Palestinians living abroad have accused Microsoft of closing their email accounts without warning - cutting them off from crucial online services.
They say it has left them unable to access bank accounts and job offers - and stopped them using Skype, which Microsoft owns, to contact relatives in war-torn Gaza.
Microsoft says they violated its terms of service - a claim they dispute.
"They killed my life online," said Eiad Hametto, who lives in Saudi Arabia.
"Theyâve suspended my email account that Iâve had for nearly 20 years - It was connected to all my work," he told the BBC.
He also said being cut off from Skype was a huge blow for his family.
Technology
Palestinians say Microsoft unfairly closing their accounts
in BBC NewsMultisolving innovations: How digital equity, e-waste, and right-to-repair policies can increase the supply of affordable computers
In short, although policies to improve broadband access are important, policies that help ensure the availability of low-cost devices are also essential.
But advocates of digital equity are not the only constituent groups concerned with the supply and accessibility of computing devices. Environmental and labor rights activists advocate for policies that extend the lifecycle of existing devices, which can help to minimize e-waste and protect the viability of the repair and refurbishing labor markets, respectively. Making computer repair cheaper and bolstering secondhand and refurbishing markets better ensures that low-income consumers can afford to maintain the devices they already own and that they can purchase devices as needed (Fosdick, 2012; Islam et al., 2021). Extending the life of a device through repair is often a more affordable choice than purchasing a brand-new device (Svensson-Hoglund et al., 2021). Furthermore, optimizing the lifecycle of existing devices helps exert market pressures on manufacturer's pricing of new devices, helping to keep down the cost of brand new devices (Islam et al., 2021; Leclerc & Badami, 2020). Thus, policies championed to reduce e-waste and protect the right-to-repair (R2R) can also enhance digital equity.
Policies that have mutually beneficial outcomes for different sectors have been described as multisolving innovations (Dearing & Lapinski, 2020). Multisolving innovations can broaden the coalition of activists in support of a given policy issue and can be strategically framed to appeal to constituent bases that might otherwise be disinterested or even antagonistic (e.g., framing environmental policies around health outcomes to appeal to conservatives) to an issue.
Paramount Is Taking Down Decades Worth of Old TV Clips from the Web
in IndieWireA rep for Paramount told IndieWire: âAs part of broader website changes across Paramount, we have introduced more streamlined versions of our sites, driving fans to Paramount+ to watch their favorite shows.â
For now though, many of these series are not currently available on Paramount+, such as âThe Colbert Reportâ or âThe Nightly Show.â Even âThe Daily Showâ has only two of the most recent seasons, encompassing 2024 and 2023, available, despite decades of the showâs history. âSouth Parkâ clips used to be hosted on Comedy Centralâs website, but the only place to watch full episodes of those are via Max, not Paramount+.
The likely reason for this? Cost cutting. In a town hall this week, Paramountâs âOffice of the CEOâ including co-chiefs George Cheeks, Chris McCarthy, and Brian Robbins, expressed plans to save $500 million in order to stave off profit drops and one day make Paramount+ profitable.
Mitt Romney Reveals Twisted Reason Why Congress Moved to Ban TikTok
in The New RepublicSpeaking at the McCain Institute on Friday alongside Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Romney lamented Israelâs inability to control the flow of information out of and about Gaza, despite its best efforts to restrict press access.
âI mean, typically the Israelis are good at P.R. Whatâs happened here? How have theyâhow have they, and we, been so ineffective at communicating the realities there and our point of view?â Romney asked Blinken, seemingly in disbelief that images of Israelâs indiscriminate bombing of Gaza have prompted outrage in the United States.
Then Romney explained that the TikTok ban overwhelmingly passed both chambers of Congress because of the widespread Palestinian advocacy on the app.
âSome wonder why there was such overwhelming support for us to shut down potentially TikTok or other entities of that nature. If you look at the postings on TikTok and the number of mentions of Palestinians relative to other social media sites, itâs overwhelmingly so among TikTok broadcasts. So Iâd note thatâs of real interest, and the President will get the chance to make action in that regard,â Romney said.
Lynn Conway, microchip pioneer and trans rights advocate, dies at 86
in The Washington PostIn part, Ms. Conway acknowledged, she had avoided the spotlight intentionally, living in âstealth modeâ for fear that her gender identity would wreck her career. It had already cost her her job once, when she was fired from IBM in 1968 after confiding to managers that she was planning to undergo gender-confirmation surgery, a then-novel procedure that she had to travel to Mexico to receive.
âIn many jurisdictions, I could have been arrested and charged as a sex offender â or, worse yet, institutionalized and forced to undergo electroshock therapy in a mental hospital,â she wrote in a 2013 essay for HuffPost.
âEvading those fates, I completed my transition and began building a career in a secret new identity, starting at the bottom of the ladder as a contract programmer. Even then, any âoutingâ could have led to media exposure, and Iâd have become unemployable, out on the streets for good.â
âI covered my past for over 30 years,â she added, âalways looking over my shoulder, as if a foreign spy in my own country.â
By 2000, she had decided to begin telling her story â including discussing her early research contributions at IBM, which had been lost to history because they were credited under her long-discarded birth name. She started speaking to reporters, including for a nearly 8,000-word cover story in the Los Angeles Times Magazine, and created a personal website where she aimed to offer âinformation, encouragement and hopeâ to others who had transitioned or were in the process of doing so.
BASIC turns 60: Why simplicity was this programming language's blessing and its curse
And you try telling the kids of today thatâŠ
That first version only had 14 commands. They included: PRINT, IF and THEN, and, the soon-to-be infamous GOTO. Thanks to GOTO, the famous Dutch computer scientist Edsger Dijkstra said, "It is practically impossible to teach good programming to students that have had a prior exposure to BASIC: As potential programmers, they are mentally mutilated beyond hope of regeneration."
With GOTO, it was all too easy for would-be programmers to write what would become known as spaghetti code -- a tangled mess of source code that was almost impossible to understand or debug. Yes, BASIC was easy to write simple programs in, but it was awful for writing anything complex.
Still, the keyword was "easy." So, early developers kept using BASIC and porting it to one computer after another.
Then, as the years rolled by, another paradigm for computing power emerged: The PC. In 1975, instead of sharing computers, you could have one of your very own with all the power of a 2MHz Intel 8080 processor.
Two young men, Paul Allen, and Bill Gates, proposed to the maker of the first PC, Ed Roberts' Altair 8800, that they port BASIC to his computer. He agreed, and shortly thereafter, they founded Micro-Soft. You know it better as Microsoft.
Yes, that's right. Without BASIC, you're not running Windows today. At about the same time, Steve Wozniak was working on porting BASIC to the first Apple computer, the Apple I. BASIC was essential for Apple's early growth as well.
BASIC also became a staple in home computers like the Atari 400, Commodore 64, and TRS-80. It was featured prominently in early computer magazines, where readers could find and then type in BASIC code all by themselves. Or, you could pay real money and get a cassette tape with such popular games as Lunar Lander.
Then, when IBM came out with its first PC, Gates and Allen were ready to take advantage of this new platform. As IBM President of Entry Systems, Don Estridge, said, "Microsoft BASIC had hundreds of thousands of users around the world. How are you going to argue with that?"
Elon Musk reveals Tesla software-locked cheapest Model Y, offers 40-60 more miles of range
in ElectrekOver the years, Tesla has periodically offered cheaper vehicles with shorter ranges, and rather than building a new vehicle with a smaller battery pack, the automaker has decided to instead use the same battery packs capable of more range and software-locked the range.
Yesterday, we reported that Tesla stopped taking orders for the cheapest version of Model Y, the Standard Range RWD with 260 miles of range. Instead, Tesla started offering a new Long Range RWD with 320 miles of range.
Separately, CEO Elon Musk revealed that the previous Model Y Standard Range RWD was a software-locked vehicle â something that was suspected but never confirmed.
The CEO announced that Tesla plans to unlock the rest of the battery packs for an additional 40 to 60 miles of range:
'The â260 mileâ range Model Yâs built over the past several months actually have more range that can be unlocked for $1500 to $2000 (gains 40 to 60 miles of range), depending on which battery cells you have.'
Musk said that Tesla is currently âworking through regulatory approvalsâ to enable thisâ for this upgrade offer.
Is social media destroying kids mental health?
for YouTubeLately, a moral panic has been brewing. People in the media, government, and across the internet are declaring that children are suffering an unprecedented mental health crisis and that smartphones and social media are to blame. But is this even true?
I talked to danah boyd, the top researcher on kids and social media use, about some of the problems that young people today are facing, why quick fixes like banning social media apps are never the answer, and what we can actually do to help younger generations.
Struggling with a Moral Panic Once Again
I have to admit that itâs breaking my heart to watch a new generation of anxious parents think that they can address the struggles their kids are facing by eliminating technology from kidsâ lives. Iâve been banging my head against this wall for almost 20 years, not because I love technology but because I care so deeply about vulnerable youth. And about their mental health. And boy oh boy do I loathe moral panics. I realize theyâre politically productive, but they cause so much harm and distraction.
I wish there was a panacea to the mental health epidemic we are seeing. I wish I could believe that eliminating tech would make everything hunky dory. (I wish I could believe many things that are empirically not true. Like that there is no climate crisis.) Sadly, I know that what young people are facing is ecological. As a researcher, I know that young peopleâs relationship with tech is so much more complicated than pundits wish to suggest. I also know that the hardest part of being a parent is helping a child develop a range of social, emotional, and cognitive capacities so that they can be independent. And I know that excluding them from public life or telling them that they should be blocked from what adults values because their brains arenât formed yet is a type of coddling that is outright destructive. And it backfires every time.
Iâm also sick to my stomach listening to people talk about a âgender contagionâ as if every aspect of how we present ourselves in this world isnât socially constructed. (Never forget that pink was once the ultimate sign of masculinity.) Young people are trying to understand their place in this world. Of course theyâre exploring. And I want my children to live in a world where exploration is celebrated rather than admonished. The mental health toll of forcing everyone to assimilate to binaries is brutal. I paid that price; I donât want my kids to as well.
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Please please please center young people rather than tech. They need our help. Technology mirrors and magnifies the good, bad, and ugly. Itâs what makes the struggles young people are facing visible. But it is not the media effects causal force that people are pretending it is.
Bubble Trouble
Modern AI models are trained by feeding them "publicly-available" text from the internet, scraped from billions of websites (everything from Wikipedia to Tumblr, to Reddit), which the model then uses to discern patterns and, in turn, answer questions based on the probability of an answer being correct.
Theoretically, the more training data that these models receive, the more accurate their responses will be, or at least that's what the major AI companies would have you believe. Yet AI researcher Pablo Villalobos told the Journal that he believes that GPT-5 (OpenAI's next model) will require at least five times the training data of GPT-4. In layman's terms, these machines require tons of information to discern what the "right" answer to a prompt is, and "rightness" can only be derived from seeing lots of examples of what "right" looks like.
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In essence, the AI boom requires more high-quality data than currently exists to progress past the point we're currently at, which is one where the outputs of generative AI are deeply unreliable. The amount of data it needs is several multitudes more than currently exists at a time when algorithms are happily-promoting and encouraging AI-generated slop, and thousands of human journalists have lost their jobs, with others being forced to create generic search-engine-optimized slop. One (very) funny idea posed by the Journal's piece is that AI companies are creating their own "synthetic" data to train their models, a "computer-science version of inbreeding" that Jathan Sadowski calls Habsburg AI.