Cigarette butts are worse contaminants of oceans than plastic STRAWS, report claims
While cigarette butts are found almost everywhere around the world, their disposal has remained unregulated, meaning that huge numbers end up in the oceans

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Apple's mobile privacy letter to Congress omits an awful lot of context

Apple's official letter of response to the chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce this month was designed to alleviate congressional fears about the company invading its customers' privacy. But a close reading of the letter does the opposite, pointing out the many ways sensitive data is retained even when the consumer says no. And that retained data is only one crafty cyberthief away from getting out.

The problem with the letter is that it assumes that technology always works perfectly and that security safeguards are never overcome by attackers — or even nosey, technically astute romantic partners. Such thinking, that we live in a state of nirvana, is the one of the biggest privacy and security problems today, with vendors routinely — and unrealistically and arrogantly — assuming that they have anticipated and negated all security holes.

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Smaller updates remove 'last significant barrier' to commercial Windows 10 adoption, argues expert

Smaller monthly updates for Windows 10 may help push the operating system onto more machines as its predecessor faces retirement, a patch expert said.

"Lots of companies are feeling the pain [of large updates] and deferring or delaying migration to Windows 10 because of that," said Chris Goettl, product manager with client security and management vendor Ivanti, in an interview last week. "We should see Windows 10 adoption move forward again because [customers] can overcome the size problem."

[ Related: Windows 7 to Windows 10 migration guide ]

Currently, Microsoft delivers three different sizes of quality updates — security patches and non-security bug fixes that are issued several times monthly — full, express and a third, dubbed delta. However, beginning with Windows 10 1809, the feature upgrade set to ship next month or in October, Microsoft will offer only one size; that update will be considerably smaller than what Microsoft now calls the full update and only slightly larger than express on individual PCs.

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Urgent call comes into this third-party corporate IT support group that someone needs to be sent at once to a big client halfway across the country, according to a pilot fish on the scene.

"We were just told something important broke, and must be fixed pronto," fish says.

"The tech who got the lucky plane ticket flew in, got his rental car and pulled into the client's parking lot, where he saw a crane sitting in the spaces closest to the warehouse.

"Sure enough, right behind it there was a crane-shaped hole in the wall, draped with plastic.

"Never underestimate the power of automation"

Answer Sharky's call for true tales of IT life by sending your story to me at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. You can also comment on today's tale at Sharky's Google+ community, and read thousands of great old tales in the Sharkives.

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Google launched its Tez paymen app in India a year ago, and now the company is giving the service major push into retail as it prepares to expand it to other parts of Asia and beyond.

The app itself is being rebranded to Google Pay — bringing it in line with Google global payment service, which is available in 20 countries — but there are more tangible updates on their way. Most notably, Google is plotting to turn Tez Google Pay into an all-encompassing payment app for India.

The service started out in bank-based payments before adding bill and utility payments and messaging, but now Google is planning an extended push into retail, both online and offline.Economic Times recently reported on the rebrand and expansion.

The service already supports payments with some 2,000 apps and websites, including Goibibo and RedBus, but it is adding to that number and planning‘deep& integration with partners such as Uber and ticketing service BookMyshow. Google is also focusing on offline, and it said it is in the processof adding in-store payment support with a range of retail brands that will includeBig Bazaar, e-Zone, and FBB.

Tez competes with dedicated payment services like Paytm and Mobikwik, and also WhatsApp — the Facebook-owned service that is Indiatop messaging app but has struggled to win approval to launch an upcoming payment service due to concerns around its lack of a local office.

Already, Googleservice has made progress. The Tez app has pulled in 55 million downloads, and Google said it has racked up 750 million transactions with an annual run rate of over $30 billion. That, it said, has motivated it to look at overseas expansion opportunities.

Google is supercharging its Tez payment service in India ahead of global expansion

GoogleIndia-based Tez service has been rebranded to Google Pay

Beyond the retail push, the service formerly knownas Tez will also expand to cover micro-loans, bringing it into direct competition with startups like ZestMoney — which just closed aninvestment from Xiaomi this week.

Google said it has partnered with a number of India-based banks — including HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Federal Bank, and Kotak Mahindra Bank — to offer &pre-approved& loans to customers &in a matter of seconds& through the Google app.

These will be smaller than typical loans, especially those in the West. Loans on services like ZestMoney typically cover one-off purchases like electronics, education fees and more, CEO Lizzie Chapman told TechCrunch in a recent interview.

Google is supercharging its Tez payment service in India ahead of global expansion

Finally, Google also plans to expand Tez Google Pay overseas. That means both adding Tez features to the Google Pay service worldwide, and taking the India-based service into new parts of Asia. That&ll require plenty of localization since the Indian version is heavily based around the countryUPI payment system — which doesn&t translate overseas — but ita step in the right direction.

Google isn&t saying too much about which markets it might move into but you&d imagine Southeast Asia, which as plenty of similarities with India, will be top of mind.

Note: The original version of this story was updated to correct that the integration with banks doesn&t use Tez payment data to assess user creditworthiness.

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