Galaxy S24 Customer Satisfaction Bests iPhone-First Time Ever; Google-Don’t Tell AI Personal Info; Microsoft Bringing Some Xbox Games to PS5 & Switch; EU Won’t Make Apple Open Up iMessage 

In a giant plus for Samsung, Galaxy S24 customer satisfaction has surpassed that of iPhones for the first time ever. Bgr.com reports that the data is from PerfectRec, which says 91% of early adapters of the Samsung S24 base model gave the Galaxy S24 5 stars and 88% gave top ratings to the S23 Ultra. The base iPhone 15 got 76%, with the top line iPhone 15 Pro Max garnering 74%. PerfectRec notes that this lead may not hold as it is a survey of early adopters who are enthusiasts that are more familiar with recent models and can be disappointed if incremental improvements don’t seem impressive. They note that It is possible this is purely an Apple phenomenon, and early Galaxy S adopters behave differently.” Still…a big psychological win for Samsung at this point.

Google has made what you would think would be an obvious warning…don’t disclose personal information to AI! According to zdnet.com, Google points out that your interactions with the Gemini will allow the AI to collect information about conversations, your location, feedback, and usage information. Google goes on to state that the collected information helps them provide, improve, and develop products, services, and machine learning technologies. Gemini Apps conversations can be reviewed by human reviewers, and they are retained for 3 years. Even when Gemini Apps Activity are off, your conversations will be saved with your account for up to 72 hours…so be warned. 

Microsoft is preparing to launch a “select number of Xbox games on PS5 and Nintendo Switch.” Hi-Fi Rush and Pentiment are up first, with Sea of Thieves coming to non-Xbox platforms in late 2024. “Other first-party titles [are] also under consideration.” PCmag.com says we can expect more details on February 15th, just a couple days from now. Microsoft isn’t throwing in the towel on their own hardware…they are apparently working on their own hand held device. Of course Nintendo is far ahead with the Switch and then there is the Valve Steam Box.

The European Commission has ruled that Apple’s iMessage is not a ‘core platform service’ that falls under the EU’s Digital Markets Act. Theverge.com reports that this still doesn’t get Apple totally off the hook…they may need to offer interoperability with other messaging apps. Apple’s App Store, Safari browser, and iOS operating system were already designated as core platform services. Meta had both WhatsApp and Messenger designated core platform services under the DMA, and must make them interoperable with third-party services.  

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Google One Hits 100 Million Subscribers; Big Companies Using AI to Monitor Employee Messages; Russians Using Starlinks in Battle vs Ukraine; Bezos Sells $2 Billion in Amazon Shares

Every company seems to be on a tear to suck more monthly subscription money out of us. Now, Google has hit a major milestone…100 million Subscribers for Google One. Theverge.com reports that Google announced the figure on Friday. Google One is their all-in-one subscription service that opens up additional storage for free services like Gmail, Drive, and Photos, as well as access to more features. It’s a step in their effort to move away from free plans, as they have discontinued unlimited Google Drive storage for photos. YouTube Premium took 9 years to do it, but they are over 100 million subscribers thanks to ad removal and adding extra like music and high-quality streamers. The new paid AI plan is another of Google’s plans to hoover up more cash…it’s similar to the existing $100 a year Google One Premium plan that has 2 TB of storage, VPN, and dark web monitoring…except the AI plan costs twice as much. Will generative AI be worth it? Time will tell. 

It has always gone without saying that you should watch what you do and say online with regards to your employer…now, this becomes even more important as some large employers are using AI to monitor employee messages. According to CNBC, employers like Walmart, Delta Air Lines, T-Mobile, Chevron and Starbucks, as well as European brands including Nestle and AstraZeneca, have turned to a seven-year-old startup, Aware, to monitor chatter among their rank and file, according to the company. What are they watching? The AI is analyzing your messages on Slack, Microsoft Teams, Zoom and other popular apps. the data is supposedly anonymized, but is being used to see how employees of a certain age group or in a particular geography are responding to a new corporate policy or marketing campaign, and to read text and process images, it can also identify bullying, harassment, discrimination, noncompliance, pornography, nudity and other behaviors. The Aware analytics tool can also monitor employee sentiment and toxicity…and via a separate Aware eDiscovery tool, can…in the event of extreme threats or other risk behaviors that are predetermined by the client, attach employee names to the posts…so much for anonymized! As always…if you are using an employer device or program, watch what you post!

SpaceX and Elon Musk deny selling Russia…either directly or indirectly…Starlink satellite terminals…yet they have showed up on the front lines of Russia’s war on Ukraine. Arstechnica.com notes that Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence unit said on Telegram on Sunday that radio intercepts confirmed the use of Starlink terminals by Russian units operating in the occupied Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine. There are photos of the unique, rectangular units out in the wild. Musk had provided thousands of the units to Ukraine in 2022…later it was disclosed that the US government underwrote the units. The Ukrainian media reports that Russian forces may have obtained the terminals from intermediaries in Dubai. 

A regulatory filing Friday afternoon indicates that Jeff Bezos just sold over $2 billion worth of Amazon shares….his first sale since 2021. Geekwire.com reports that as of February last year, he controlled around 12.3% of the company…counting shares he personally owns and those he has voting rights over…that belong to his ex-wife MacKenzie Scott. With this sale, he still controls around 11.8% of the online giant. I report this just to underscore what crazy wealth the big billionaires have. Bezos is worth some $195 billion. Just think about that…$2 billion would make most of us and our entire families insanely rich for generations…and Bezos has 20 times that much. Elon Musk has a bit more than Bezos at $201 billion, and Bernie Arnault, CEO of French luxury goods group LVMH checks in as world’s richest person with around $219.2 billion. A bit of food for thought…or in our case, a few crumbs for thought.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Google One Hits 100 Million Subscribers; Big Companies Using AI to Monitor Employee Messages; Russians Using Starlinks in Battle vs Ukraine; Bezos Sells $2 Billion in Amazon Shares

Every company seems to be on a tear to suck more monthly subscription money out of us. Now, Google has hit a major milestone…100 million Subscribers for Google One. Theverge.com reports that Google announced the figure on Friday. Google One is their all-in-one subscription service that opens up additional storage for free services like Gmail, Drive, and Photos, as well as access to more features. It’s a step in their effort to move away from free plans, as they have discontinued unlimited Google Drive storage for photos. YouTube Premium took 9 years to do it, but they are over 100 million subscribers thanks to ad removal and adding extra like music and high-quality streamers. The new paid AI plan is another of Google’s plans to hoover up more cash…it’s similar to the existing $100 a year Google One Premium plan that has 2 TB of storage, VPN, and dark web monitoring…except the AI plan costs twice as much. Will generative AI be worth it? Time will tell. 

It has always gone without saying that you should watch what you do and say online with regards to your employer…now, this becomes even more important as some large employers are using AI to monitor employee messages. According to CNBC, employers like Walmart, Delta Air Lines, T-Mobile, Chevron and Starbucks, as well as European brands including Nestle and AstraZeneca, have turned to a seven-year-old startup, Aware, to monitor chatter among their rank and file, according to the company. What are they watching? The AI is analyzing your messages on Slack, Microsoft Teams, Zoom and other popular apps. the data is supposedly anonymized, but is being used to see how employees of a certain age group or in a particular geography are responding to a new corporate policy or marketing campaign, and to read text and process images, it can also identify bullying, harassment, discrimination, noncompliance, pornography, nudity and other behaviors. The Aware analytics tool can also monitor employee sentiment and toxicity…and via a separate Aware eDiscovery tool, can…in the event of extreme threats or other risk behaviors that are predetermined by the client, attach employee names to the posts…so much for anonymized! As always…if you are using an employer device or program, watch what you post!

SpaceX and Elon Musk deny selling Russia…either directly or indirectly…Starlink satellite terminals…yet they have showed up on the front lines of Russia’s war on Ukraine. Arstechnica.com notes that Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence unit said on Telegram on Sunday that radio intercepts confirmed the use of Starlink terminals by Russian units operating in the occupied Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine. There are photos of the unique, rectangular units out in the wild. Musk had provided thousands of the units to Ukraine in 2022…later it was disclosed that the US government underwrote the units. The Ukrainian media reports that Russian forces may have obtained the terminals from intermediaries in Dubai. 

A regulatory filing Friday afternoon indicates that Jeff Bezos just sold over $2 billion worth of Amazon shares….his first sale since 2021. Geekwire.com reports that as of February last year, he controlled around 12.3% of the company…counting shares he personally owns and those he has voting rights over…that belong to his ex-wife MacKenzie Scott. With this sale, he still controls around 11.8% of the online giant. I report this just to underscore what crazy wealth the big billionaires have. Bezos is worth some $195 billion. Just think about that…$2 billion would make most of us and our entire families insanely rich for generations…and Bezos has 20 times that much. Elon Musk has a bit more than Bezos at $201 billion, and Bernie Arnault, CEO of French luxury goods group LVMH checks in as world’s richest person with around $219.2 billion. A bit of food for thought…or in our case, a few crumbs for thought.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


GM Hires Ex-Tesla Battery Guru; Official-Google Bard AI is now Gemini; Deepfake ‘Face Swaps’ Surged 704% Last Year; FTC Accuses Microsoft of Misrepresenting Activision Blizzard Plans Post Layoffs

General Motors has picked up ex-Tesla executive and battery wiz Kurt Kelty to be the General’s new vice president of batteries…a brand new role at GM. Kelty’s role will likely affect the Ultium program, although his job is designed to be far broader. GM has had teams dedicated to different pieces of the battery process. However, there has never been one role that strings together every step, including sourcing raw materials and identifying and testing out new technologies. Kelty spent more than a decade as the head of Tesla’s battery team. He was there through the launch of Tesla’s first four cars: The Roadster, Model S, Model X and Model 3. He also used to work at Panasonic, Tesla’s partner in cell development at the Gigafactory in Nevada. Since leaving Tesla, Kelty was VP of commercialization at Silk Nanotechnologies, a firm that was working on a silicon based anode that can dramatically increase the energy density of lithium-ion batteries. 

Google announced officially today that it is renaming its Bard chatbot to Gemini, releasing a dedicated Gemini app for Android, and even folding all its Duet AI features in Google Workspace into the Gemini brand. It also announced that Gemini Ultra 1.0 — the largest and most capable version of Google’s large language model — is being released to the public. If you download the new app on Android, it can set Gemini as your default assistant…replacing Google Assistant when you say “Hey, Google.” So far, there isn’t dedicated Gemini app for iOS, and at any rate, you couldn’t replace Siri with it on Apple devices. Most people will use the standard version which is now called Gemini Pro. For Gemini Ultra, the more powerful version, you have to drop $20 a month for the Gemini Advanced subscription…which is part of the Google One AI Premium plan. Since that plan also includes 2TB of Google Drive Storage and other features, Google says the Gemini Advanced subscription is only really $10…except you have to pay the $20 to get it!

New research from iProov, a biometric firm from the UK finds that Deepfake “face swap” attacks skyrocketed by 704% from the first to the second half of 2023. With their ability to manipulate key traits of an image or video, face swaps made with GenAI are difficult to detect. They’re also user-friendly and affordable. To create convincing face swaps, all you need is off-the-shelf software. The manipulated or synthetic output is then fed to a virtual camera. SwapFace and DeepFaceLive are the most popular tools for bad actors, according to iProov.  By using these tools, crooks can hide the evidence of virtual cameras, which makes the face swaps harder to detect. Four years after researchers highlighted deepfakes the most worrying AI crime, their anxieties are becoming reality.

A week after Microsoft laid off nearly 2,000 employees in its gaming division, the Federal Trade Commission is accusing Microsoft of contradicting its pledge to allow Activision Blizzard to operate independently post-acquisition. Engadget.com reports that the FTC has filed a complaint in federal appeals court as of yesterday, saying that last week’s downsizing, which affected employees of Activision Blizzard, “contradicts Microsoft’s representations in this proceeding.” The FTC is asking for a temporary pause of Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard as it further investigates potential antitrust issues. In Wednesday’s complaint, the FTC argued that the recent layoffs also undermine its own ability to order relief for employees who were negatively affected in the acquisition.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


Toyota Drops another $1.3 Billion in US EV Plant; Apple Working on Folding Phones; Microsoft Redesigns Copilot for Web & Mobile; Ex-Tesla Honcho Leading Ford EV Skunkworks Project

Toyota has dropped a whopping $1.3 billion into its facility in Georgetown, Kentucky. According to Arstechnica.com, that’s where Toyota will produce its upcoming three row electric SUV. Now, Toyota will also add a battery pack assembly line as well as make other changes to the plant. Toyota…and Honda as well…have largely hung back in the EV race up to now, but in 2023, the company announced plans to sell 3.5 million EVs by 2030. Still, Chairman Akin Toyoda believes that EVs may only reach 30% market share. 

While Samsung has gone through several generations of folding phones, all has been quiet about them at Apple. Well, the information reports that Apple has secretly been working on at least 2 folding phones after 5 years of research and development. Both prototype iPhones fold widthwise, like a clamshell. Sources indicate that there are no plans to mass produce them yet this year or in 2025, so the earliest we might see them would be 2026. Of course, Apple may can the whole idea if they can’t build them to their standards. The company is reportedly concerned about technical challenges and offering sufficiently appealing features on the device that would justify its high price point compared to non-foldable devices. As with Samsung and others, the pesky crease in the middle of the screen is an issue…especially when trying to use the Apple Pencil on the 8 inch screen the prototypes have. 

Microsoft is giving its Copilot a makeover, with a new, more streamlined design on the web and in mobile apps. Engadget.com says Microsoft points to  a cleaner look and feel for the chatbot’s responses, while Copilot will display a carousel of suggested prompts to highlight what it can do. The new designs drop right before the Super Bowl, and not coincidentally Redmond is running an ad in the big game for the first time in 4 years. Copilot now has more image-editing and creation options. Designer in Copilot (at least in some territories) now allows you to edit images you’ve generated without having to leave the chatbot. You can turn an image into pixel art or blur the background, for instance. Copilot Pro subscribers can resize images between landscape and square formats and regenerate them without having to exit the chat.

Ford has a ‘skunkworks’ project underway to develop a low-cost EV, and it’s being helmed by former Tesla development boss Alan Clarke. Techcrunch.com reports that the disclosure came in an earnings call. The so-called skunkworks project is being run from Irvine, CA, and has been going for a couple years. Besides Clarke, there are engineers from AMP, the EV startup Ford snapped up last Fall. The former CEO of AMP also worked previously with Clarke at Tesla. The project is focused on cost, smaller EVs and efficiency, including the battery. Whichever EV maker gets a good, reliable EV with decent range for under $30 grand first is going to really hit it big…and Ford wants it to be them. By the way, Skunkworks originally referred to Lockheed Martin’s secret Advanced Development Projects, which built the highly secret planes for the US government…notably the U-2 and SR-71 spy planes. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now. 


Meta Announces New Tools to Help Teens Fight Sextortion; YouTube Has Apple Vision Pro App in Works; Bluesky Opening to Public; Android 15 May Get Freeze Feature for All Unused Apps

Meta is rolling out new updates to help teens on its platforms that will help teens battle sextortion. According to techcrunch.com, Meta is expanding availability of Take It Down, an online tool that it helps finance and is run by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC). The company also updated its Sextortion hub with new guidance and is launching a global campaign to raise awareness about sextortion. Take It Down is intended to stop the spread of non-consensual intimate imagery. It allows teens to take back control of their personal intimate photos and prevents ex-partners and scammers from spreading them online. The system can be used by people under 18 who are worried their content has been or may be posted online. It can also be used by parents or trusted adults on behalf of a young person. Plus, it can be used by adults who are concerned about images taken of them when they were under 18.

We have previously reported that neither Netflix nor YouTube nor Spotify would have a native app for Apple’s new Vision Pro headset. Now, bgr.com reports that YouTube spokesperson Jessica Gibby has said that a native Vision Pro app is “on our roadmap,” but she didn’t share a release date. While we wait on a native app from YouTube, there’s already one developer that beat them to the punch. Christian Selig, the developer of the beloved Apollo for Reddit app that shut down recently, whipped up a third-party YouTube app called Juno for the headset. The app costs $4.99 and gives users the full native experience that Google hasn’t built yet.

Bluesky, the social media platform started by Jack Dorsey, former CEO of Twitter, has been available by invitation only for a while. Now, theverge.com says the app is ready to go public. Bluesky had grown to 2 million users and 3 million sign ups in closed beta, but has quite a ways to go to get even remotely close to Twitter successor X, or even Meta’s Threads app. 

Google has had a feature in place that archives unused apps to save memory. Now, androidpolice.com reports that Android 15 may extend the auto-archiving feature for unused apps to ones side loaded from other sources besides the Play Store. When you archive an app on Android, it does some spring cleaning. The heavy stuff gets tossed out, leaving behind a slimmed-down version on your device. Archived apps are also easy to spot—just look for a cloud icon hanging out on the app icon. If you ever feel the need to resurrect an archived app, just give it a tap. It’ll zip back to life, fully restored, as long as the app is still available.

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


Rivian Smaller, Cheaper SUV Coming soon; More Efficient Solar Cell from Oxford Wizards; Google Rebranding Bard to Gemini; Underground Site Uses Neural Networks to Make Really Good Fake IDs

Rivian is getting set to unveil its smaller, cheaper SUV dubbed the R2. The drop date is March 7th. TechCrunch.com reports that it should retail for between $40-60,000, a much lower price than the R1S SUV and the R1T pickup. The reveal will happen in Laguna Beach, CA. Rivian has been operating at a loss, despite decent sales of the present SUV and pickup, as well as the vans it makes for Amazon. They believe at this lower price point, they will be able to scale up production enough to get into the black. Rivian built some 57,000 vehicles in 2023. 

A spinoff from Oxford University called Oxford PV has now made the most efficient solar panel ever built. According to thenextweb.com, compared to the average panels out there…which can convert about 15-20% of solar energy to electricity, this new one can convert 25% of the sun’s energy it receives. It uses a material that is better at absorbing light than previous cells. The spinoff claims that the panels have a theoretical efficiency of 43%…but this has yet to be shown in a real world setting. If they can show that, it would be a gigantic leap forward for solar power.

Google is getting ready to rebrand its Bard generative AI as ‘Gemini,’ likely as early as this week. 9to5google.com reports that Google has upgraded Bard with new features and capabilities. They are also powering the AI with what they call ‘Gemini Pro.’ A Gemini Advanced tier will be available on February 7th. It is a paid product, and includes  “expanded multi-modal capabilities,” better coding support, and “the ability to upload and more deeply analyze files, documents, data, and more.” After the rebranding, Google will be putting out an Android App. The app has a distinct similarity to the current Google Assistant app available in the Play Store, and they note will only run on ‘select devices.’ Most likely that means phones like Tensor-powered Pixels and the Galaxy S24 handsets.

In a flashback to my college days, when one guy I knew made fake out-of-state IDs so his pals could buy booze, a website called OnlyFake is claiming to use “neural networks” to generate realistic looking photos of fake IDs for just $15, radically disrupting the marketplace for fake identities and cybersecurity more generally. This technology, which 404 Media has verified produces fake IDs nearly instantly, could streamline everything from bank fraud to laundering stolen funds. These guys are pikers…the guy I knew charged $25 back decades ago. Ok, inappropriate, I know. At any rate, 404Media says OnlyFake created a highly convincing California driver’s license, complete with whatever arbitrary name, biographical information, address, expiration date, and signature. 404 Media used another fake ID generated by this site to successfully step through the identity verification process on OKX. OKX is a cryptocurrency exchange that has recently appeared in multiple court records because of its use by criminals. BTW, the alleged owner of OnlyFakes goes by John Wick. 

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.


New Nonprofit AI Tool to Detect Deepfakes, etc; Apple-600 Native Apps Available for Vision Pro Tomorrow; US Social Media Use; Tesla Sued over Hazardous Waste by 25 California Counties

A new nonprofit, nonpartisan tech organization called TrueMedia is working on an AI-powered tool to detect deepfake videos, photos, and audio, aiming to combat political disinformation in the run up to the 2024 elections. According to geekwire.com, it’s headed up by a University of Washington professor who was also CEO of the Allen Institute for AI. TrueMedia plans to release a free, web-based tool in the first quarter of this year that combines advances from TrueMedia with existing deepfake detection tools in areas including computer vision and audio analysis. It will be available initially for use by journalists, fact-checkers, and online influencers before broader public release later in the year.

A day ahead of the release of the Apple Vision Pro, Apple has announced over 600 apps that are optimized and ready to use on the pricy headset. We reported earlier about all the Microsoft apps, but now here are some others, as reported by macrumors.com. For entertainment, we already noted that Netflix and YouTube won’t have apps…but Disney+, IMAX, Max, MLB, NBA, PGA TOUR Vision, and Red Bull TV have all been optimized to take full advantage of the Vision Pro’s spatial design elements and immersive capabilities. In addition, soccer fans can subscribe to MLS Season Pass in the Apple TV app. A few other notable apps include Box, Wayfair, Webex, Zillow, Zoom, Airmail, Night Sky, Parcel. There are also over a million apps that are really for iOS and iPadOS, but will run on the Vision Pro. 

With Congress grilling the social media CEOs yesterday, how much do Americans use social media? Here are some numbers from Pew Research…this is the % of all US adults who say they ever use the platforms. Here are the top 10: YouTube rules, with 83%, Facebook is #2 with 68%. Instagram claims 47% of Americans, Pinterest has 35%, TikTok gets 33%, LinkedIn garners 30%. WhatsApp is close behind at 29%, Snapchat gets 27%, X has 22%, and Reddit also has 22%. 

Twenty five California counties have sued Tesla, alleging that the automaker has repeatedly mishandled hazardous waste at facilities throughout the state. The lawsuit was filed after months of settlement talks apparently fell apart. The claim states that Tesla  improperly labeled and disposed of materials like “lead acid batteries and other batteries,” paints, brake fluid, aerosols, antifreeze, acetone, diesel fuel and more at its production and service facilities throughout the state. Tesla also allegedly improperly disposed of the waste, both on-site and at landfills that can’t accept hazardous waste. Tesla could be on the hook for as much as $70,000 per violation per day, according to Reuters, which first reported the suit. For its part, Tesla says it “had implemented various remedial measures, including conducting training and audits, and enhancements to its site waste management programs.”

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.