Rabu, 19 Juni 2019

Google Says It Didn't Scrape Data from Genius - Thurrott.com

Two days after the Genius media website accused Google of scraping its song lyric data, the online giant issued a simple retort: We didn’t do it.

“We do not crawl or scrape websites to source [song] lyrics,” Google’s Satyajeet Salgar explains. “The lyrics that you see in information boxes on Search come directly from lyrics content providers, and they are updated automatically as we receive new lyrics and corrections on a regular basis.”

In other words, it was one of Google’s lyric content providers that scraped Genius’s lyrics. Not Google.

“We’ve asked our lyrics partners to investigate the issue to ensure that they’re following industry best practices in their approach,” he continues. “We always strive to uphold high standards of conduct for ourselves and from the partners we work with.”

Google hasn’t named the partner that it suspects of scraping data from Genius.

This incident is an interesting example of the knee-jerk reaction that often occurs in the wake of news stories involving Big Tech. As our own Brad Sams noted, “Google wields a significant amount of power over what and how users see content,” and this alleged lyrics scraping represented “one more piece of evidence of the company potentially abusing its position in the marketplace.”

The assumption by many, of course, was that Google was guilty. But it seems now that it was a Google partner, and not Google, that stole Genius’ data without attribution.

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https://www.thurrott.com/google/208733/google-says-it-didnt-scrape-data-from-genius

2019-06-19 12:13:19Z
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The Morning After: Facebook is launching its own cryptocurrency - Engadget

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Happy Wednesday to you. If you're a Firefox user, update your browser. We'll wait. If you're into crypto, read up on Facebook's own take on digital currency (and explain it to me if you could). If you're into Quidditch and hippogryphs, then get hyped for the Harry Potter take on Pokémon Go' -- it lands on Friday. In short, it's a choose-your-own Morning After to brighten up your hump day.


And the Calibra wallet launches in 2020.
Facebook's Libra currency gets backing from MasterCard, Visa, PayPal and more

Facebook's Calibra wallet will use a brand new cryptocurrency, Libra. The cryptocurrency will be governed by the Libra Association -- a purpose-built, independent non-profit headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland. As of today, the Libra Association has 28 co-founders, including MasterCard, PayPal, Visa, eBay, Spotify, Uber, Lyft, Vodafone Group, Andreessen Horowitz, and of course, Facebook.

Eventually, Facebook said, it wants to offer more services for people and businesses, including the ability to easily pay bills, buy a cup of coffee with the scan of a code and use it to ride public transit without the need for cash or a physical pass. House Financial Services Committee Chairwoman Maxine Waters has issued a statement calling on Facebook to pause development of Libra until Congress and regulatory bodies have had a chance to review it.


By 'right now' we mean five minutes ago.
You should update Firefox right now to fix a critical bug

If you have Firefox on your computer, you should update it right now. Mozilla has released security updates Firefox 67.0.3 and Firefox ESR 60.7.1 to fix a critical bug, which it says hackers are actively exploiting to take control of vulnerable systems.


The AR game will first become available in the US and the UK.

'Harry Potter: Wizards Unite' AR game launches on June 21st

Looking to replicate the major (and cultural phenomenon) of Pokémon Go, Niantic's Harry Potter game is almost here. Harry Potter fans in Australia and New Zealand had the chance to take the beta version of the game for a spin when Niantic chose the regions as its testing grounds back in May, but the game will only come out in the US and the UK on Friday, marking the beginning of a worldwide rollout.


Uh-oh.
Google Calendar crashed yesterday

Visitors to Google Calendar on desktop began receiving a 404 error around 10AM ET. By the time things were restored in the afternoon we'd pretty much given up on keeping our plans for the day organized and resolved to come back strong on Wednesday -- how'd you do?


Free to play, until Nintendo takes it down.
Fan-made 'Mario Royale' pits you against 74 speedrunners

Battle Royale everywhere. A programmer and video game streamer going by the handle Inferbro has hacked together a web-based multiplayer version of Super Mario Bros. that challenges up to 75 people to finish the first stage of the classic game as quickly as possible. The fittingly named Mario Royale is available to play online in your favorite browser right now, but you better get a few runs in while you can -- Nintendo will probably squash it very soon.


Like an El Cami-Nikolai.
YouTuber known for 'shitty robots' turns Tesla Model 3 into pickup truck

YouTuber and inventor Simone Giertz needed a truck to carry materials for her creations, but didn't want a gas-guzzling pickup. So the 28-year-old robotics enthusiast decided to buy herself a brand spanking new Tesla Model 3, carve out the back seat and the trunk, and perform a bunch of other mods to the $35,000 vehicle that will make some of the Musk faithful wince. Fortunately, she documented the entire messy process in a 31-minute YouTube video. Look on with horror or admiration. And if you're not into hacking apart your beloved ride, you can always play a game on the dash screen.

But wait, there's more...


The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't Subscribe.

Craving even more? Like us on Facebook or Follow us on Twitter.

Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.

All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/19/the-morning-after-facebook-libra-currency-launch/

2019-06-19 10:56:53Z
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Google's new Chrome extension makes it easy to report suspicious sites - Engadget

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raybon009 via Getty Images

Google's Safe Browsing feature will only work if it knows what websites to protect you against, which is why the tech giant is encouraging users to report suspicious sites. The company has launched a new Chrome extension called Suspicious Site Reporter, which gives you a quick way to let Google know if a website looks, well, suspicious. It adds a flag right next to your other extensions that turns orange if it finds anything dubious about the page you're visiting.

Sometimes the things it considers questionable are as trivial as the website not belonging in the top 5,000. But if it does find something truly unsavory, you can easily notify Google by clicking the Send Report button, which will send the company that website's URL, a screenshot of it and all the site's HTML. In the tech giant's announcement, it said the extension is for "power users" -- presumably, that means system administrators -- but we were able to access it and send a report just fine.

Google

In addition, Google is rolling out a new feature for Chrome 75 that can prevent you from loading deceptive websites. If you attempt to load go0gle.com instead of google.com, for instance, the browser will issue a full page warning. It will ask if the legit website is the one you actually want to go to, because you don't usually visit the one you're loading.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/19/google-chrome-suspicious-site-reporter/

2019-06-19 07:29:20Z
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Google's new Chrome extension makes it easy to report suspicious sites - Engadget

Sponsored Links

raybon009 via Getty Images

Google's Safe Browsing feature will only work if it knows what websites to protect you against, which is why the tech giant is encouraging users to report suspicious sites. The company has launched a new Chrome extension called Suspicious Site Reporter, which gives you a quick way to let Google know if a website looks, well, suspicious. It adds a flag right next to your other extensions that turns orange if it finds anything dubious about the page you're visiting.

Sometimes the things it considers questionable are as trivial as the website not belonging in the top 5,000. But if it does find something truly unsavory, you can easily notify Google by clicking the Send Report button, which will send the company that website's URL, a screenshot of it and all the site's HTML. In the tech giant's announcement, it said the extension is for "power users" -- presumably, that means system administrators -- but we were able to access it and send a report just fine.

Google

In addition, Google is rolling out a new feature for Chrome 75 that can prevent you from loading deceptive websites. If you attempt to load go0gle.com instead of google.com, for instance, the browser will issue a full page warning. It will ask if the legit website is the one you actually want to go to, because you don't usually visit the one you're loading.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/19/google-chrome-suspicious-site-reporter/

2019-06-19 07:03:56Z
52780316903472

Google's new Chrome extension makes it easy to report suspicious sites - Engadget

Sponsored Links

raybon009 via Getty Images

Google's Safe Browsing feature will only work if it knows what websites to protect you against, which is why the tech giant is encouraging users to report suspicious sites. The company has launched a new Chrome extension called Suspicious Site Reporter, which gives you a quick way to let Google know if a website looks, well, suspicious. It adds a flag right next to your other extensions that turns orange if it finds anything dubious about the page you're visiting.

Sometimes the things it considers questionable are as trivial as the website not belonging in the top 5,000. But if it does find something truly unsavory, you can easily notify Google by clicking the Send Report button, which will send the company that website's URL, a screenshot of it and all the site's HTML. In the tech giant's announcement, it said the extension is for "power users" -- presumably, that means system administrators -- but we were able to access it and send a report just fine.

Google

In addition, Google is rolling out a new feature for Chrome 75 that can prevent you from loading deceptive websites. If you attempt to load go0gle.com instead of google.com, for instance, the browser will issue a full page warning. It will ask if the legit website is the one you actually want to go to, because you don't usually visit the one you're loading.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/19/google-chrome-suspicious-site-reporter/

2019-06-19 07:03:24Z
52780316903472

Google's new Chrome extension makes it easy to report suspicious sites - Engadget

Sponsored Links

raybon009 via Getty Images

Google's Safe Browsing feature will only work if it knows what websites to protect you against, which is why the tech giant is encouraging users to report suspicious sites. The company has launched a new Chrome extension called Suspicious Site Reporter, which gives you a quick way to let Google know if a website looks, well, suspicious. It adds a flag right next to your other extensions that turns orange if it finds anything dubious about the page you're visiting.

Sometimes the things it considers questionable are as trivial as the website not belonging in the top 5,000. But if it does find something truly unsavory, you can easily notify Google by clicking the Send Report button, which will send the company that website's URL, a screenshot of it and all the site's HTML. In the tech giant's announcement, it said the extension is for "power users" -- presumably, that means system administrators -- but we were able to access it and send a report just fine.

Google

In addition, Google is rolling out a new feature for Chrome 75 that can prevent you from loading deceptive websites. If you attempt to load go0gle.com instead of google.com, for instance, the browser will issue a full page warning. It will ask if the legit website is the one you actually want to go to, because you don't usually visit the one you're loading.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/19/google-chrome-suspicious-site-reporter/

2019-06-19 06:32:57Z
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Samsung reportedly holding Galaxy Note 10 launch event in NYC on August 7th - 9to5Google

As the second half of the year approaches, there are quite a few smartphones to look forward to. Tonight, we’re learning that Samsung is reportedly planning for an August 7th launch event for the Galaxy Note 10 in a familiar location.

The best gifts for Android users

According to CNET, Samsung is planning to launch the Galaxy Note 10 at an event on August 7th. That puts it in the same week as last year’s Galaxy Note 9 launch, and apparently, that’s not all the event will share in common. Samsung will reportedly be returning to the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York.

Samsung will show off its Galaxy Note 10 during a flashy Unpacked event on Aug. 7 at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, according to people familiar with the company’s plans. The venue is the same place the South Korean technology giant launched the Note 9 last year.

This wouldn’t be the first time Samsung re-used a venue for a smartphone launch, but it is notable after the Galaxy S10 launch moved things to San Francisco earlier this year.

So far, Galaxy Note 10 rumors have revealed a handful of details ahead of the launch event. The cameras have been shown off, as well as rumors about the headphone jack being dropped. Recent renders have also given us a good idea of what Samsung’s next phablet flagship will look like.

More on Samsung Galaxy Note 10:


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https://9to5google.com/2019/06/18/note-10-launch-event-report/

2019-06-19 03:44:00Z
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