Microsoft’s Big Quantum Breakthrough; Google Pulls Gemini from Main iOS Search App; AI’s Fake Cases-Getting Lawyers Fired; Another New Chip Coming from Apple

In what may turn out to be a much bigger deal than any AI, Microsoft has announced a huge breakthrough in quantum 

computing. Microsoft says it has developed a new quantum processor based on a novel state of matter, giving it a clear path to achieve quantum computing’s long-term promise of solving some of the world’s most difficult problems. “We believe this breakthrough will allow us to create a truly meaningful quantum computer not in decades, as some have predicted, but in years,” wrote Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in a LinkedIn post about the news. Redmond has been working on quantum computing for almost 20 years…in fact, that program is the longest-running R&D program in the company. Microsoft’s work produces much more accurate quantum computing than others. They have placed eight topological qubits on a chip dubbed Majorana 1, after the Italian physicist who proposed the particles back in 1937!

Google has pulled Gemini from its main search app on iOS. According to TechCrunch.com, the aim is to get users to download the standalone Gemini app instead, which would allow Google to more directly compete with other consumer-facing AI chatbots like ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity. However, the change could also risk reducing Gemini’s reach as Google’s app is already used by millions, and many are not motivated enough to download other new mobile applications. A lot of people aren’t excited about having to use the additional app, but one benefit is that you can have live conversations with the AI assistant via Gemini Live. 

Last year, there was a flap in legal circles as an attorney used AI to write a brief he submitted to the court, and the artificial intelligence came up with ‘artificial cases’ to support his position. The court and opposing counsel noticed the fake cases, and he was fined and dressed down. Arstechnica.com notes that now we have a situation with Morgan and Morgan, which bills itself as ‘America’s largest injury law firm.’ Morgan was involved in a suit against Walmart over a claimed defective hoverboard toy…which caused a house fire. The lead attorney from Morgan, Rudwin Ayala, submitted a filing, and Walmart’s attorneys couldn’t find any trace of eight cases cited in it…except on ChatGPT! The attorney was removed from the case, and Morgan ended up paying Walmart’s attorneys for wasted time chasing down the fake cases. Some attorneys have been fired over this sort of use of AI. I recently took a couple of continuing legal education courses, and they stressed quite strongly that you have to look up any cases AI presents in a legal filing you intend to use…and make damned sure they are actual cases, and not some imagined ones from ChatGPT, Claude, or other AI models!

Yesterday, along with the iPhone 16e, Apple bowed its new C1 modem chip…making the entry-level iPhone the first to run on Apple’s in-house designed modem. Now, 9to5 mac.com reports that analyst Ming-Chi Kuo is predicting another new Cupertino-designed chip, and he says it will be in all the new iPhone 17 models. Apparently, besides their C-1 modem, which is allowing Apple to ditch Qualcomm, Apple has been working on their own Wi-Fi chip to replace the Broadcom ones the present iPhones use. Even though all the new iPhones will have this new Apple Wi-Fi chip, only the so-called ‘slim’ iPhone 17 will use the C-1 modem that just debuted in the iPhone 16e. Analyst Kuo says the Apple Wi-Fi chip should ‘enhance connectivity across Apple devices.’ He didn’t clarify if that just meant from one Apple device to another, or also to your router and other devices. It looks like within a year or 2, Apple will be running iPhones on nearly entirely their own silicon…with the exception of memory chips. 

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


Newest Member-Apple Family Tomorrow; AI Can Replicate Itself-With Help; Phone By Google Call History Filters; Meta Announces 1st Generative AI Developers Conference 

Apple plans to introduce its ‘newest member of the family’ tomorrow. That’s the tease from CEO Tim Cook. Engadget.com reports that we don’t really know if this is just the rollout of the iPhone SE…which was delayed, or new AirTags, or possibly the rumored new home device. Whatever it is, we’ll have a recap about it all tomorrow right here. 

In an absolutely nerve-fraying study from China, they have been able to reach a so-called ‘red line’ with artificial intelligence. According to bgr.com, some Chinese scientists were able to get AI to replicate itself. The researchers ran 10 trials, at the end of which two AI models were able to create separate and functioning replicas in 50% and 90% of cases. Bear in mind that the researchers gave the AI what they call an ‘Agent scaffolding, comprising tools, system prompts, and a thinking model that enabled the LLM to interact with the operating system.’ Without all the assistance, they note that the AI models would not have been able to replicate. At least for now, you can’t just instruct AI to reproduce itself. An international statement about AI safety was signed by many countries last week…but the US, UK, and China refused to sign. 

Google has added some call history filters to the beta of Android. 9to5google.com notes that these should be pretty handy. You can now select from all, missed, contacts, non-spam, spam. What do you bet when it is fully released, most people will leave the filter in non-spam all the time! 

Meta has announced LlamaCon, its first generative AI dev conference. Techcrunch.com reports that the event is scheduled for April 29th. The LlamaCon moniker comes from Meta’s Llama family of generative AI models. Meta said that it plans to share “the latest on [its] open source AI developments to help developers […] build amazing apps and products.” Meta several years ago embraced an “open” approach to developing AI technologies in a bid to grow an ecosystem of apps and platforms. They were caught off guard when the Chinese released their open AI model that reportedly could outperform the next version of Llama…expected to be released soon. Meta is budgeting up to $80 billion on projects revolving around AI this year. 

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


Google Announces Date for I/O; iPhone Owners Back to Replacing Phones Faster; Thomson Reuters Wins 1st Major US AI Copyright Case; Anthropic CEO Warns of Race To Understand AI

The next Google I/O will be coming up on May 20th and 21st at Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View. 9to5google.com reports that the keynote will be as usual by CEO Sundar Pichai, and it starts at 10 am Pacific time. The event will be streamed both days. We should see a lot of information and no shortage of hype about Gemini and other AI, in addition to new details about Android 16. In the announcement, Google highlights ‘Android, AI, Web, Cloud, and more.’ Online registration starts today…and it’s free. 

In a report at least I didn’t see coming…after years of holding on to iPhones longer, Apple users have swung back to upgrading more often. According to Consumer Intelligence Research Partners, more iPhone users retired their phones in a shorter period of time than had been the trend before. In December 2024 compared to 2023, 36% of buyers had owned their prior iPhones for 2 years or less…that’s up 31%. Fewer users kept their phones for 3 years or longer. CIRP didn’t research the ‘why,’ but it could be due to the hype around AI, or perhaps due to more aggressive carrier pricing. It will be interesting to see if this is really a trend back to more frequently trading up, or just a one-time bump.

Media and tech giant Thomson Reuters has won the first major AI copyright case in the US. Wired.com says the suit was against legal AI startup Ross Intelligence. Thomson Reuters claimed the AI firm reproduced materials from its legal research firm WestLaw. Today, a judge ruled in Thomson Reuters’ favor, finding that the company’s copyright was indeed infringed by Ross Intelligence’s actions. Legal publication houses are very aggressive about protecting their intellectual property, but this is a first as we move to more and more AI. The judge found in favor of Thomson Reuters on the issue of fair use. The fair use doctrine is a key component of how AI companies are seeking to defend themselves against claims that they used copyrighted materials illegally. The idea underpinning fair use is that sometimes it’s legally permissible to use copyrighted works without permission—for example, to create parody works, or in noncommercial research or news production. The court found that Ross failed the 4 pronged test for fair use…the reason behind the work, the nature of the work (whether it’s poetry, nonfiction, private letters, et cetera), the amount of copyrighted work used, and how the use impacts the market value of the original. 

Anthropic’s CEO has warned of the ‘race’ to understand AI as it becomes more powerful. Techcrunch.com reports that Dario Amodei…who has been a neuroscientist…is concerned that our understanding might not keep up with our ability to build things. He said he wasn’t just harping about safety issues, but emphasizing that failing to keep up with understanding what we are building with AI might cause us to lose great opportunities. Anthropic makes the Claude AI product…which some people prefer over OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google Gemini.

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


Altman-OpenAI Not for Sale To Musk or Others; Apple & Google Take Down Malicious Mobile Apps; Meta Supposedly Used 82TB in Stolen Books for AI Training; Ukraine Makes Non-GPS Drones to Evade Russian Jamming

After Elon Musk and some partners made an unsolicited bid to buy OpenAI yesterday for some $97.4 billion, OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman flatly and publicly rejected the offer. Arstechnica.com reports that the offer was backed by Musk’s company xAI, with several investor buddies of Musk involved…almost all of whom have money in Tesla or SpaceX. Musk has had a grudge against Altman since 2015, when both partnered with others to start OpenAI as a non-profit. Musk cut ties with the company in 2018….then saw OpenAI’s value soar in 2022 and 2023. His attempt to buy OpenAI is a pretty good indicator that even Elon knows his own AI…called Grok…sucks compared to ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Anthropic’s Claude, and even Apple’s AI.

Apple and Google have removed up to 20 apps from their app stores after security researchers found that the apps were carrying data-stealing software for nearly a year. According to techcrunch.com, the researchers at Kaspersky said the malware, called SparkCat, had been active since March 2024. Originally, they found the malware in a food delivery app used in UAE and Indonesia, but then spotted it in 19 other unrelated apps. Apparently the apps were cumulatively downloaded some 242,000 times just on Google’s Play Store. Apparently, the malware scanned image galleries for keywords to grab phrases for crypto wallets. Using the recovery phrases, they could gain control over a victim’s wallet and steal the money. 

ChatGPT and also Gemini from Google have been hit with copyright suits from content owners that didn’t approve of…or get paid for…the training of the large language models on their material. Now, Meta has joined the party, Bgr.com says a class action has hit Meta over its alleged downloading of 82 TB of pirated books from illegal sources to train its AI. Meta had previously admitted that it torrented tens of millions of pirated books. Some documents from the lawsuits have surfaced on X…including comments from Meta employees involved in the process who mused on the type of illegal data collection that Meta was doing. Like OpenAI and Google, Meta can probably remove the copyrighted material at this point now that the large language models are pretty well trained. It remains to be seen if and how much copyright owners will be compensated. 

Ukraine has had an advanced tech industry for years. Now, a company there has come up with drones that don’t rely on GPS for navigation. Thenextweb.com reports that Sine.Engineering has designed the drones to evade Russia’s electronic warfare, which has made a hash of GPS signals. The new drones are basically based on time-of-flight methods…something that way predates GPS. The drone systems measure the time it takes a signal to get from a transmitter to a target. The calculations are done in a communication module that is smaller than a playing card. The Drone shares signals with a ground stations and two beacons. It can run on multiple bandwidths, too. As with a lot of Ukraine’s weapons systems, they have figured out how to build the drones relatively cheaply too. 

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


ChatGPT No Longer Requires Account; Amazon-A Devices Event on February 26th; NBA Testing Smart Basketball; AT&T’s ‘Why Business is Calling’ Feature

ChatGPT is now making search available without an account, in regions where ChatGPT is available. You won’t have to log in to use ChatGPT’s search engine. Just head over to the website and type in your query. OpenAI says that “The search model is a fine-tuned version of GPT-4o, post-trained using novel synthetic data generation techniques, including distilling outputs from OpenAI o1-preview. ChatGPT search leverages third-party search providers, as well as content provided directly by our partners, to provide the information users are looking for.” The real question is how may people will ditch Google search and start using ChatGPT. Don’t expect Google to take this lying down. The games continue!

Amazon is preparing to bow new hardware. A device event has been scheduled for February 26th in New York City at 10 AM Eastern. In an invite, the online giant didn’t really give any clues about what hardware might be featured. Engadget.com notes that there have been freshened Kindles lately. Perhaps Amazon is ready to unveil the next-gen Alexa and related devices. That would mean new Echo speakers and Echo Buds. Amazon also may reveal what they will be charging for a subscription to the ‘turbocharged’ version of Alexa at the event.

SportIQ, a startup out of Finland, has made a better basketball…a smart basketball! Thenextweb.com says the ball has a sensor in the valve that tracks a player’s shots. Data is first extracted on their form, position, angle, power, and technique. Next, the information is fed to a mobile app for AI analysis. Players then receive direct feedback and advice. The company estimates that regular users improve their shooting accuracy by 12%. This has piqued the interest of the NBA. They have selected SportIQ for Launchpad, the league’s tech incubator. If you are interested in a smart ball to improve your own shooting, they are about $106 on SportIQ’s website. You will need to specify an indoor or outdoor ball.

AT&T is rolling out a new feature for Android customers. Zdnet.com reports that it is called TruContact Branded Call Display. You do have to sign up for it with the carrier. It should help you ensure you don’t miss an important call…and helps you to avoid unwanted calls…what a concept! When an enrolled business places a call, they’ll select the reason. The callers have a range of reasons to pick from including “Customer Service,” “Refill Reminder,” “Appointment Reminder,” “Delivery,” “Patient Callback,” and “Upcoming Appointment.” When your phone rings, you’ll see the business name, number, possibly its logo, and the reason for the call. This sounds actually useful! For now, the feature is only available on Android.

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


Twitterrific Team Launches Tapestry; Apple Launches ‘Invites’ App; Meta May Stop Development of Some AI Systems; 25 Year Old Musk Engineer Has Admin Privileges Over Treasury Computers

The folks that used to make Twitterrific, the Icon Factory, have just launched a new app that pulls social media and web feeds together in one place. 9to5mac.com reports that with Tapestry, you can now see your feeds from Bluesky, Mastodon, RSS, YouTube, and more in a single timeline. It’s all in chronological order, with no algorithm deciding what you should see or not see. Tapestry is free for download at the App Store, but you can also pay to remove ads, unlock custom timelines, mute content, and customize themes. The fees for the upgraded service run $1.99 a month, $19.99 a year, or you can get them for a one-time purchase at $79.99.

Apple has rolled out a new app called ‘Invites,’ which is supposed to let user plan events like birthday parties, graduations, vacations, baby showers, and more. In other words, Apple has invented Evite! Snark aside, according to macrumors.com, the Apple app lets you grab images from your Photos library, set an emoji background, and will automatically add info from the Maps and Weather apps, so that is useful. You can use their AI Image Playground to create original images using text-based descriptors. The app has a built in method that lets the sender track who has responded. To use the app, you will need to be an iCloud Plus subscriber and be running iOS 18 or later on your iPhone. 

Meta, in a new policy document, says it may not release some for its AI systems that fall under what it terms ‘high risk’ or ‘critical risk’. Techcrunch.com says the document is called Frontier AI Framework by Meta. Under their definition of ‘high-risk’ and ‘critical-risk’, they mean systems which are capable of aiding in cybersecurity, chemical, and biological attacks, the difference being that “critical-risk” systems could result in a “catastrophic outcome [that] cannot be mitigated in [a] proposed deployment context.” High-risk systems, by contrast, might make an attack easier to carry out but not as reliably or dependably as a critical risk system. If Meta determines a system is high-risk, the company says it will limit access to the system internally and won’t release it until it implements mitigations to “reduce risk to moderate levels.” If, on the other hand, a system is deemed critical-risk, Meta says it will implement unspecified security protections to prevent the system from being exfiltrated and stop development until the system can be made less dangerous. That’s thoughtful of them, isn’t it. Let’s hope the critical systems don’t get hacked by some bad foreign actor!

If this doesn’t make your hair catch fire, I don’t know what will. A 25 year old whiz-kid engineer put in place by Elon Musk…who is not any kind of government official…despite the White House calling him ‘a special government employee’ today apparently has administrative access to the computer code that directs Social Security payments, tax returns, and other payments owed to Americans. Rawstory.com notes that folks inside the Treasury Department and now Democrats and some Republicans in Congress are freaking out. The engineer, Marko Elez, formerly worked for a couple of Musk companies. The Treasury Secretary nominee assured Congressional Republicans that he only has ‘read only’ privileges. Some insiders at Treasury say the kid has already made some rather substantial changes to the code. It should be noted that the old Treasury computers run on COBOL, which is what I would describe as more squirrelly and brittle than more modern codes, so this kid could inadvertently do irreparable damage the payment system of the United States, that handles some $6 trillion in funds! Are you nervous yet?

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


Open AI Bows 03 Mini; Apple Reports Record Q1; Smart Glasses Help Macular Degeneration Patients; Tire Recycling Startup Gets $ From Costco Co-Founder

After the big shake up in AI with the introduction of DeepSeek out of China, OpenAI has responded with the release of the o3-mini reasoning model. Arstechnica.com reports that the faster, more accurate STEM-focused model will be free to all users. OpenAI crows that o3-mini ‘advances the boundaries of what small models can achieve. The model has been optimized for STEM functions and shows “particular strength in science, math, and coding” despite lower operating costs and latency than its predecessor o1-mini, OpenAI says.OpenAI says testers reported a 39 percent reduction in “major errors” when using o3-mini, compared to o1-mini, and preferred the o3-mini responses 56 percent of the time. Subscribers to OpenAI’s Plus, Team, or Pro tiers will see o3-mini replace o1-mini in the model options starting today.

Apple continues to bring in big bags of cash. According to 9to5mac.com, the Cupertino giant released first quarter earnings (Apple’s quarters don’t follow the calendar’s quarters) with $124.30 billion in revenue. That compares with $119.58 billion for the same quarter a year ago, up 4%. As usual for the last many years, iPhone brought in the bulk of it with $69.14 billion. Services revenue…subscriptions and the like hauled in $26.34 billion. Wearables, Home, and Accessories amounted to $11.75 billion, while Macs generated $8.99 billion and iPads $8.08 billion. 

Having had a couple of family members who had it, I can tell you that macular degeneration sucks. It hits millions of people worldwide, generally folks over 60. The drop outs and vision loss…a lot of it in straight ahead vision….really make things tough. Now, a firm called Soliddd Corp has shown some smart glasses that may be a big help. Bgr.com notes that injections can slow one type of macular degeneration, but there isn’t a cure. Soliddd’s smart glasses fill a gap, though. They use tiny cameras on each temple that capture images of the environment and send them to displays inside the lenses. The displays have 64 micro-lenses, each projecting a miniature image on the healthy peripheral part of the retina. They basically remove the blind spots the disease causes. The glasses were shown at CES, and are expected to be on the market by the end of the year. No pricing has been released as yet. Since they are glasses, and not a medication or an implant, no FDA approval is needed.

A recycling startup called Prism Worldwide which was started by Bob Abramwitz, who did bottled water for Costco, just scored $40 million from Costco’s co-founder Jim Sinegal. Geekwire.com reports that Prism uses patented tech that can turn the used tires into a polymer that can be used in a variety of applications. Right now, only a fraction of the over 300 million used tires in the US are recycled…mainly ground up and used in components of sports fields, asphalt, or back into new tires. They are also burned in power plants…but the dirty secret is that most end up on landfills. Prism’s recycled polymers are being used in rubber car mats, plastic tote containers, racks for shipping goods and other applications. They hope to expand to even more reuse for their polymers from the recycled tires.

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


TSMC Now Making Apple Watch Chips in the US; DOJ Sues 6 Biggest US Landlords-Algorithmic Pricing; Nvidia- Chips Improving Faster Than Moore’s Law; Tesla US Sales Dropped 5% Last Year

As reported here and elsewhere, under the Biden Administration CHIPS Act, a number of chip plants have been built or are being built in the US. Now, bgr.com reports that the TSMC Arizona plant has started making another chip for Apple. Last year, they started making A16 Bionic chips, and now they are producing the S9 chips for the Apple Watch Series 9 and Apple Watch Ultra 2. Right now they are producing about 10,000 a month in the Arizona plant, but expect to up production to 24,000 a month by the next quarter. The 2 chips being made at the TSMC Arizona plant are 4 nanometer, but they plan to bring 3 nanometer tech to the facility, which would enable them to build the A17 Pro, the A18 family, the M3 and M4…and eventually Apple’s M5 chip. The Chips Act has provided subsidies, as right now, it is costing about 50% more to make them here than in Taiwan until they can produce enough volume to be competitive. As Joe Biden might say, this is a big effing deal.

The Department of Justice has sued 6 of the biggest US landlords over ‘algorithmic pricing schemes that harmed renters.’ According to arstechnica.com, one landlord, Cortland Management, has agreed to a settlement “that requires it to cooperate with the government, stop using its competitors’ sensitive data to set rents and stop using the same algorithm as its competitors without a corporate monitor.” The other defendants are Greystar, LivCor, Camden, Cushman, and Willow Bridge. The DOJ had previously sued RealPage, a software maker accused of helping landlords collectively set prices by giving them access to competitors’ nonpublic pricing and occupancy information. The original version of the lawsuit described actions by landlords but did not name any as defendants. “The amended complaint alleges that the six landlords actively participated in a scheme to set their rents using each other’s competitively sensitive information through common pricing algorithms,” the DOJ said. The phrase ‘price fixing’ came up in discussions between the landlords, according to the government’s amended complaint. It will be interesting to see if the change of administration causes the DOJ to back off. Even at that, the suit has been joined by the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee, and Washington. 

Unless you are in the tech business or are a real tech nerd, you may not be all that familiar with Moore’s Law. Moore’s Law was coined by the co-founder of Intel Gordon Moore in 1965, and it basically says that the number of transistors on computer chips would roughly double every year, essentially doubling the performance of those chips. This prediction mostly panned out, and created rapid advances in capability and plummeting costs for decades. Now, TechCrunch.com says that Nividia CEO Jensen Huang claims that the performance of his company’s AI chips is growing faster than the historical rates set by Moore’s Law. He told a group at CES “We can build the architecture, the chip, the system, the libraries, and the algorithms all at the same time. If you do that, then you can move faster than Moore’s Law, because you can innovate across the entire stack.” Huang claims that Nvidia’s AI chips are 1,000 times better than what their chips were 10 years ago…a much faster pace than that laid down in Moore’s Law. He says there is no sign of it slowing down soon, either. 

While AI chips are getting faster at warp speed, that’s not the case with Tesla vehicle sales. Elecctrek.co reports that analyst TroyTeslike on X has been one of the most reliable at predicting Tesla quarterly delivery results. Tesla is easily the most opaque automaker when it comes to this metric. Teslike has crunched numbers and says Tesla’s US sales are down by 5% in 2024 compared to the previous year. They are also down about 10% in Europe, but up 8% in China. The drop in the US is tough, since Tesla worked at goosing sales with discounts and incentives…including price cuts and subsidized financing. Although adding the Cybertruck to the line picked up 30,000 more deliveries, the car maker was still down more than 34,000 units in 2024. Electrek.co noted ‘that it might be time for Tesla to start to consider that Elon Musk’s antics are badly hurting sales in the US.’

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


Reserve a Samsung Galaxy S25 & Get $50 Credit; Swave Set to Introduce True 3D Glasses; Facebook Ditches Fact-Checking; UK Confirms Plan to Criminalize Explicit Deepfakes

The next Samsung Galaxy Unpacked is coming up January 22nd, in San Jose, and we’ll see the new S25 series of smartphones at that time. Although there is lots revealed already, we are now hearing that the S25 Ultra may get the rest of the series’ rounded corner design. If you are super-stoked, and know you are ready to upgrade, androidpolice.com reports that Samsung is once again offering reservations in advance for the S25 phones. You can get $50 in Samsung credits once again for reserving and then going through with your preorder. Of course, we’ll cover the details of the freshened line on the 22nd. 

A startup called Swave, which has been spun off from Belgium’s Imec…one of the world’s foremost research facilities on nanoelectornics, is aiming to release the world’s first true 3D glasses. While there are AR and VR headsets like the Microsoft HoloLens and Apple Vision Pro, you really are only getting a 3D effect on a transparent screen. According to thenextweb.com, the Swave smark glasses have a special display that uses phase-change materials to steer light and ‘sculpt’ 3D images that you can see from all angles. The glasses are claimed to have the world’s smallest pixels, to create high-quality images without straining the eyes. That by itself would be quite a lap forward. The founders’ ultimate goal is to create applications that can pass the visual Turing test, where virtual reality is indistinguishable from real-world images. Swave is also working on Heads Up Displays for vehicles that would create holograms without the need for glasses at all. No timeline has been given as yet. 

In a move unlikely to bolster confidence in what you see on the platform, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has announced that content moderation and other restrictions on speech would be lifted across Facebook, Instagram and other platforms as Donald Trump returns to the White House. Stand by for more ‘alternative facts’ on Facebook. Rawstory.com notes that Zuck said in a video “More specifically, we’re going to get rid of fact-checkers and replace them with Community Notes similar to X, starting in the U.S.” Meta claims there has been too much political bias in the third party fact-checker system. 

The UK is moving to criminalize the creation of sexually explicit deepfake images and videos. TechCrunch.com reports that sharing such deepfakes is already illegal under the Online Safety Act that went live last year. Now, the Brits move on to creation of the sleazy things. Prime Minister Starmer was actually the subject of a deepfake video smear, but that one involved a shady investment scheme. Here in the US, California is going after deepfakes with a new law…although Elon musk’s X is suing to try to keep the law from going into effect. In the UK, Parliamentary Under-Secretary Alex Davies-Jones said in a statement. “This demeaning and disgusting form of chauvinism must not become normalized, and as part of our Plan for Change we are bearing down on violence against women – whatever form it takes.”

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


Samsung Already Working on Answer to iPhone ‘Air;’ OpenAI Nearly Ready to Bow ChatGPT Search; Tesla-Big Issue with Self-Driving Computers; TikTok Begs Supreme Court for Lifeline 

We are really just still hearing word about the reported iPhone ‘Air,’ but now it turns out Samsung is hard at work on their own slim smartphone that may launch a few months after the rollout of the Galaxy S25 phones…which should hit the market late January or early February. Mashable.com reports that Korea’s ET News spotted the new model in a database. The iPhone is reportedly going to have a 6.5 inch or 6.6 inch display with a much thinner profile than present iPhones. Back in 2014, Samsung did make a much thinner phone called the Galaxy Alpha with a 4.7 inch display. At that time, it wasn’t a great seller. Don’t expect either Samsung or Apple to mess with their great-selling flagship phones for these slim models…they will be additions. Neither tech titan wants to harm their golden goose!

ChatGPT search has been open to paid subscribers since this Fall…now, OpenAI says it won’t be long before anyone can use it, with no Plus or Pro membership needed. According to engadget.com, you will still need to make an OpenAI account…hey, for a freebie service, did you think they wouldn’t want some of your info to re-sell?  At any rate, once you’re logged in, and if your query calls for it, ChatGPT will automatically search the web for the latest information to answer your question. You can also force it to search the web, thanks to a handy new icon located right in the prompt bar. OpenAI has also added the option to make ChatGPT Search your browser’s default search engine. 

This is not good…brand new Teslas are having self-driving computer failures. It’s happening to enough cars that it is apparently overwhelming their service. Electrek.co says that the problem seems to come from a low voltage battery short-circuiting the computer during a camera calibration process. Tesla is going to try to push out a temporary software fix, but ultimately may have to just replace the computers. Tesla hasn’t issued a service bulletin and has told service downplay the problem as they race to deliver enough cars at the end of the quarter to avoid their first down year in deliveries in 10 years. 

The clock is ticking for TikTok to sell the app or face a US ban. Now, ByteDance has asked the US Supreme Court to consider blocking the sell-or-ban law passed earlier this year by January 6. This would give American app stores and internet hosting providers just a few weeks to prepare for January 19, the deadline when the U.S. could force them to block TikTok. Techcrunch.com reports that the TikTok CEO also met with president-elect Trump on Monday, asking for help. Trump told reporters he has a ‘warm spot in my heart for TikTok.’ That’s a 180 degree turn from when he was trying to ban it himself with an executive order when he was in office before. 

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