WebProNews

Year: 2023

  • FTC and 17 States Sue Amazon For Alleged Antitrust Violations

    FTC and 17 States Sue Amazon For Alleged Antitrust Violations

    The Federal Trade Commission has launched a widely expected lawsuit against Amazon over alleged antitrust violations.

    The FTC has been investigating Amazon’s business practices and preparing a case against the tech giant for months. The FTC makes clear that it is not suing Amazon become of its size, but because of alleged “exclusionary conduct” aimed at stifling competition from existing or potential rivals.

    “Our complaint lays out how Amazon has used a set of punitive and coercive tactics to unlawfully maintain its monopolies,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “The complaint sets forth detailed allegations noting how Amazon is now exploiting its monopoly power to enrich itself while raising prices and degrading service for the tens of millions of American families who shop on its platform and the hundreds of thousands of businesses that rely on Amazon to reach them. Today’s lawsuit seeks to hold Amazon to account for these monopolistic practices and restore the lost promise of free and fair competition.”

    The FTC took special note of Amazon’s practice of punishing sellers who try to offer lower prices through other outlets, as well as the company’s efforts to force sellers into gaining “Prime” status, ensuring Amazon is able to charge them significant fees for fulfillment services. The agency also took issue with Amazon’s practice of pushing its own products, preferring advertised products over genuine results, and adding more fees to sellers, with many of them paying Amazon as much as 50% of what they earn.

    “We’re bringing this case because Amazon’s illegal conduct has stifled competition across a huge swath of the online economy. Amazon is a monopolist that uses its power to hike prices on American shoppers and charge sky-high fees on hundreds of thousands of online sellers,” said John Newman, Deputy Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Competition. “Seldom in the history of U.S. antitrust law has one case had the potential to do so much good for so many people.”

    The FTC was joined in its lawsuit by the attorneys general of Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.

  • JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon Working on First Republic Rescue Plan

    JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon Working on First Republic Rescue Plan

    JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is reportedly leading the charge to save First Republic Bank and restore confidence in the bank.

    First Republic is facing its worst crisis in 15 years on the heels of three other banks collapsing. Silicon Valley Bank collapsed in early March, and Signature Bank followed shortly after. Meanwhile, Credit Suisse’s freewheeling ways finally caught up with it, leading to its sale to rival UBS.

    According to The Wall Street Journal, Dimon is leading a coalition of banks that are trying to keep First Republic from following SVB and Signature. Dimon helped orchestrate eleven banks in depositing $30 billion into First Republic in an effort to restore confidence.

    The assisting banks have yet to rule out converting the deposit into a straight cash infusion if necessary.

    Either way, the lengths Dimon and his fellow bankers are going to demonstrate the fragility of the current economic situation.

  • Google CEO: ‘Things Will Go Wrong’ With Bard AI

    Google CEO: ‘Things Will Go Wrong’ With Bard AI

    Google has finally released its Bard AI to the world, albeit via a waitlist, but Google CEO Sundar Pichai is warning “things will go wrong.”

    Google’s Bard has already had a rough launch. When the company first announced it, the AI flubbed an answer to one of the questions, spooking investors and taking $100 billion off of Alphabet’s stock value. In response, Pichai asked Googlers to test Bard in an effort to improve it, leading to its public release Tuesday.

    While the release is good news for Google, Pichai is warning company employees not to expect perfection.

    “As more people start to use Bard and test its capabilities, they’ll surprise us. Things will go wrong,” Pichai wrote in an internal email to employees Tuesday viewed by CNBC. “But the user feedback is critical to improving the product and the underlying technology.”

    Pichai said Googlers “should be proud of this work and the years of tech breakthroughs that led us here, including our 2017 Transformer research and foundational models such as PalM and BERT.”

    Nonetheless, he cautioned: “Even after all this progress, we’re still in the early stages of a long Al journey.”

    “For now, I’m excited to see how Bard sparks more creativity and curiosity in the people who use it.”

  • Microsoft Brings DALL-E AI Image Creator to Bing

    Microsoft Brings DALL-E AI Image Creator to Bing

    Microsoft is continuing its transformation of Bing into an AI powerhouse, adding the DALL-E AI image creator to its Bing AI.

    OpenAI debuted DALL-E in early 2021, an AI model that can draw images based on text prompts. As OpenAI’s biggest single investor, Microsoft has access to its tech and is using it as the backbone of Bing AI.

    Microsoft is now including DALL-E as part of Bing, giving users the ability to have the AI create images for them.

    “We’re excited to announce we are bringing Bing Image Creator, new AI-powered visual Stories and updated Knowledge Cards to the new Bing and Edge preview,” writes Yusuf Mehdi, Corporate Vice President & Consumer Chief Marketing Officer. “Powered by an advanced version of the DALL∙E model from our partners at OpenAI, Bing Image Creator allows you to create an image simply by using your own words to describe the picture you want to see. Now you can generate both written and visual content in one place, from within chat.”

    The new feature will begin rolling out to users with access to the preview starting today.

    “For those in the Bing preview, Bing Image Creator will be fully integrated into the Bing chat experience, rolling out initially in Creative mode,” adds Mehdi. “By typing in a description of an image, providing additional context like location or activity, and choosing an art style, Image Creator will generate an image from your own imagination. It’s like your creative copilot. Just type something like “draw an image” or “create an image” as a prompt in chat to get creating a visual for a newsletter to friends or as inspiration for redecorating your living room.”

    Users who haven’t signed up for the preview can do so here.

  • Oracle Releases Java 20

    Oracle Releases Java 20

    Oracle has released Java 20, the latest Feature Release on the company’s six-month update cycle.

    Java 20 is not a a long-term support (LTS) release, so it will only provide updates until version 21 comes out in six months. Nonetheless, this version provides a number of bug fixes and improvements.

    “Instead of making tens of thousands of fixes and delivering close to one hundred JEPs (JDK Enhancement Proposals) every few years, as we did with yesteryear Major Releases, enhancements are delivered in leaner Feature Releases on a more manageable, predictable, six-month schedule,” writes Sharat Chander Director, Java SE Product Management. “The changes range from significant new features to small enhancements to routine maintenance, bug fixes, and documentation improvements. Each change is represented in a single commit for a single issue in the JDK Bug System.

    “Of the 21,604 JIRA issues marked as fixed in Java 11 through Java 20 at the time of their GA, 15,420 were completed by people working for Oracle while 6,184 were contributed by individual developers and developers working for other organizations.”

    Java 20 also includes a number of significant new features and improvements, including:

    • (D)TLS Key Exchange Named Groups
    • Add GarbageCollectorMXBean for Remark and Cleanup Pause Time in G1
    • Unicode 15.0 Support
    • Improved Control of G1 Concurrent Refinement Threads
    • New JFR Event: jdk.InitialSecurityProperty
    • New JFR Event: jdk.SecurityProviderService
    • …and much more

    For more information, check out Oracle’s full release announcement.

  • Amazon Is Shutting DPReview.com

    Amazon Is Shutting DPReview.com

    Amazon is shutting down popular camera review site DPReview.com, ending a 25-year run.

    DPReview.com established itself as the destination for in-depth reviews of cameras and various photography equipment. Amazon ultimately acquired the company in 2007, roughly nine years after its launch.

    “Dpreview.com is by far the most authoritative source anywhere for straight talk about new digital cameras,” said Jeff Bezos, founder and then-CEO of Amazon said at the time. “We at Amazon.com have been their fans for a long time, and we extend a big welcome to the dpreview.com team.”

    Unfortunately for photography enthusiasts and professionals, Amazon is now shutting the site down, per an announcement on DPReview.com:

    Dear readers,

    After nearly 25 years of operation, DPReview will be closing in the near future. This difficult decision is part of the annual operating plan review that our parent company shared earlier this year.

    The site will remain active until April 10, and the editorial team is still working on reviews and looking forward to delivering some of our best-ever content.

    Everyone on our staff was a reader and fan of DPReview before working here, and we’re grateful for the communities that formed around the site.

    Thank you for your support over the years, and we hope you’ll join us in the coming weeks as we celebrate this journey.

    Sincerely,

    Scott Everett General Manager – DPReview.com

  • Get Ready for Another Nvidia GPU Crunch

    Get Ready for Another Nvidia GPU Crunch

    Gamers may enjoy a ready supply of Nvidia GPUs, but that may soon change as the AI market heats up.

    During the pandemic and crypto heyday, Nvidia’s GPUs were in short supply. The sudden uptick in demand for personal computers and crypto mining rigs combined to drive the price of Nvidia’s GPUs through the roof and make it almost impossible to actually buy one.

    Those days may return faster than anyone — except Nvidia, of course — may like. At the GTC 2023 Keynote yesterday, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang made it clear that Nvidia is all-in on AI.

    “We are at the iPhone moment of AI,” Huang said during his keynote, in which he touted the number of companies rolling out Nvidia’s AI systems. The list of companies includes Atos, AWS, Cirrascale, CoreWeave, Dell, Gigabyte, HPE, Lambda, Lenovo, Oracle, QCT, and Supermicro.

    As TechRadar’s John Loeffler points out, the increased demand for Nvidia’s chips in the AI market could eventually force the company to choose between the consumer gaming market and the more profitable commercial market. This could lead to a significant reduction in available GPUs, or it could lead to Nvidia pulling out of the market altogether.

  • Google Releases Bard AI to the Public

    Google Releases Bard AI to the Public

    Google is moving to the next stage of its AI development, releasing it to the public to try out, although using it will require joining a waitlist.

    Bard AI is Google’s attempt to take on Microsoft’s Bing AI, which is based on OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Unfortunately for Google, its initial launch of Bard did not go well, with the AI giving a wrong answer during its public reveal. The flub cost Alphabet $100 billion in stock value.

    Since its botched reveal, Google has been working night and day to improve Bard, with CEO Sundar Pichai asking Googlers to volunteer their time to help improve it.

    It seems Google believes Bard is finally ready for the public, providing a waitlist for people to sign up for access:

    Meet Bard: your creative and helpful collaborator, here to supercharge your imagination, boost your productivity, and bring your ideas to life.

    Bard is an experiment and may give inaccurate or inappropriate responses. You can help make Bard better by leaving feedback. Join the waitlist and try it for yourself.

    You can sign up here.

  • Personal Loans For Business: What You Need to Know

    Personal Loans For Business: What You Need to Know

    Although personal loans can be easier to obtain than business ones, they may jeopardize your finances. Here are some things you should know before using a personal loan for your company.

    During the pandemic, many small businesses grappled with worst-case scenarios: lenders tightened borrowing conditions, and revenues were down. In these cases, a personal loan may be used for payroll or vendor payments when a business has used up its business line of credit and cannot obtain a traditional business loan.

    It’s possible for entrepreneurs to be so driven that they would do anything to keep their business going, whether that’s a good idea or not. However, here are some reasons why getting a personal loan for a small business may or may not be a good idea.

    Personal Loan: A Definition

    Based on your credit history and income, you can borrow a predetermined amount of money for nearly any reason through a personal loan. Over time, you repay it with interest.  Therefore, you can get a lump sum of money from a bank, credit union, or internet lender that ranges from $1,000 to $100,000; the money is typically repaid over the course of two to five years in monthly installments.

    Your creditworthiness, a gauge of how dangerous of a borrower you are, plays a significant role in whether or not you are approved for a personal loan. You have a better chance of getting authorized for a loan with the lowest interest rate if your income and credit score are strong.

    Notwithstanding the differences between personal and business loans, both can depend on an owner’s credit history for acceptance.

    Getting A Personal Loan for Your Small Business

    Personal loans are not always a wise business decision. For instance, a person about to retire may not wish to take on extra debt. However, younger businesspeople are considering the long-term impact of the extra money on their businesses. 

    Here are a couple of reasons why you would want to obtain a personal loan for your company:

    Personal loans are quick and flexible. 

    A personal loan might be the best option if you require money urgently to cover the financial requirements of your business, from payroll to vendor expenses. On the other hand, it can take weeks or even months for a Small Business Administration loan, and a personal loan can be approved in a matter of days.

    Obtaining personal loans is much easier than securing business loans. One reason is that, with a personal loan, you won’t have to put up collateral to reduce the lender’s risk. A business loan is often more difficult to obtain than a personal loan. However, the current economy has made it considerably more difficult. 

    Comparatively speaking, personal loans are less expensive.

    Entrepreneurs with tight cash flows could be tempted to take on sales-based loans like invoice loans or merchant cash advances. Because the interest can compound quickly, it is advisable to carefully read the fine print. Hidden clauses can wreak havoc on your finances if you don’t recognize what they really are. 

    Although personal loans typically offer lower interest rates, you can also consider using all available credit on your company and personal credit cards. Yet, compared to personal loans, conventional business loans have lower interest rates and bigger credit ceilings.

    Conclusion

    A personal loan may be the answer for your business if a business loan is not feasible right now. However, make sure that it won’t do more harm than good. After all, your personal credit is something that will follow you throughout your life. Therefore, it’s wise to guard it carefully. 

  • Microsoft Is Taking a ‘Principled Approach’ to Changing Default Apps

    Microsoft Is Taking a ‘Principled Approach’ to Changing Default Apps

    Microsoft is going to make it much easier for users to change their default apps, adopting a “principled approach.”

    Microsoft’s latest versions of Windows have disappointed and angered users by making it unnecessarily difficult to change the default web browser and other apps. In fact, when Windows 11 first dropped, changing the default browser required changing the default handler for each and every file type web browsers normally handle.

    While Microsoft eventually changed its stance and made it easier to change the default web browser, the company is taking it a step further.

    “Today we’re reaffirming our long-standing approach to put people in control of their Windows PC experience and to empower developers to take advantage of our open platform,” write Tali Roth & Aaron Grady.

    “We want to ensure that people are in control of what gets pinned to their Desktop, their Start menu and their Taskbar as well as to be able to control their default applications such as their default browser through consistent, clear and trustworthy Windows provided system dialogs and settings.”

    The company is adding a new option in the Settings app that will allow users to set their preferred apps.

    Microsoft App Preference Settings – Credit Microsoft

    “For defaults, we will soon introduce a new Settings deep link URI for applications to take their users directly to the appropriate location in Settings for the user to change their defaults,” Roth and Grady add. “This is an extension to our existing ms-settings: URI scheme. Learn more about ms-settings: URI schemes.”

    It’s nice to see Microsoft listening to user feedback and making it easier for people to use the apps of their choice.

  • Microsoft May Launch Mobile Game Store Next Year

    Microsoft May Launch Mobile Game Store Next Year

    Microsoft may launch a mobile game store next year in one of its most ambitious attempts to take on Apple and Google.

    In an interview with Financial Times, via CNET, CEO of Microsoft Gaming Phil Spencer said the decision is contingent on the company’s Activision Blizzard acquisition being approved.

    “We want to be in a position to offer Xbox and content from both us and our third-party partners across any screen where somebody would want to play,” Spencer told said. “Today, we can’t do that on mobile devices but we want to build towards a world that we think will be coming where those devices are opened up.”

    Microsoft plans appear to line up with the EU’s Digital Markets Act (DMA) that will require Apple and Google to allow third-party app stores on their platforms. Once the legislation goes into effect in March 2024, Microsoft will be able to compete on far more level ground.

  • Zippyshare File Hosting Service Is Shutting Down After 17 Years

    Zippyshare File Hosting Service Is Shutting Down After 17 Years

    Zippyshare, the popular file hosting service, is shutting down after 17 years of operation, despite 45 million monthly visits.

    Zippyshare launched in 2006 and quickly grew to be one of the most popular file hosting services, offering generous size limits for free. Unfortunately, in a world where ad blocking is increasingly popular, the project can no longer afford to stay operational.

    The project made the announcement on its blog:

    We’ve decided that we’re shutting down the project at the end of the month. Please make backups of your important files, you have about two weeks to do so. Until then, the site will run without any changes.

    The project says a “vicious cycle” of ads and ad blocking helped lead to its demise:

    All sorts of adblockers, whether built into the browser, as add-ons, or in the form of DNS services. Sure, we all use them, but they take away any control the site owner has over the site. Eventually we get to the point where a vicious cycle begins, in order to pay for the server infrastructure you are forced to place more and more ads, then users fire up more and more adblockers and we get to a point like today.

    In addition to ad blocking, the cost of electricity played a role, with prices increasing 2.5x since the site’s launch.

    In the meantime, Zippyshare will shut down at the end of March, and users are encouraged to download and backup their files immediately.

  • Amazon Laying Off 9,000 More, With AWS Hard-Hit

    Amazon Laying Off 9,000 More, With AWS Hard-Hit

    Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has announced the company plans to lay off an additional 9,000 employees, particularly in AWS, PXT, Advertising, and Twitch.

    Amazon has already laid off 18,000 employees, between reported decisions made in November and an expansion of those plans in January. CEO Andy Jassy has announced that the company plans to expand the scope of its layoffs once more, this time letting an additional 9,000 employees go:

    As we’ve just concluded the second phase of our operating plan (“OP2”) this past week, I’m writing to share that we intend to eliminate about 9,000 more positions in the next few weeks—mostly in AWS, PXT, Advertising, and Twitch. This was a difficult decision, but one that we think is best for the company long term.

    Jassy says a big part of the decision-making process involved looking at what mattered to the company’s customers and how best to meet those needs:

    As our internal businesses evaluated what customers most care about, they made re-prioritization decisions that sometimes led to role reductions, sometimes led to moving people from one initiative to another, and sometimes led to new openings where we don’t have the right skills match from our existing team members.

    It’s interesting that AWS is one of the teams being targeted with this round of layoffs, but Jassy emphasized his faith in the cloud division’s future:

    I remain very optimistic about the future and the myriad of opportunities we have, both in our largest businesses, Stores and AWS, and our newer customer experiences and businesses in which we’re investing.

  • Credit Suisse Collapses, Sells to Rival UBS

    Credit Suisse Collapses, Sells to Rival UBS

    Credit Suisse has reached an agreement to be purchased by rival UBS, ending its 167-year run as an independent institution.

    Credit Suisse developed a reputation for taking risks that many other banks wouldn’t. As The Wall Street Journal reports, the bank emerged from the 2008 crisis stronger than many rivals, a position that emboldened it to continue its freewheeling style.

    “They felt, ‘We are the winner from the financial crisis, and everyone else is hurt,’” said Andreas Venditti, a Vontobel banking analyst. “So they doubled down on these kinds of businesses and on investment-banking exposure in general.”

    Unfortunately, the bank’s reputation caught up with it, and amid the economic downturn and failing banks, investors were more rattled than expected. The bank’s stocks tanked, and it struggled to compete with other banks for deals critical to its survival.

    “Credit Suisse’s problem for decades, and I really mean decades, is terrible operational risk management,” said Mayra Rodriguez Valladares, a U.S.-based consultant bank regulation consultant. “Everyone lets them get away with it: The U.K., the U.S., the Swiss.”

    While regulators may have let Credit Suisse get away with its antics, the market didn’t.

  • US Agencies Request the Most User Data From Big Tech, Apple Complies the Most

    US Agencies Request the Most User Data From Big Tech, Apple Complies the Most

    Americans concerned about their user data falling into the hands of foreign governments may want to look closer to home.

    According to new research by VPN provider SurfShark, the US government makes the most requests for user data from Big Tech companies than any other jurisdiction in the world. The company analyzed data requests to Apple, Google, Meta, and Microsoft by “government agencies of 177 countries between 2013 and 2021.”

    The US came in first with 2,451,077 account requests, more than four times the number of Germany, the number two country on the list. In fact, the US made more requests than all of Europe, including the UK, which collectively came in under 2 million.

    While the US and EU were responsible for a combined total of 60% of all data requests, the US “made 8 times more requests than the global average (87.9/100k).”

    The number of accounts being accessed is also growing, with a five-times increase in requests from 2013 to 2021. The US alone saw a 348% increase during the time frame, and the scope and purpose of the requests are expanding.

    “Besides requesting data from technology companies, authorities are now exploring more ways to monitor and tackle crime through online services. For instance, the EU is considering a regulation that would require internet service providers to detect, report, and remove abuse-related content,” says Gabriele Kaveckyte, Privacy Counsel at Surfshark. “On one hand, introducing such new measures could help solve serious criminal cases, but civil society organizations expressed their concerns of encouraging surveillance techniques which may later be used, for example, to track down political rivals.”

    The report also sheds light on which companies comply the most versus which ones push back against requests. For all of its privacy-oriented marketing — “what happens on your iPhone stays on your iPhone” — Apple complies with data requests more than any other company, handing it over 82% of the time.

    In contrast, Meta complies 72% of the time, and Google does 71% of the time. Microsoft, on the other hand, pushes back the most among Big Tech companies, only handing data over 68% of the time.

    The findings may also put a dent in US efforts to ban TikTok and other foreign apps under the guise of protecting user privacy and data.

  • Google CEO Sundar Pichai Accused of Intentionally Deleting Communications

    Google CEO Sundar Pichai Accused of Intentionally Deleting Communications

    Google CEO Sundar Pichai is accused of intentionally deleting company communication in violation of US retention laws.

    Companies in the US are legally required to retain communications if they have reason to believe they may be involved in legal action. The Department of Justice has already accused Google of ‘systematically destroying’ communications related to its antitrust case. The DOJ maintains that Google intentionally had its various chat platforms set to auto-delete messages every 24 hours, despite telling US authorities that it had suspended such operation.

    The DOJ, as well as Epic Games and others, are now accusing Pichai of being involved in the deletion, effectively creating a top-down culture of hiding relevant information, according to FOSS Patents. In the latest claim, the plaintiffs make the following claim:

    “The newly produced Chats reveal a company-wide culture of concealment coming from the very top, including CEO Sundar Pichai, who is a custodian in this case. In one Chat, Mr. Pichai began discussing a substantive topic, and then immediately wrote: ‘[REDACTED]’ Then, nine seconds later, Mr. Pichai [REDACTED]. […] When asked under oath [REDACTED]’ (Id. Ex. 2, Pichai Dep. Tr. 195:7-12.)

    “Like Mr. Pichai, other key Google employees, including those in leadership roles, routinely opted to move from history-on rooms to history-off Chats to hold sensitive conversations, even though they knew they were subject to legal holds. Indeed, they did so even when discussing topics they knew were covered by the litigation holds in order to avoid leaving a record that could be produced in litigation.” (emphasis in original)

    The plaintiffs, including the Utah Attorney General, asked the court to issue an adverse ruling that Google was trying to hide something by deleting the messages. The court had previously indicated that it would not issue a ruling telling jurors they must conclude the deleted messages are indicative of Google intentionally hiding something, but the plaintiffs say this latest revelation provides enough evidence that that is exactly what Google and its executives were trying to do.

    In light of the recently produced documents, anything less than a clear adverse inference instruction — instructing the jury as to what Google did and what the jury should make of it — would reward Google for its years-long, calculated policy of systematically destroying evidence, and would encourage Google to maintain, rather than eradicate, the corporate culture of litigation misconduct it has nurtured for many years.

    If the plaintiffs are able to prevail upon the court and convince it to render such a judgment, it would be catastrophic for Google’s case.

    Eileen Scallen, a professor at the UCLA School of Law, previously told CNBC that an adverse jury instruction would be “very damning.”

    “The one person the jury respects in a courtroom is the trial judge,” Scallen said. “And if the trial judge is telling them you can presume that this was bad news for Google, they’re going to take that to heart.”

  • Amazon May Be Working On An AI-Powered Web Browser

    Amazon May Be Working On An AI-Powered Web Browser

    Amazon may be looking to disrupt the web browser market with an AI-powered entry in what could be a major threat to established players.

    Amazon recently sent out a survey to users asking what they value in a web browser. Consumer Reports’ Nicholas De Leon tweeted about the survey:

    Gizmodo got a hold of a copy of the survey, and the questions include asking what features people value and what features would convince them to try a new web browser. AI integration is one of the feature choices.

    While the web browser market is fairly crowded, it’s dominated by Google Chrome and Apple’s Safari. Firefox brings up a distant third, with everything else fighting for scraps.

    Amazon has the brand-name recognition and integration with established services to possibly be the most disruptive entry since Google Chrome.

  • Samsung Max VPN Collects Your Private Data and Sells It

    Samsung Max VPN Collects Your Private Data and Sells It

    Users relying on Samsung’s Max VPN should look for other options to keep their data private and safe.

    Samsung includes and/or promotes its Max VPN service on its phones. As sharp-eyed Reddit user soboi12345 has pointed out, however, users’ data is not at all private when using Samsung’s VPN. In fact, the company collects unique identifying data and sells it to third parties.

    The company describes its practices in its Max Service Description and Privacy Policy:

    The Max Service app may log how you use your device, including unique identifiers, information about the software you’ve installed, device characteristics, information about your location and mobile carrier, the type of network you use to access web content, how much data you use, and the URLs you visit. We use this data to debug the Max Service app and to improve the user experience. We anonymize and/or aggregate this data and may allow our business partners access to it.

    To be clear, Samsung’s VPN is collecting unique identifiers, location data, the apps users have installed, and the websites they visit — and then selling that data rather than protecting users’ privacy.

    This is an appalling breach of trust for any VPN provider, especially since many VPN users are specifically looking to avoid exactly the kind of data collection Samsung is engaging in.

    Samsung’s behavior is even more egregious when considering that the company called out people’s data being used as a commodity when it launched Max VPN:

    “All over the world, data has become a commodity, but many plans are simply still too expensive for consumers that want to get the most out of the latest technology built into their devices,” said Seounghoon Oh, Vice President Samsung R&D Institute India, at the time. “With Samsung Max, our users in every corner of the globe now have increased autonomy and control over their data usage and privacy in an era of rising security threats, fraudulent apps and user profiling.”

    With such a strong statement, Samsung’s users could be forgiven for thinking the company would actually protect their privacy and not use their data as “a commodity.”

    As we have stated on WPN, and as The New York Times Wirecutter has recommended, Mullvad is the best VPN for users that truly care about their privacy. The company has a zero-logs policy and doesn’t save identifying information. In fact, users are given a random numeric account number for login purposes rather than using an email address or username.

    The company has also had extensive third-party security audits, is transparent about its ownership, has a clear privacy policy, good performance, and is reasonably priced.

  • Minnesota Nuclear Plant Leaked 400,000 Gallons of Radioactive Water

    Minnesota Nuclear Plant Leaked 400,000 Gallons of Radioactive Water

    Xcel Energy’s Monticello nuclear plant leaked 400,000 gallons of radioactive water, although regulators say there’s no danger.

    According to AP News, regulators have been monitoring the Xcel’s cleanup efforts surrounding the radioactive water leak, saying the company took swift action to address the issue.

    The company evidently reported the leak of tritium-contaminated water to federal and state authorities in late November, but the public was not informed until this week.

    “We knew there was a presence of tritium in one monitoring well, however Xcel had not yet identified the source of the leak and its location,” Minnesota Pollution Control Agency spokesman Michael Rafferty said.

    “Now that we have all the information about where the leak occurred, how much was released into groundwater, and that contaminated groundwater had moved beyond the original location, we are sharing this information,” he said, adding the water remains contained on Xcel’s property and poses no immediate public health risk.

    The company says the leak poses no danger to people or the environment.

  • From Awareness to Loyalty: Understanding the Journey of Nonprofit Supporters and How to Engage Them

    From Awareness to Loyalty: Understanding the Journey of Nonprofit Supporters and How to Engage Them

    As a nonprofit grows and gains new members, volunteers, and donors, you’ll start to recognize core differences in how different groups of people act and react to marketing materials. A devoted volunteer might take a much more favorable view of your campaigns than someone that hasn’t heard of your organization before, for example.

    It is essential that nonprofits understand how to communicate with these different stages in order to better market to them. At its most basic, nonprofits need to master the rule of seven before moving on to later-stage customer relationships. In this article, we’ll guide nonprofits through the different stages of the customer journey, demonstrating exactly how they should engage their supporters throughout their ongoing familiarization. 

    What is the Nonprofit Customer Journey?

    As a person becomes more familiar with your nonprofit, the extent to which they support, engage, and help market for your cause will shift. Of course, people that have only just stumbled across your nonprofit aren’t going to have the level of support and loyalty that a long-term donor has.

    In order to create better marketing materials and communications, nonprofits need to know how to relate to donors across all levels of their customer journey. Typically, this journey is split into three core sections:

    • Awareness
    • Consideration and Donation
    • Time Donation

    Awareness

    Marketing for nonprofits always starts with the awareness stage. This is the first point of contact between an organization and the potential donor. At this stage, they don’t have a stake in your nonprofit and are have only come across either a marketing post, a blog, or some other piece of content that you’ve put out into the world.

    When marketing to people within the awareness stage, you should focus on showing the real-world positives that your nonprofit creates. Whether you use finished projects that you’ve terminated in the past or materials which demonstrate the good you’re delivering, these should be your front line of marketing.

    The awareness stage is about increasing recognition and ensuring that people remember the good you’ve done when they see your name. You’re not asking for donations, nor are you trying to get these people to join your nonprofit. This stage, as its title suggests, is all about building awareness.

    Consideration and Donation

    During the consideration stage, people are familiar with your nonprofit and what good you do in the world. At this point, you can move into quantified marketing that shows what their donation would actively result in.

    Using quantified statistics, you could demonstrate that their donation of $10 would have a certain real-world impact. Showing how they can be a part of the good that they encounter in the awareness stage will help urge people to donate to your nonprofit.

    Donations are typically the first stage of involving members of a nonprofit. At this stage, the time and frequency of a recurring donation will dictate how you manage your connections going forward. As a person donates more of their money over a longer period to your cause, their natural relationship with you will build.

    It’s important to show your gratitude over time, ensuring that those that move from consideration to donation feel valued for their contributions.

    Time Donor (Volunteers)

    The final stage, which is often overlooked within the world of nonprofit marketing, is the relationship between your organization and its most valuable assets – those that offer their time. The vast majority of nonprofits are able to continue running due to the hours of free labor that volunteers will offer.

    Those that are willing to donate their own time are incredibly impactful to your organization. While donating money is one thing, these hourly shifts ensure the longevity of your nonprofit and help you scale toward new horizons.

    When dealing with people that are volunteers, your marketing should be extremely personalized. You’re no longer dealing with a potential mass of new donors. Each one of these people has given up hours of their life to help achieve your vision.

    Your marketing communications here should never focus on donations, and should be entirely grateful. Focus on the good that they’ve achieved, and how you are – together – building toward a better future.

    Don’t underestimate the importance of volunteers in your nonprofit. 

    Why Is Shaping Communication so Important?

    Communication does not have the same effect on every single person. On the contrary, each and every person will react differently to messaging they encounter. When it comes to the nonprofit industry, using the wrong communication style can be disastrous – impacting both new and established donors.

    Changing the focus of your marketing campaigns to match the current stage that a customer is in allows for a much greater degree of personalization. Customer segmentation and personalization are the backbones of the marketing industry, with over 70% of all consumers expecting a high degree of personalized content.

    Altering a nonprofit’s marketing materials will ensure that different groups react more positively to your communications:

    • New Contacts – If you ask people in the awareness stage for donations, you’re instantly slamming the door on that person and making them feel uncomfortable. Understanding that your tone will shift over time will allow you to market appropriately to newer audiences.
    • Established Donors – If you patronize established donors with materials aimed at new people, you’ll start to chip away at their loyalty. Personalize your voice to ensure that it’s more thankful, full of gratitude, and highlights how appreciative you are for all their help.

    Understanding how to alter your marketing materials for these different stages will lead to a higher uptake with new clients and increased loyalty with older connections. Ultimately, this is a total win-win for your nonprofit.

    Final Thoughts

    For nonprofits to achieve success across the customer journey, they need to understand the unique perspectives, behaviors, and styles of communication that work for each archetypal supporter. By altering marketing tactics and tones across these three main stages, a nonprofit is able to engage its audience to a greater extent.

    As they do this, nonprofits will rapidly find that their marketing materials stretch further, gain more interactions, and help streamline the development of customer relationships across the entire donor lifecycle. 

  • Learn Linux TV Releases Ubuntu Flatpak Remix Distro

    Learn Linux TV Releases Ubuntu Flatpak Remix Distro

    Jay from the Learn Linux TV YouTube channel has released an Ubuntu-based distro built around Flatpaks.

    Flatpaks and Snaps are two universal packaging formats for Linux, giving developers the ability to build an app that can be run on any distro that has Flatpak support. The format accomplishes this by bundling all necessary dependencies within the package, although Flatpaks can share dependencies between them.

    As the maker of the far less popular Snap format and the Ubuntu distro, Canonical recently made the decision to prohibit official Ubuntu flavors from shipping with Flatpak installed and enabled out of the box. Despite the decision, Ubuntu is still a solid distro, one with wide hardware and app support.

    Jay has taken Ubuntu and replaced Snap with Flatpak while leaving everything else that makes Ubuntu the world’s leading Linux distro:

    The Flatpak Remix of Ubuntu features the awesome GNOME desktop, with Canonical’s attention to detail – unchanged from the standard release.

    While the standard release of Ubuntu features support for Snap Packages built-in, with this distribution the focus is on Flatpak instead.

    To learn more, check Jay’s video and the project’s website.

    https://youtu.be/w1-TIhtyCao