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Technology

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- Category: Technology
Read more: Facebook, Google and other tech giants should be broken up says inventor of the web
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If you're anything like me, you probably say a lot of the same stuff time and time again.
I'm not just talking about trendy exclamations like "Good golly, Gertrude!" and "Holy hamburgers, Henry!" Those are certainly fair game, of course, but I'm thinking more about the sorts of things you type repeatedly as part of your work day — addresses, phone numbers, the current date, or any other bits of text you send over and over to clients, colleagues, and/or lifelong foes.
We've talked before about text expanding tools for Android that can save such phrases and then make them easy to insert anywhere, with minimal effort, on your mobile device. When it comes to the desktop, though, those utilities tend to be limited to traditional operating systems like Windows and MacOS and not designed for contemporary, browser-centric use — which also means they aren't available on Chrome OS.
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Read more: A time-saving typing tool that works anywhere in Chrome
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Apple's voice-activated digital assistant, Siri, has come in for more than its share of criticism that it has fallen behind other voice assistants in some ways. Critics don&t seem to understand that Applevoice assistant is an enterprise product.
Why is Siri an enterprise product
This is what happens when you use a voice search tool: You activate the assistant, it listens to what you say, identifies that a request is being made and sends that request to the cloud to be resolved and responded to.
To read this article in full, please click here
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Read more: Why Apple’s Siri is already an enterprise product
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- Category: Technology
Read more: Google Employees Stage Global Walkout Over Payouts To Alleged Sexual Harassers
Write comment (95 Comments)With the US midterms fast approaching purveyors of online disinformation are very busy indeed spreading their hyper-partisan junk on Facebook .
Their goal:Skewing democratic outcomes by putting out misleading, deceptive or incorrect information thatpackaged as real news about politics, economics or culture — yet presented in a way that panders to prejudices and is more likely to get virally spread on mainstream social media platforms where it has the chance to influence peopleviews.
This has happened before; is still happening; and will keep on happening unless or until social media platforms get properly regulated.
In the meanwhile, whatto be done Arming yourselves and your friends with smart digital and news literacy tools to help shine a light on the kind of ridiculously over-inflated political nonsensethatbeing passed around on all sides (albeit, not necessarily equally) seems like a good place to start.
Step forward, Oxford UniversityOxford Internet Institute (OII), which has just launched an aggregator tool which tracks what it terms &junk& political views being shared on Facebook — doing so in near real-time and offering various ways to visualize and explore the junk heap.
What&junk news& in this contextThe OII says this type of political content can include &ideologically extreme, hyper-partisan, or conspiratorial news and information, as well as various forms of propaganda&.
This sort of stuff might elsewhere get badged ‘fake news&, although that label is problematical — and has itself been hijacked by known muck spreaders. (So ‘online disinformation& tends to be the label of choice in academic and policy circles, these days.)
The OII is here using its own political propaganda content categorization — i.e. this term &junk news& — which is based on what it describes as &a grounded typology& derived through analyzing a large amount of political communications shared by US social media users.
Specifically itbased on an analysis of 21.8 million tweetssent during the 2016 Presidential campaign period up til the 2018 State of the Union Address in the United States — applying what the Institute dubs &rigorous coding and content analysis techniques to define the new phenomenon&.
This involved labelling the source websites of shared links based on&a grounded typology that has been tested over several elections around the world in 2016-2018&, with a content source gettingcoded as a purveyor of junk news if it failed on 3 out of 5 of criteria of the typology.
(Examples of sources that are being judged junk via this method include the likes of Breitbart, Dailycaller and Dailywire to name just a few.)
Now to the tool itself:
The Visual Junk News Aggregator does what it says on the tin, aggregating popular junk news posts into a bipartisan thumbnail wall of over-inflated (or just out and out) BS.
Complete with a trigger warning for the risk ofgraphic images and language. Mousing over the thumbnails brings up any title and description thatbeen scraped for the post in question, plus a date stamp and full Facebook reaction data.
Another tool — theTop 10 Junk News Aggregator —shows the most engaged with English language junk news stories posted to Facebook in the last 24 hours, in the context of the 2018 US midterm elections.(With engagement being based on total Facebook reactions per second of the postlife.)
While the full aggregator toolsupports keyword searches of the junk heap (by content and/or publisher), and also by time — allowing for sifting of junk posts published to public Facebook pages as recently as the last hour or up to a full month old.
Returned search results can be further sorted by time and reaction — across all eight types of possible Facebook reactions.
&The Junk News Aggregator is an interactive tool for exploring junk news stories posted on Facebook, particularly useful right now in the lead-up to the US midterms,& the Institute writes. &It is a unique tool for systematically studying misinformation on Facebook in real time. It make visible the depth of the junk news problem, displaying the quantity and the content of junk news, as well as the levels of engagement with it.
&Junk news content can be sorted by time and by engagement numbers, as well as via keyword search (such as for a candidate, district, or specific issue). It also offers a visual overview and a top-10 snapshot of the daymost engaged-with junk news.
&Our goal is to help shed light on the problem of junk news on social media, to make this issue more transparent, and to help improve the publicmedia literacy. It also aims to help journalists, researchers, policy-makers, and social media platforms understand the impact of junk news on public life.&
It sent us a case study example to help demonstrate the &functionality and usefulness& of the tool (based on a search it conducted at 11:00am GMT, October 31, 2018).
For this example it used the search keyword &caravan&, selecting posts from the last day and filtering for the most shared posts — which served up several posts.
The most shared post was this one, below, from junk news source Chicks on the Right:
The Institute doesn&t make any comment on why it chose to track junk news on Facebook, specifically, vs other social media platforms (e.g. Twitter) — thoughtherelittle doubt that Facebookplatform remains the kingpin where skewing political views is concerned, given its massive user-base.
Meanwhile the companyongoing attempts to dampen the virality of democracy-denting junk shared on its platform continue — and continue to yield underwhelming results, given the size and gravity of the problem.
Also unconvincing: Facebookextremely recent attempts to install systems that verify the actual identity of political advertisers on its platform. Yet these self-imposed checks look to be off to a terrible start — as Facebook has just been shown hosting (and spreading) yet more fake information… ouch…
Putting your faith in Facebook to sort its shit out on the political front — and fast — looks about as sensible as trusting your pet turtle to a shark to babysit.
Much better to tool up and seek to stay on top of the junk heap yourself — at least until the worldpolitical representatives sort their shit out and get a proper handle on regulating social media.
In the meanwhile, don&t forget to vote.
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Read more: Tool up for the midterms with this Facebook junk news aggregator
Write comment (93 Comments)Google employees are fed up with the search giantlack of transparency when it comes to handling sexual harassment and misconduct allegations.
This morning, thousands of Googlers from San Francisco to Dublin are walking out in hopes of bringing real change to the company. The protest follows a New York Times reportlast week that revealed Google had provided Android co-creator Andy Rubin a $90 million payout package despite credible allegations of sexual misconduct made against him.
The protestors have five key asks:
- An end to forced arbitrationin cases of harassment and discrimination.
- A commitment to end pay and opportunity inequity.
- A publicly disclosed sexual harassment transparency report.
- A clear, uniform, globally inclusive process for reporting sexual misconduct safely and anonymously.
- Elevate the chief diversity officer to answer directly to the chief executive officer and make recommendationsdirectly to the board of directors. And appoint an employee representative to the board.
Plans of the walkoutemerged earlier this week, just days after the bombshell NYT report was released. According to BuzzFeed, some 200 Googlers began staging the protest; the group quickly grew to thousands, including non-U.S. Googlers. Google CEO Sundar Pichai had reportedly condoned the protest in an internal e-mail to employees Tuesday.
Pichai also responded to the NYT report with a letter co-signed by vice president of people operationsEileen Naughton, admittingthat 48 people had been terminated at the company for sexual harassment in the past two years alone, including 13 senior employees.
We&ll be at the San Francisco protest, which begins at 11:10 a.m. PST. Herea look at protestors around the globe this morning.
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Read more: Google employees across the globe are walking out now to protest sexual harassment
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