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Tag: Germany

  • Germany Pushes Back Against EU Client-Side Scanning Plans

    Germany Pushes Back Against EU Client-Side Scanning Plans

    The EU Commission wants to roll out client-side scanning on consumers’ devices, but Germany is pushing back against the plan.

    Client-side scanning is being touted by some companies and regulators as a way to “preserve” end-to-end encryption by scanning for illegal content on a person’s device. If such content is found, authorities will be notified. The idea is that since all the scanning occurs on a user’s device, communications between devices can remain end-to-end encrypted.

    Germany, however, isn’t buying that argument and, at a recent hearing of the German Parliament’s Digital Committee, made clear it doesn’t agree with the EU’s proposal. Germany is basing its opinion on the many computer and security experts who have testified that the EU’s proposal will do far more harm than good.

    “The draft regulation basically misses the goal of countering child abuse representations,” emphasized the Computer scientist and spokeswoman for the Chaos Computer Club, Elina Eickstädt (via computer translation). “The design is based on a gross overestimation of capabilities of technologies “, especially with regard to the detection of unknown material.

    Client-side scanning also represents “an unprecedented surveillance infrastructure,“ added Eickstädt. She pointed out that even an error rate of one percent will lead to billions of false reports, warning that the technology could eventually become “censorship tools of equal value.”

    Read more: EU Proposes Most Privacy-Invasive Measure Yet to Tackle Child Abuse

    Interestingly, even the Head of the Central and Contact Point Cybercrime North Rhine-Westphalia, Chief Prosecutor Markus Hartmann, said the EU’s proposal goes too far. Instead, he said existing law enforcement agencies should be shored up to better utilize server-side scanning abilities and traditional investigative techniques, rather than the more invasive client-side scanning.

    The EU Commission’s proposal is certainly one of the most privacy-invasive measures being pursued by a democracy. Even by the EU’s own admission, a client-side scanning “process would be the most intrusive one for users.”

    The EU’s proposal is currently being negotiated, giving Germany a chance to make its case and have the client-side scanning clause dropped. Otherwise, should the bill become law, many experts believe it will never survive its first court challenge.

    “Child protection is not served if the regulation later fails before the European Court of Justice,” said Felix Reda from the Society for Freedom Rights. “The damage to the privacy of all people would be immense “, he added. “The tamper-free surveillance violates the essence of the right to privacy and cannot therefore be justified by any fundamental rights assessment.”

    Should the EU’s proposal go unchallenged, as Harvard cryptography professor Matthew Green says, the bloc will go down in history as creating “the most sophisticated mass surveillance machinery ever deployed outside of China and the USSR.”

  • Intel Announces Plans to Invest Up to $80 Billion in EU Chip-Making

    Intel Announces Plans to Invest Up to $80 Billion in EU Chip-Making

    Intel has announced its latest expansion effort, planning to spend up to $80 billion in chip-making in Europe.

    Intel has been expanding at a record pace, announcing new factories and foundries in multiple US locations. The company is now taking that expansion to Europe in an effort to help insulate the EU from chip shortages over the next decade.

    “Our planned investments are a major step both for Intel and for Europe,” said Pat Gelsinger, CEO of Intel. “The EU Chips Act will empower private companies and governments to work together to drastically advance Europe’s position in the semiconductor sector. This broad initiative will boost Europe’s R&D innovation and bring leading-edge manufacturing to the region for the benefit of our customers and partners around the world. We are committed to playing an essential role in shaping Europe’s digital future for decades to come.”

    The expansion will begin with a $19 billion (17 billion euro) investment that will include a “semiconductor fab mega-site in Germany, to create a new R&D and design hub in France, and to invest in R&D, manufacturing and foundry services in Ireland, Italy, Poland and Spain. “

    The initial investment will create 7,000 construction jobs and 3,000 permanent jobs at Intel. In addition, tens of thousands of jobs will be created from the supporting companies and industries that will spring up to support the new factories.

  • Volkwagen Preparing to Take On Tesla, Defend Its Home Turf

    Volkwagen Preparing to Take On Tesla, Defend Its Home Turf

    Volkswagen is preparing to defend its home turf, ramping up electric vehicle (EV) production to take on Tesla in Germany.

    Tesla’s Gigafactory is the company’s first manufacturing operation in Germany, as Tesla works to maintain its dominance in the EV market. Unfortunately for the company, virtually every major automaker is racing to transition to an EV lineup, and Volkswagen is no exception.

    According to TheStreet, Volkswagen is planning on spending some $2.2 billion on a new factory to produce its Trinity EV. Construction will begin in early 2023, with the first vehicles slated to roll off the assembly line in 2026. Volkswagen’s goal is to make the Trinity a carbon-neutral vehicle.

    “We are setting benchmarks in the automotive industry with Trinity and the new factory and turning Wolfsburg into the global lighthouse for cutting-edge and efficient vehicle production,” CEO Ralf Brandstätter said in a statement.

    The company is also “seeking to attract new groups of customers and tap additional sources of income” as it continues to work on autonomous vehicles. Like other automakers, the company has been working on the next evolution of the automobile, developing its own autonomous software and partnering with Microsoft Azure to help power it.

  • Germany May Block Telegram Over Hate Speech

    Germany May Block Telegram Over Hate Speech

    Germany is looking to address hate speech on the Telegram messaging platform, even leaving open the possibility of banning the service.

    Telegram is a messaging service that offers end-to-end encryption (E2EE), making it a prime competitor to WhatsApp and Signal. In addition to E2EE, the app has strong support for groups, making it as much a chat as messaging platform.

    As with all E2EE services, some use Telegram for illegal and unwanted behavior. Germany has been struggling with far-right groups, something the country is especially sensitive to, given its past.

    In response, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser, left open the possibility of banning the app in statements to Die Zeit, via The Independent

    “We cannot rule this out,” she said. “A shutdown would be grave and clearly a last resort. All other options must be exhausted first.”

  • Google Investing $1.2 Billion in Its German Cloud Infrastructure

    Google Investing $1.2 Billion in Its German Cloud Infrastructure

    Google is investing $1.2 billion to expand its cloud infrastructure in Germany, and has committed to using more renewable energy.

    Google is currently the number three cloud provider worldwide, but CEO Thomas Kurian has made it his goal to take the number two spot within the next few years. The company is preparing to expand its infrastructure in Germany significantly, investing $1.2 billion by 2030, according to ABC News.

    The company’s expansion will be centered in the Berlin region, as well as the town of Hanau, near Frankfurt’s DE-CIX data exchange.

    Google is also planning to purchase more than 140 megawatts of electric from Engie, and says 80% of the electricity will be generated using carbon-free sources. Ultimately, by 2030, Google wants 100% of its energy to be renewable.

  • Germany Clearing Autonomous Vehicles for Regular Use

    Germany Clearing Autonomous Vehicles for Regular Use

    Germany is poised to be the first country to clear autonomous vehicles for everyday use.

    According to Deutsche Welle, Germany’s lower house of parliament has passed a bill that paves the way for autonomous vehicle integration, with the bill moving to the upper chamber for passage. The bill would allow autonomous vehicles to be a standard part of daily traffic, with minimal restrictions.

    “Individual permits, exceptions and requirements — such as the presence of a safety assurance driver who is always ready to intervene — would not be necessary,” the Transportation Ministry said in a statement.

    In order to qualify, however, they must be Level 4 autonomous vehicles. Autonomous vehicles are ranked (via TechRepublic) from Level 0 to Level 5, with Level 0 having no autonomous ability and Level 5 requiring no human control whatsoever. Level 4 is still considered “fully autonomous,” even though it may not cover every conceivable driving scenario. Instead, Level 4 is focused on “operational design domain (ODD)” performance.

    Currently, there are no Level 4 vehicles available. In fact, Honda recently made headlines when it announced the world’s first Level 3 autonomous vehicle. As a result, it may be some time before there are vehicles available that meet Germany’s threshold. Nonetheless, once the bill goes into effect, Level 4 vehicles should be approved as of 2022.

    “Germany will be the first country worldwide to take autonomous vehicles from the research laboratories to the streets,” said Transportation Minister Andreas Scheuer in a statement. “We are now a major step closer to that goal.

  • German Regulator Wants to Stop WhatsApp/Facebook Data Sharing

    German Regulator Wants to Stop WhatsApp/Facebook Data Sharing

    A German regulator is the latest to object to data being shared between WhatsApp and Facebook, and is taking steps to stop it.

    WhatsApp and Facebook drew worldwide ire when it was announced that WhatsApp user data would be shared with other Facebook-owned companies. The backlash was immediate, with Facebook initially delaying the move to give people time to adjust. Ultimately, however, the company is moving forward with its plans, and users will either have to accept the change or lose access to WhatsApp.

    A German regulator wants a third option, according to Bloomberg, with the regulator for Hamburg seeking an order that would block the data sharing. Given the data sharing is set to go into effect May 15, the regulator is seeking an order that would be “immediately enforceable.”

    “WhatsApp is now used by almost 60 million people in Germany and is by far the most widely used social media application, even ahead of Facebook,” Johannes Caspar, the data commissioner, said in a statement. “It is therefore all the more important to ensure that the high number of users, which makes the service attractive to many people, does not lead to an abusive exploitation of data power.”

    India has similarly taken steps to block data sharing between the services. With Germany now taking action as well, more jurisdictions may start taking a closer look and enacting privacy protection measures before it’s too late.

  • Germany Will Require All Fueling Stations to Offer Electric Vehicle Charging

    Germany Will Require All Fueling Stations to Offer Electric Vehicle Charging

    Germany has taken a significant step toward widespread adoption of electric vehicles, by requiring fueling stations to offer electric vehicle charging.

    The move is part of a group of steps Germany is taking to help cut carbon emissions, including taxing owners of gas-guzzling SUVs and providing a subsidy to electric car buyers.

    As Reuters points out, Germany will spend some 2.5 billion euros on charging infrastructure, as well as battery production. This should go a long way toward alleviating concerns drivers have about how easily they’ll be able to charge an electric vehicle.

    “We know that 97% of the reason why they’re not buying electric cars is range anxiety,” Diego Biasi, chairman and co-founder in Quercus Real Assets told Reuters. “The German move is a way to try and fix this range anxiety since it means you know a petrol station is always open.”

    Hopefully other countries will follow Germany’s example.

  • Austria Will Work With EU Partners On Huawei Decision

    Austria Will Work With EU Partners On Huawei Decision

    As Britain and Germany consider whether to ban Huawei, Austria has said it will collaborate with EU partners on a decision, according to Reuters.

    The U.S. and Huawei have been engaged in a war over the company’s role in helping build out 5G networks around the world. The U.S. has already banned the Chinese telecommunications company as a result of allegations it provides a way for Beijing to spy on governments and corporations.

    The U.S. has also engaged in a campaign to convince its allies of the danger of relying on Huawei, even threatening to ban intel sharing with countries that use the company. For its part, Huawei has denied the allegations, while network operators have lamented that any attempt to avoid Huawei equipment will add time and expense to 5G deployments.

    Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz would not rule out using Huawei, but said the country would work with EU partners on a decision.

    “We want to be technology-neutral and at the same time guarantee maximum safety,” Kurz said at a news conference in Vienna. “We are in close coordination with our European partners and also with the European Commission.”

  • Uber’s Ride-Hailing Service Banned in Germany

    Uber’s Ride-Hailing Service Banned in Germany

    Reuters is reporting that a German court has banned Uber from providing its ride-hailing services in Germany, saying it lacks the license necessary to transport passengers in rental vehicles.

    Uber currently operates in seven German cities, including Berlin, Frankfurt and Munich. The issues stem from the fact that Uber works exclusively with rental car agencies and their drivers in Germany.

    While the ban goes into immediate effect, it is still open to appeal, and the company has not ruled out a legal challenge to the decision. In the meantime, Reuters reports that Uber is looking at other options for how it operates in Germany. What that would look like is anyone’s guess at this point, as a previous court ruling in 2015 prohibited the company from matching customers with drivers using their own vehicles, as it does in the U.S. That ruling is what originally prompted Uber to use rental car companies and their drivers to provide their service.

    Uber is facing increasing challenges and bans around the world. Just last month, the city of London denied Uber a license, citing safety concerns. In the wake of a recent report that thousands of sexual assaults and nine murders have occurred during rides, it’s a safe bet Uber will continue to meet with opposition.

  • Tensions Escalate Between China and Germany Over Huawei

    Tensions Escalate Between China and Germany Over Huawei

    Bloomberg is reporting that a spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said that security concerns will be the deciding factor impacting what role Huawei will play in the country’s 5G rollout.

    China made headlines when it threatened Germany over a possible ban on Huawei. Chancellor Merkel has previously said no single vendor would be banned, emphasizing the need to have a security protocol that all vendors must meet. In spite of that, pressure has mounted within her government to take a harder stance on Huawei.

    No doubt in an effort to stave off any potential ban, China’s ambassador to Germany, Wu Ken, made it clear there would be repercussions should the German government go that route, according to Bloomberg, saying:

    “If Germany were to take a decision that leads to Huawei’s exclusion from the German market, there will be consequences. The Chinese government will not stand idly by.”

    In response, Chancellor Merkel’s chief spokesman, Steffen Seibert said: ““Our position on the security issue with respect to the expansion of the 5G network is driven by the need for security – not industry considerations.”

    Given that China is Germany’s largest trading partner, it will be interesting to see where the two countries go from here.

  • China Confident Brazil Will Choose Huawei For Its 5G Mobile Network

    China Confident Brazil Will Choose Huawei For Its 5G Mobile Network

    Huawei has come under fire from countries throughout the West, with allegations the telecommunications equipment company engages in spying for the Chinese government. The United States, Britain, Australia and Germany have expressed concern in some cases, and gone as far as to ban the company in others.

    In spite of Huawei’s reputation, at least one major country is undeterred: Brazil. Bloomberg is reporting that the Chinese government is confident Huawei will be chosen to build out Brazil’s 5G mobile network.

    “I am confident in terms of the cooperation between China and Brazil over 5G technology”, China’s Ambassador to Brasilia Yang Wanming told Bloomberg in response to emailed questions. He added that Brazil “will take into account its own development interest” when analyzing Huawei’s bid.

    Yang also indicated that Brazil has remained objective and had not been moved by what he described as the United States’ campaign of “bad faith and defamation.”

    Nonetheless, if China’s assessment is correct, and Huawei is chosen, it could ratchet up tension between the U.S. and Brazil. The U.S. has been warning allies of the dangers of relying on Huawei and has already informed Brazil it may downgrade security cooperation if Huawei is chosen.

    Telecom companies in other countries have already been sounding the warning regarding the added cost and time that will be incurred building 5G networks without Huawei’s equipment. Countries, especially ones with limited options, will no doubt be watching closely to see who blinks in this game of 5G brinksmanship.

  • Not So Fast: Huawei May Not Qualify to Participate In German 5G Market

    Not So Fast: Huawei May Not Qualify to Participate In German 5G Market

    Germany made headlines a few weeks ago when it released its ‘security catalog,’ a set of rules for 5G deployment. Despite the German government stating no telecommunications company was excluded, it now appears Huawei may not qualify after all, according to Reuters.

    Reuters is reporting that German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas expressed concern over Huawei’s dependence on the Chinese government, obligating it to pass on any sensitive information it may be privy to.

    According to the report, “Germany therefore wants to add a test of trustworthiness to the 5G security catalogue that so far had mainly envisaged an evaluation of technical criteria, Maas said.

    “In this test of trustworthiness, German authorities will examine if a company is forced by law in its home country to pass on information and data that actually should be protected, Maas said, adding: ‘That’s the case with Huawei.’”

    Despite Maas’ stance, nothing is certain. German operators have already warned the government that banning Huawei would add billions in cost and years of effort to a successful 5G rollout. It’s possible Germany may allow Huawei to participate, but limit the company’s access from more sensitive aspects of the technology’s deployment.

    Whatever happens, with the U.S. continuing to pressure allies and Britain voicing similar concern, Huawei still faces a long road to convincing world governments that it can be trusted.

  • German Commission Recommends Tighter Regulation of AI Development

    German Commission Recommends Tighter Regulation of AI Development

    Few technologies have sparked as much debate, held more promise or terrified more people than artificial intelligence (AI). Depending on who is talking, AI promises to usher in a new technological era or precipitate the demise of humanity.

    Notable individuals such as Mark Zuckerberg, Ray Kurzweil and Sam Altman have been strong proponents of AI development, even going so far as to believe the potential benefits create a moral imperative to pursue AI research. Others, such as Elon Musk, Clive Sinclair and the late Stephen Hawking, believe true AI may represent the greatest existential danger to the human race.

    With so much controversy, governments are getting drug into the middle of the debate, trying to navigate what role they should play in regulating AI, with Germany the latest to wade in on the topic. In 2018, the German government formed the Data Ethics Commission to “develop ethical benchmarks and guidelines as well as specific recommendations for action, aiming at protecting the individual, preserving social cohesion, and safeguarding and promoting prosperity in the information age.”

    Last week the commission released an opinion on AI development, recommending more regulation and government involvement.

    “The Data Ethics Commission holds the view that regulation is necessary, and cannot be replaced by ethical principles. This is particularly true for issues with heightened implications for fundamental rights that require the central decisions to be made by the democratically elected legislator. Regulation is also an essential basis for building a system where citizens, companies and institutions can trust that the transformation of society will be guided by ethical principles.”

    AI proponents and tech experts are already speaking about against the commission’s findings, voicing concern that the focus on regulation will stifle innovation.

    “Europe wants to be more competitive in the digital economy,” wrote Eline Chivot, a senior policy analyst at the Center for Data Innovation in Brussels. “But it cannot substitute regulation for innovation. Rather than trying to achieve competitiveness in AI through policies designed to disadvantage foreign providers and promote European digital sovereignty, European policymakers should instead focus on developing an AI strategy that invests in people, data, and digital infrastructure, and creates a more innovation-friendly regulatory environment, so that European firms can better compete with China and the United States.”

    One thing is certain: The debate about AI, its future and the best way to safely develop the technology is far from over.

  • Germany Won’t Exclude Huawei 5G Equipment

    Germany Won’t Exclude Huawei 5G Equipment

    Germany has completed its ‘security catalog,’ a set of rules telecommunications companies must comply with as they deploy 5G networks. Reuters is reporting that, despite pressure from the U.S., German officials have not excluded Huawei from participation.

    The U.S. and Huawei have been at odds over allegations the equipment vendor has backdoors in its 5G equipment—backdoors that enable China to spy on other countries. Huawei has vehemently denied the allegations, but that hasn’t stopped the U.S. from taking action to implement bans, export controls and tech sharing restrictions. This has impacted all aspects of the company’s business, even resulting in it losing full access to Google’s Android. The U.S. has also put pressure on European allies to limit Huawei’s ability to do business in the EU.

    In what some are seeing as a snub of U.S. interests, Germany declined to single out any vendor, including Huawei. This is likely due to warnings from German operators who have said banning Huawei could cost billions and add years to a successful 5G rollout.

    “We are not taking a pre-emptive decision to ban any actor, or any company,” German government spokesman Steffen Seibert told a news conference in Berlin on Monday.

  • Facebook, Twitter and Google Hire German Censorship Army to Avoid Millions in Fines

    Facebook, Twitter and Google Hire German Censorship Army to Avoid Millions in Fines

    According to a Wall Street Journal article, Facebook, Google and Twitter have hired censorship teams to remove user posted content that German law prohibits. As of January 1, 2018 a new law in Germany puts tech companies that allow user posted content at risk of fines of up to $60 million if they fail to remove posts deemed illegal.

    Companies must remove hate speech within 24 hours in simple cases or within 7 days where content evaluation is difficult. The new fines can apply to any social media company that allows user content such as Reddit, Gab, Tumblr, Snapchat, Instagram and more.

    Per WSJ, while Germans are only 1.5% of the Facebook user base, they are 16% of their worldwide censorship army. They have already contracted for 1,200 moderators in Germany to process user content flags. (Wall Street Journal)

    Some readers of the article feel that Germany’s new hate speech fines are really a way to control anti progressive speech and to squelch opposition to Germany’s mass muslim migration. Others think it’s simply another way to shake down profitable U.S. companies similar to what the E.U. has done to Microsoft and Google.

    The primary purpose of this new social media censorship in Germany is to stamp out criticism of Islam and Angela Merkel’s mad hat immigration policy. – Ben Qurayza

    Freedom of speech mean you can say amazingly vile things, unless you say something that directly impinges on someone elses rights. So yelling fire in a crowded room is prohibited speech. Saying Hitler is a good guy is not. The challenge when governments control speech is just that, they control the speech. We see how this works in Iran recently. The bricks that need to be crushed are those that jeopardize free speech. That should be particularly the case in Germany. – Bill Fotsch

    This is designed for Germany to milk American companies for fines. – Olesya Reyenger

    Anything critical of the leftists in power will be squashed, like they are trying to do in the US. – Richard Stanton

    Policing thought crime seems very expensive. – Peter Beacom

  • Mark Zuckerberg: Facebook About To Crack Down On Hate Speech

    Mark Zuckerberg: Facebook About To Crack Down On Hate Speech

    Mark Zuckerberg admitted on Friday that Facebook recognizes, and will be doing more to counteract, hate speech against migrants.

    In September, Mark Zuckerberg met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel about ongoing hate speech issues in Germany.

    The meeting Friday was in response to anti-migrant Facebook posts by neo-Nazi sympathizers that have made their way onto the social media platform since Facebook was made available in their country.

    Mark Zuckerburg said on Friday, “Learning more about German culture and German law has led us to change our approach on that. This is always a work in progress. I’m not going to claim up here today that we’re perfect, we’re definitely not.”

    Live from our Townhall Q&A in Berlin. Comment to ask a question!

    Posted by Mark Zuckerberg on Friday, February 26, 2016

    Facebook recently pledged over $1 million dollars in funds to the Online Civil Courage Initiative. The group also receives support from the German Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection.

    Hopefully all of the actions taken by Mark Zuckerberg will help slow the flow of all kinds of hate speech on the immensely popular social media platform.

    At our Townhall Q&A in Berlin, someone asked why Priscilla and I plan to give away 99% of our Facebook shares. I talked about our hopes for improving education, curing disease and building stronger communities.

    Posted by Mark Zuckerberg on Saturday, February 27, 2016

    Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg expressed similar sentiments with Mark Zuckerberg and said of the initiative, “We have repeatedly emphasized that Facebook is no place for the dissemination of xenophobia, hate speech or calls for violence.”

    She added, “With this new initiative, we are convinced to better understand and respond to the challenges of extremist speech on the internet.”

    What do you think of the extraordinary steps Mark Zuckerberg has gone through to stop hate speech on Facebook?

  • Google Faces Another Complaint From German Publishers

    Google is still battling German publishers over including their content among Google News links as it faces a new legal complaint related to a war that just won’t end.

    Will this end up with Google shutting Google News down in Germany? Time will tell.

    VG Media, a consortium of German news publishers, has reportedly filed a new complaint against the company for what common sense dictates is free traffic to their websites (go ahead and try to make sense of it). Reuters reports:

    They justified the step by saying that Google still did not want to pay to use their publications: “So bringing a civil claim before the responsible court is the only way to enforce the ancillary copyright for press publishers against Google,” the VG Media spokesman said.

    VG Media represents about 200 publishers.

    Once upon a time, the consortium pushed for an ancillary copyright law to force Google to pay for using snippets of content, but Google got around it. Eventually, Google just stopped showing snippers for the publishers in question, and then VG Media turned around and said they could again use snippets because they were “being forced to take this step because of the ‘overwhelming market power of Google.’”

    It was a head scratcher then, and it sill is.

    Google faced a similar situation in Spain and ultimately just shut down Google News. According to a study that came out last summer, the effects of that were damaging to the industry.

    Will the same thing happen in Germany? We’ll just have to see how the story plays out. So far, Google is keeping quiet.

    Image via Google

  • Domino’s Pizza buys Joey’s Pizza To Become Germany’s Go-To Delivery Place

    Domino’s Pizza knows that Germans are super serious about their pizza, and now they own a bigger slice of that market.

    Britain’s Domino’s Pizza Group has joined with Domino’s Pizza Enterprises to buy Joey’s Pizza and create Germany’s largest pizza delivery business.

    The venture will reportedly cost 45 million euros, which is 33 million pounds and somewhere around 35 million dollars.

    Domino’s Pizza has been struggling in recent years over in Germany, which is kind of surprisingly the world’s fourth largest pizza market.

    Domino’s Pizza has 20 stores across Germany, 15 of which will become part of the new group and five of which will close down altogether.

    Joey’s is doing much better than Domino’s pizza, with 212 stores nationwide. Joey’s has been in business for 27 years.

    What separates us from the rest. #WordsYouCanEat #wordstoliveby #foodart

    A photo posted by Domino's Pizza (@dominos) on

    It’s meant to be. They fit perfectly together.

    A photo posted by Domino's Pizza (@dominos) on

    So, if you live in Germany and you happen to be a fan of mediocre pizza, then you should be really excited about this Domino’s Pizza merge.

    That will bring the total number of stores across the nation to 227, as Domino’s Pizza tries to “overcome the challenges it has faced as a small operator in the country”, the company said in a statement.

    Stepping up the sundae game with one minor/major modification. #MoreThanPizza #dessert #marbledcookiebrownie

    A photo posted by Domino's Pizza (@dominos) on

    And now I’m hungry.

    Are you a fan of Domino’s Pizza? If not, what’s your favorite pizza delivery go-to?

  • Volkswagen Scandal Hasn’t Really Harmed Reputation in Germany

    The Volkswagen emissions scandal hasn’t really harmed the company’s reputation inside its home country, a new survey finds.

    Nearly two-thirds of Germans said that Volkswagen still makes “outstanding cars.”

    From Reuters:

    Sixty-five percent said they either fully or largely agreed the scandal was overdone and that VW still made excellent cars, according to results of an independent online survey of 1,000 people published on Monday by market research firm Prophet.

    Six out of 10 said they did not believe the “Made in Germany” label would be damaged by the scandal in the long term, and 63 percent believed the affair would soon be forgotten.

    The scandal that rocked the auto industry saw Volkswagen admit to fitting its diesel vehicles with software so they could beat emissions tests.

    The software, known as a ‘defeat device’, allowed the cars to beat lab tests, but it was revealed that the cars emitted 40 times what they tested at when driving around in the wild.

    The scandal caused Volkswagen’s stock price to plummet and the company’s CEO Martin Winterkorn was forced to resign. Volkswagen has publicly announced plans to spend at least $7.3 billion on fixing the emissions issues, and the company’s U.S. CEO Michael Horn was recently grilled by Congress about said plans.

    The scandal recently claimed its fifth executive, as the company suspended its top quality-control executive on Tuesday.

    While many Germans feel that the whole thing will soon be forgotten, Volkswagen has a long way to go in terms of repairing the damage caused by the deception.

    And it won’t help that Leonardo DiCaprio is taking the whole story to the big screen.

  • Hearing Aids For iPhone, Apple Watch Users Hit The Spotlight

    Hearing aids from ReSound will be in the spotlight next week as the company takes its expanded portfolio to EUHA’s 60th International Congress of Hearing Aid Acousticians in Nuremberg, Germany.

    This year, the company introduced ReSound Smart for Apple Watch, which lets users control smart hearing aids from their wrist.

    During the conference, the company will give interactive demos of its line-up of smart hearing aids including the ReSound LinX2, which it declares to be the world’s first full family of “made for iPhone” hearing aids. ReSound says in an announcement:

    This innovation builds on ReSound’s industry-leading technologies in all areas of Smart Hearing (audiology, connectivity, design, and apps), and on the fourth generation of GN ReSound’s proprietary 2.4 GHz wireless platform. ReSound will also showcase the world’s smartest super power hearing aid, ReSound ENZO, for people with severe to profound hearing loss.

    ReSound’s Smart Hearing aids lead the industry in connectivity, allowing users to stream sounds, including phone calls and music, directly to their hearing aids without the use of an intermediary device. Innovative technologies give wearers the most natural hearing experience possible, including Spatial Sense, which gives wearers a natural ability to focus on conversation while maintaining a sense of where sounds are coming from. Users also have the freedom to personalize their hearing experience through the ReSound Smart app, available for iOS devices, including iPhone and Apple Watch, and several Android models.

    In other hearing aid news, CVS announced it will be experimenting with selling hearing aids (as well as glasses) in stores.