recommendations.

Network admins have brought up these problems over and over, and have been laughed at and ridiculed. Glad to see others see the big problems of DoH too and hopefully DoT takes the lead.

Elon Musk advises people to ditch Facebook and use Signal

Found on Digital Trends on Tuesday, 12 January 2021
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The tweets seem to have been prompted by a recent change to Facebook’s privacy policy. As reported by The Hacker News, the new updates allow more sharing of data between Facebook and its partner company WhatsApp, including the sharing of phone numbers, interactions on the platform, information about mobile devices used to access the service, and IP addresses. If WhatsApp users do not agree to the data sharing, their accounts are disabled.

Disabling the WhatsApp accounts is the best users can hope for.

WhatsApp Rival Signal Reports Growing Pains as New Users Surge

Found on Bloomberg on Saturday, 09 January 2021
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Signal, an encrypted messaging app that competes with other services including Facebook’s WhatsApp, said Thursday that verification codes used to create new accounts were delayed because of a flood of new users.

The surge came just hours after Elon Musk endorsed the service and amid reported changes to WhatsApp’s terms of service.

Responsible people flee WhatsApp, the rest stays.

WhatsApp gives users an ultimatum: Share data with Facebook or stop using the app

Found on Ars Technica on Thursday, 07 January 2021
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WhatsApp, the Facebook-owned messenger that claims to have privacy coded into its DNA, is giving its 2 billion plus users an ultimatum: agree to share their personal data with the social network or delete their accounts.

In 2016, WhatsApp gave users a one-time ability to opt out of having account data turned over to Facebook. Now, an updated privacy policy is changing that. Come next month, users will no longer have that choice.

Those who never ever used WhatsApp or Facebook however have no option to stomp them from using their personal data that's uploaded through the accounts of people which have them in their address books.

It's game over for FarmVille, as Flash also buys the farm

Found on CNet News on Friday, 01 January 2021
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Game developer Zynga announced in September it would shut down the game on Dec. 31, a victim of Adobe's decision to stop distributing and updating its Flash Player for web browsers, which in turn led Facebook to announce an end to support for Flash games on its platform.

It's so good to see that this piece of software disaster drags other disasters down with it too.

Amazon still hasn’t fixed its problem with bait-and-switch reviews

Found on Ars Technica on Thursday, 31 December 2020
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The manufacturer had tricked Amazon into displaying thousands of reviews for an unrelated product below its drone, helping the drone to unfairly rise to the top of Amazon's search results.

This kind of review bait-and-switch is not a new problem. More than two years ago, Buzzfeed's Nicole Nguyen wrote about other online sellers using the same scam. For example, she found that many of the five-star reviews for a highly-rated iPhone charging dock were actually reviews for a culinary torch.

As long as the false reviews generate more income for Amazon, they won't change it.