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While it was occasionally inconvenient to walk around without it, it was also refreshing; I'd long craved a digital detox. To my alarm, the thief had hacked into my Google account and changed the password, locking me out. To recover an account, you need a recovery email or phone number and the Google Authenticator app. AdvertisementYou have to pay for a Google One account to chat online with Google agents. Whenever I thought I'd done all the admin, another nightmare popped up.
Persons: , I'd, Gary Nunn, São Paulo, he'd, I've, I'm, That's Organizations: Service, Business, Google, Apple, Spotify, Skype Locations: Brazil, Rio de Janeiro, Rio De Janeiro, São Paulo, Sydney
Drop bears: The true history of a fake Australian animal
  + stars: | 2024-07-30 | by ( Ben Westcott | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +10 min
“Once prey is within view, the Drop Bear will drop as much as eight meters to pounce on top of the unsuspecting victim. When CNN Travel asked Australian film star Chris Hemsworth for advice on avoiding drop bears in 2018, he said: “Bring an umbrella.”The origins of the drop bearDespite the drop bear’s popularity and growing international reputation, its actual origins are unknown. Not every Australian grew up with stories of drop bears, but those who do remember being told about drop bears by their parents, especially people who grew up in the country or in farming communities. The Drop BearsThere is, however, one clear marker of when the mythical drop bears began to enter Australian pop culture. Tell them you’ve got to be wary or (the drop bears) will drop down and take you,” Batchelor said.
Persons: they’ll, , Ian Coate, , Chris Hemsworth, Clint, Paul Hogan, Hogan, Indiana Jones, koalas, savaging Hogan, Coate, ” Coate, Chris Toms, Johnny Batchelor, ” Batchelor, Toms, you’ve, Batchelor, It’s, Bears Batchelor, thylacoleo, Australia’s Coates, Coates, isn’t Organizations: CNN, of Australia, CNN Travel, National Library of Australia, Canberra Times, TAM, Clint, US, Aussie, Bears, Google, Bundaberg, ITV Locations: Australian, , Goannas, Australia, Zealander, Sydney, New Zealand, New South Wales, Bundaberg Rum
Read previewAn Olympics ad from Google depicting a father using its Gemini AI assistant to help his daughter compose a letter to her favorite athlete has drawn sharp criticism from online commentators. Google's "Dear Sydney" spot first aired on TV during the broadcast of the opening ceremony on July 24 and is also available on YouTube. Related stories"It follows a coherent story, focuses on characters with agency and vitality, and prioritizes people over the product," said Jon Evans, System1 chief customer officer, of Google's ad. Still, several ad experts have said Google's marketing department — which created the ad in-house rather than using an ad agency — should have done a better job of reading the room. The "Dear Sydney" spot was still airing on US TV on Tuesday morning, according to the measurement firm iSpot.
Persons: , USA's Sydney McLaughlin, McLaughlin, Shelly Palmer, Syracuse University's S.I, Jon Evans, Evans, System1, Kevin, Sabrina, Sydney, Maani Safa, Poppins, Safa, Malcolm Poynton, didn't, Lorraine Twohill, Josh Green Organizations: Service, Google, Gemini, Business, Paris Olympics, YouTube, Team USA, Syracuse University's, Newhouse School of Public Communications, NBC Sports, Cheil Locations: Paris
Big Tech firms are investing in their own AI ventures as well as in external companies. Microsoft has put $13 billion into OpenAI, while Amazon and Google have backed Anthropic. AI investments are projected to reach $1 trillion, but firms are opaque about internal spending. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementAs the AI race heats up, Big Tech companies are both spending big on their own technology and strategically investing in external AI ventures.
Persons: , Anthropic, Claude, ChatGPT Organizations: Big Tech, Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Service, OpenAI, Business Locations: OpenAI
Read previewThe AI arms race continues apace, with OpenAI competing against Anthropic, Meta, and a reinvigorated Google to create the biggest, baddest, model. OpenAI set the tone with the release of GPT-4 and competitors have scrambled to catch up, with some coming pretty close. But will it be enough to set OpenAI — which is apparently hemorrhaging billions of dollars — apart from the increasingly impressive array of other AI models on offer? He expects GPT-5 to be more like going from undergrad to a PhD program, better for sure but not necessarily Earth-shattering. Already many user are opting for smaller, cheaper models and AI companies are increasingly competing on price rather than performance.
Persons: , that's, OpenAI, Hamish Low, Jake Heller, Heller, Read, He's, Will GPT, Hooman Radfar, he's, Radfar Organizations: Service, Anthropic, Meta, Google, Business, Enders Analysis, GPT, Thomson Reuters Locations: GPT, undergrad
Apple appears to have just shunned Nvidia again
  + stars: | 2024-07-30 | by ( Jordan Hart | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +1 min
It appears that Apple opted for Google's TPU chips over Nvidia's for its AI development. An Apple research paper highlights the use of TPUv5p chips from Google for iPhone AI. AdvertisementIt looks like Apple has confirmed it's using Google's chips for Apple Intelligence — not Nvidia's. There was no mention of Nvidia in an Apple research paper published on Monday that discussed foundation language models developed to power Apple Intelligence features. In fact, the tech giant wrote that it used TPUv4 and TPUv5p chips, Google's tensing processing units, to train its artificial intelligence tools.
Persons: Apple, Organizations: Apple, Google, Nvidia, Service, Apple Intelligence, Business
@rickrudescalves hid the post within a week of publishing it, but the couch joke had already left an impression. AdvertisementOver the past week, for every seven people searching Google for "JD Vance," one person has searched "JD Vance couch," according to Google Trends. AdvertisementBusiness Insider tracked down the post's author, who we'll call Rick, in keeping with his former X screen name, @rickrudescalves. Rick is not the first person to post an absurd joke that ended up roiling political circles after flying over too many heads. As for his decision to include a fake citation in a tweet about a man having sex with a couch, Rick claims highbrow inspiration.
Persons: Donald Trump, JD Vance, @rickrudescalves, vance, Vance fantasizing, Obama, Kamala Harris, Stephen Colbert, Vance, Rick, he's, , Trump, Rush Limbaugh, Werner Herzog, Jorge Luis Borges, John Fowles, I've, Lyndon Johnson, apocryphally, Hunter S, Thompson, Johnson, John Oliver Organizations: Service, Business, Google, Associated Press, Trump, Pundit, U.S . Postal Service, FBI Locations: Vance's, Columbus , Ohio, English
In this photo illustration, the Alphabet Inc. logo seen displayed on a smartphone screen and the Google logo in the background. Britain's competition regulator on Tuesday said that it is investigating to see if Google parent Alphabet's partnership with artificial intelligence startup Anthropic has resulted in reduced competition. The regulator has invited comments from interested parties before beginning a formal investigation. An Anthropic spokesperson told CNBC that the company will cooperate with the CMA and "provide them with the complete picture about Google's investment and our commercial collaboration." "We are an independent company and none of our strategic partnerships or investor relationships diminish the independence of our corporate governance or our freedom to partner with others," the spokesperson added.
Organizations: Alphabet Inc, Google, Markets Authority, CNBC, CMA
"I think there will be a change in the way a software engineer works, and instead of five software engineers you might need four in future," she said. AdvertisementHe said that people who studied software engineering before the rise of AI tools have a stronger foundation because they have "written code from scratch." AdvertisementAn added that foundational knowledge in "algorithms, data structures, software engineering, and other critical areas" is essential for advancing AI technologies. David Malan, a computer science professor at Harvard, told BI that AI tools could be a plus for aspiring software engineers who know how to leverage them. Tejas Rajagopal, a recent computer science graduate from NTU, said he's been trying to expand his skillset to strengthen his chances of landing a job.
Persons: , Arpita Kaushik, Aditya Swami, Hatcher, Swami, Kaushik, It's, hasn't, Adrian Goh, Goh, Kan Min Yen, Kan, Bo An, David Malan, Malan, he's, Rajagopal Organizations: Service, Google, Business, IBM, Rocket Mortgage, National University of Singapore, Nanyang Technological University, NTU, Harvard, Tejas Locations: Singapore, Hatcher, Asia
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewMeta CEO Mark Zuckerberg didn't let the tomatoes touch after he cut them into perfectly uniform slices. "In our company, I want every engineer and every software developer to have an AI or many AIs," Huang said to Zuckerberg. Huang and Zuckerberg have big stakes in that vision coming true, according to Paul Baier, CEO and principal analyst at GAI Insights. Huang needs to ensure LLMs keep building with Nvidia chips and Zuckerberg needs Huang's credibility to bolster his semi-open-source strategy.
Persons: , Mark Zuckerberg didn't, Huang, Zuckerberg, Google's, Meta's, Meta, Paul Baier, Baier Organizations: Service, Business, Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, AIs Locations: Hawaii
Microsoft shares dipped on Wednesday as investors looked past better-than-expected earnings and revenue and focused instead on disappointing cloud results. But executives provided a dose of optimism when they predicted a cloud growth speed-up in the first half of 2025. Of the 29% growth for Azure and other cloud services, 8 percentage points came from AI services, Microsoft said. But demand for Azure AI services remained higher than available capacity, said Amy Hood, Microsoft's finance chief. She said Azure growth in June was slightly lower than expected across some parts of Europe.
Persons: Satya Nadella, LSEG, StreetAccount, Nadella, Amy Hood, Hood Organizations: Microsoft, Seattle Convention Center, StreetAccount, CNBC, Google, Amazon Web Services Locations: Seattle , Washington, Europe
New York CNN —OpenAI stunned users when it demonstrated an updated voice mode for the most advanced version of ChatGPT earlier this year. Far from the kind of robotic voice that people have come to associate with digital assistants like Alexa or Siri, the ChatGPT advanced voice mode sounds remarkably lifelike. Starting on Tuesday, advanced voice mode — which works with the most powerful version of the chatbot, ChatGPT-4o — will begin rolling out to paid users. Advanced voice mode will start rolling out to a small group of subscribers to the app’s “Plus” mode, with the aim of making it available to all Plus users in the fall. ChatGPT does have a less sophisticated voice mode already.
Persons: New York CNN — OpenAI, Siri, Scarlett Johansson, ChatGPT’s, OpenAI, , won’t, , Johansson, Organizations: New, New York CNN, Apple Locations: New York
Meta has agreed to pay $1.4 billion to settle a lawsuit by the state of Texas over the Facebook owner's unauthorized use of biometric data by users, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Tuesday. The suit, filed by Paxton in February 2022, accused Meta of capturing and using the biometric data of millions of Texas residents — which was contained in uploaded photos and videos on Facebook — without legally required permissions. Meta will pay out the $1.4 billion to Texas over five years, the office said. "Any abuse of Texans' sensitive data will be met with the full force of the law," Paxton said. Paxton's office is continuing to press a lawsuit against Alphabet , which accuses the Google owner of illegally collecting biometric data from millions of Texans.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Meta, Ken Paxton, Paxton, McKool Smith, Keller Postman Organizations: U.S, Capitol, Facebook, Texans, Meta, CNBC Locations: Washington , U.S, Texas, Meta, Harrison County
In his Sunday column , Jim Cramer wrote that these earnings reports will test that rotation narrative. Another way to help "take the sting away" is management teams providing a rationale behind the spending, Jim also wrote Sunday. Alphabet's second-quarter capex of $13.2 billion was up 91% year over year and higher sequentially from $12 billion in the first quarter. Alphabet's full-year capex spending is expected to total nearly $50 billion, according to estimates compiled by FactSet. Investors fretting about AI spending is not entirely new.
Persons: , Jim Cramer, Jeff Marks, Jim, Alphabet's, Sundar Pichai, FactSet, Apple, Meta's, Goldman Sachs, Jim Covello, Covello, Jim Cramer's Organizations: Big Tech, Microsoft, Apple, KeyBanc, Markets, Google, Meta, stoke, Wall Street, Wedbush Securities, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: capex
Mark Zuckerberg sees a future where we're all wearing AI-powered technology. Speaking with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at the SIGGRAPH conference on Monday, the Meta CEO said he foresees the rise of smart glasses in particular. AdvertisementMeta launched its smart glasses, a collaboration with the eyewear brand Ray-Bans, in 2021. Earlier this year, the company announced an update to Meta AI that enabled the tech to work for wearers. While the original Google Glass was a commercial flop, the recent advancements in AI technology have resulted in renewed interest in bringing the next generation of smart glasses to market.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Jensen Huang, Zuckerberg, Huang, Ray, Ban Metas, let's, Ban, Oakley Organizations: Service, Nvidia, SIGGRAPH, Business, Meta, Inc, Google Locations: WhatsApp
Perplexity AI on Tuesday debuted a revenue-sharing model for publishers after more than a month of plagiarism accusations. Media outlets and content platforms including Fortune, Time, Entrepreneur, The Texas Tribune, Der Spiegel and WordPress.com are the first to join the company's "Publishers Program." Under the new partner program, any time a user asks a question and Perplexity generates advertising revenue from citing one of the publisher's articles in its answer, Perplexity will share a flat percentage of that revenue. "Some of it grew out of conversations we were having with publishers about integrating Perplexity APIs and technology into their products," Shevelenko said. But not all news organizations are gearing up for a fight, and some are instead joining forces with AI startups like OpenAI, Perplexity and others.
Persons: Der Spiegel, WordPress.com, Forbes, Weeks, Perplexity, Dmitry Shevelenko, Shevelenko, ScalePost.ai, OpenAI, Jonathan Franzen, John Grisham, George R.R, Martin, Jodi Picoult Organizations: Media, The Texas Tribune, Wired, Google, CNBC, Center, Investigative, Microsoft, New York Times, Chicago Tribune, New York Daily News, Time, News Corp, Wall Street, Barron's, New York Post Locations: Perplexity
So far, most of the AI winners have been confined to players further up the value chain, such as data center providers and semiconductor chip producers at the backbone of AI technology. As the buildout phase of AI matures, investors are looking further down the value chain for monetization opportunities, whether it be for consumers or businesses. Ayako Yoshioka, senior portfolio manager at Wealth Enhancement Group, sees three parts of the market that could see profit enhancements from the adoption of AI. 3 non-tech AI opportunitiesThere's significant potential for the healthcare sector to reap the benefits of AI. Large banks like JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs also use AI to comb through and sort large quantities of historical financial data, facilitate financial research, and provide investment advice.
Persons: , Ayako Yoshioka, Yoshioka, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, They're, That's Organizations: Service, Big Tech, Business, Google, Security, Visa, Mastercard, Healthcare, Trust Nasdaq
But since then, Apple has held its annual Worldwide Developers Conference, where it debuted Apple Intelligence and announced a partnership with ChatGPT. Expect questions about the Apple Intelligence delayApple Intelligence is a hot topic this quarter. AppleBloomberg reported Sunday that Apple Intelligence won't begin rolling out in September, as Apple first announced. AFP/Getty ImagesChina was a hot topic during Apple's last earnings call, and it should be no different this time. AdvertisementApple talked about how well its services were doing in Q2, and Kerwin said analysts will be looking for continued "double-digit growth for the services business."
Persons: , Gene, WWDC, Munster, Tim Cook, We're, William Kerwin, Cook, Dan Ives, Dave Johnson, Kerwin Organizations: Service, Apple, Developers, Apple Intelligence, ChatGPT, Business, Apple Bloomberg, Management, Gene Munster, China Apple, Getty, Morningstar, Huawei, Street, Wedbush Securities, Google Locations: China, Europe, Shanghai, AFP
Read previewLate last year, Amazon projected its healthcare businesses to lose more than $1 billion for 2024, according to an internal planning document obtained by Business Insider. Although the company doesn't breakout financials on the healthcare business, investors will be looking for signs of success when it reports results on Thursday. That was mostly thanks to Amazon Pharmacy, which was projected to generate $1.81 billion in 2024 sales, a 45% surge. Amazon healthcare is slowing investments in smaller initiatives by delaying hiring for certain projects and reducing contractor spend, it added. It's upgrading the signup process, such as insurance card capture technology, and simplifying the linking between One Medical and Amazon Pharmacy accounts.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, Brand, Neil Lindsay, It's Organizations: Service, Business, Amazon, Pharmacy, Amazon Health Services, Tech, Amazon Pharmacy, Health Services, Health, Amazon Clinic, Google
Just 20 years ago journalists covered the tech industry "like it didn't matter, like it was this hobbyist, interesting, plucky thing." The pro-tech media gives tech's main characters the chance to write their way back to the original storyline. Trae Stephens, a partner at Founders Fund, described Pirate Wires as a kind of daily affirmation for Silicon Valley. Related storiesTrae Stephens, a partner at Founders Fund, described Pirate Wires as a kind of daily affirmation for Silicon Valley. Of the members of the news media I talked to about pro-tech media, some were backhandedly laudatory.
Persons: Mike Solana, Solana, Peter Thiel, , David Sacks, Jason Calacanis, Chamath Palihapitiya, David Friedberg, Elon Musk, Sam Altman, Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump, There's, Coogan, John Coogan, Andreessen Horowitz, Marc Andreessen, they're, Balaji Srinivasan, Mark Zuckerberg, Donald Trump's, Tyler Le, Sam Bankman, Warren Buffett, Trae Stephens, Andreessen, Palmer Luckey, It's, Dick Lucas, Lucas, Joe Rogan, Kamala, Stephens, Packy McCormick, Taylor Lorenz, Ryan Mac, Kevin Roose, Jesse Singal —, Casey Newton, Casey isn't, Casey, Newton, Erik Torenberg, Anthony Fauci, Ellen Pao, Katherine Maher, George Soros, Joe Biden, Chesa Boudin, Boudin, Gavin Newsom, Palihapitiya, Sacks, Trump, JD Vance, Brian Merchant, Ben Smith, Eric Newcomer, he's, Lulu Cheng Meservey, Balaji Srinivasan's, Zoë Bernard Organizations: Fund, Tech, Founders Fund, Apple, Elon, Elite, Sequoia Capital, Pirate, Penguin Group, Big Tech, Card Industry, Washington Post, TechCrunch, Media, NPR, Google, Disney, Twitter, Republican National Convention, Bloomberg, monetization, San, Business Locations: San Francisco, Substack, Silicon Valley, New York, Silicon, Solana, Miami, Francisco, California, Los Angeles
Read previewDonald Trump is again railing against Big Tech, accusing both Meta and Google of censoring content about him in "another attempt at RIGGING THE ELECTION!!!" In a post Tuesday on Truth Social, Trump referenced a photo taken after his assassination attempt that a Facebook communications exec previously acknowledged had been mistakenly fact-checked across the social network. The New York Post also reported Monday that after asking about the assassination attempt, Meta's AI assistant had responded that the event had never happened. Still, Trump urged his followers on Truth Social Tuesday to "GO AFTER META AND GOOGLE. Zuckerberg had called Trump a "badass" for surviving his assassination attempt, but that didn't stop Trump from threatening to send the Facebook cofounder to prison if he's elected.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump, Dani Lever, Lever, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, he's, Elon Musk, Elon Musk —, Harris • Donald Trump, Donald Trump Jr, Ted Cruz — Organizations: Service, Big Tech, Social, Facebook, Business, New York Post, Trump, Google
How can the S & P 500 be traded? Those losses continued on Thursday , with the S & P 500 closing at 5,399.22 and the Nasdaq finishing at 17,181.72. The S & P 500 lost 0.83% for the week, and the Nasdaq declined around 2% in the same period. "Then that's where maybe I'm looking to try and find some bargains here for people to sort of buy back into this market," Stutland said. Large over smalls, large over mids and U.S. over international within the large cap space," he told CNBC's " Squawk Box Asia " on Friday.
Persons: we've, Richard Clode, Janus Henderson, Paul Christopher, Christopher, Brian Stutland, CNBC's, Stutland, He's, smalls, We're Organizations: Nasdaq, Trump, Wells, Wells Fargo Investment Institute, Equity Armor Investments Locations: China, Wells Fargo, Friday's,
Well, a new Google ad says artificial intelligence can now do that for you. It shows the young girl training to compete like her hero, thanks to hurdling technique tips generated by Google’s AI search feature. But many early AI tools seem to do the opposite, instead enabling computers to generate traditionally human creative outputs such as art, music and stories. And yet tech firms have forged ahead with rolling out AI tools that can create new emojis, speak and even generate videos. Google did not respond to CNN’s request for comment regarding the backlash to the Gemini ad.
Persons: Mickey Mouse, It’s, Sydney McLaughlin, , Google’s, McLaughlin, OpenAI’s, Deadspin Will Leitch, ” Shelly Palmer, Syracuse University’s S.I, ” Apple, Sonny, Cher’s, Apple Organizations: New, New York CNN, Olympics, Google, Big Tech, Tech, Syracuse University’s, Newhouse School of Public Communications Locations: New York
Read previewFor a while now, AI stocks have seemingly had the ability to defy gravity. This week, tech companies central to the generative AI boom, including Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Meta, report earnings at a time when the market rally they've helped drive teeters on the brink of a correction. If its Big Tech peers also struggle to tell investors that AI isn't just sucking up cash, we might see the AI rally lose some steam. AI hype faces a major testThe rationale behind why AI stocks have been able to defy gravity is pretty simple. Since March, gains in the S&P 500 have been driven by chip firms like Nvidia and the so-called "Fab Five" AI Big Tech stocks, including Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Meta.
Persons: , they've, robotaxis, Sundar Pichai, Jensen Huang, Tim Cook, Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, Satya Nadella, OpenAI, Dan Ives Organizations: Service, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Nasdaq, Tesla, Google, Business, Big Tech, Apple Intelligence, Nvidia Locations: Silicon
Apple said on Monday that the artificial intelligence models underpinning Apple Intelligence, its AI system, were pretrained on processors designed by Google, a sign that Big Tech companies are looking for alternatives to Nvidia when it comes to the training of cutting-edge AI. Apple's choice of Google's homegrown Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) for training was detailed in a technical paper just published by the company. Separately, Apple released a preview version of Apple Intelligence for some devices on Monday. Apple doesn't name Google or Nvidia in its 47-page paper, but did note its Apple Foundation Model (AFM) and AFM server are trained on "Cloud TPU clusters." "This system allows us to train the AFM models efficiently and scalably, including AFM-on-device, AFM-server, and larger models," Apple said in the paper.
Persons: Apple, they've, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai, Zuckerberg, Emily Chang Organizations: Apple Intelligence, Google, Big Tech, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Oracle, Apple Foundation, Apple
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