Study: If you pay the average person at least $1,000, they’ll #DeleteFacebook
The latest privacy red flags to emerge out of Facebook — thanks this time to a bombshell New York Times report that uncovered all kinds of hairbrained moves, like Facebook allowing outside companies to get a peek at users’ private messages — is adding more fuel to the fire. The fire in this case being the informal #DeleteFacebook movement, which tends to pick up a head of steam whenever new privacy-related revelations like these arise.
It sometimes spurs big names to announce their own departures from using the service, as former tech journalist Walt Mossberg did in recent days, which spurs even more people to get in on the act. Naturally, that led some researchers to ponder — could a monetary incentive actually spur people to give up Facebook? And if so, how much would it take? Well, folks, we have an answer.
$1,000 appears to be the magic number.
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Study: If you pay the average person at least $1,000, they’ll #DeleteFacebook originally appeared on BGR.com on Thu, 20 Dec 2018 at 00:06:44 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Netflix claims it never accessed private messages from Facebook users
It’s been something of a wild, if not downright controversial, year for Facebook. While the company was simply content to remain a social networking behemoth far removed from controversy, the company was thrust into the spotlight this year once details surrounding the Cambridge Analytica scandal emerged. Since then, Facebook has continuously found itself embroiled in one privacy-related controversy after another.
The latest chapter in Facebook’s fall from grace came via a New York Times expose which alleges that Facebook gave third-party tech giants like Amazon, Google, and Netflix far more access to user data than anyone had previously imagined. In one particularly outrageous claim, the Times notes that companies like Netflix were given the ability to read private messages from Facebook users.
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Netflix claims it never accessed private messages from Facebook users originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 23:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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SpaceX shows off Crew Dragon’s integrated solar panels for the first time
SpaceX is already leading the charge in commercialized spaceflight with a packed schedule of launches and partnerships with countless space agencies and private companies, but its deal with NASA is easily one of its most important.
SpaceX has been tasked with developing a crewed launch vehicle that is capable of ferrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station, and it’s already behind schedule. The Crew Dragon capsule is still being worked on, but the U.S. government is eager to see progress. To that end, Vice President Mike Pence took a tour of SpaceX’s launch facilities and got an up-close-and-personal look at a finished Crew Dragon, prompting SpaceX to release some gorgeous new photos of the vehicle to the public.
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SpaceX shows off Crew Dragon’s integrated solar panels for the first time originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 22:04:55 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Almost 130,000 people asked Alexa to explain what ‘Fortnite’ is in 2018
It’s that time of year. The time of year when the world falls in love, like the song goes, and when the tech giants start rolling out the year-end lists comprised of all the weird, oddball things we all searched and asked for this year.
This leads to interesting revelations, like the fact that ‘World Cup’ was the most-searched phrase via Google Search worldwide this year, as we told you a few days ago. And now it’s time to take a peek at the extremely weird questions many of you were asking Amazon’s digital assistant Alexa this year.
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Almost 130,000 people asked Alexa to explain what ‘Fortnite’ is in 2018 originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 21:03:13 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Scientists added rabbit DNA to a houseplant, and now it’s an air purifier
Plants are very good at producing oxygen that we all need in order to breath, but what about clearing the air of harmful chemicals? Past research has revealed that plants do a bit of housekeeping when it comes to cleaning the air of certain compounds but researchers wondered if they could help boost that function with a genetic tweak.
In new research published in Environmental Science & Technology, researchers explain how they were able to give a common house plant more power to clean the air around it, and it’s all thanks to DNA from a mammal.
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Scientists added rabbit DNA to a houseplant, and now it’s an air purifier originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 20:39:23 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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This site automatically removes the background of any image in 5 seconds flat
Whether you’re a full-time editor or a complete amateur, one of the most frustrating, tedious parts of editing photos is removing the background. Even if you have professional software like Photoshop or Corel PaintShop Pro, cutting out a subject can be a painstaking process, which is why you’re going to want to bookmark Remove.bg.
As the name suggests, Remove.bg is a free online service that uses artificial intelligence to detect the foreground of a photo and separate it from the background. All you have to do is upload a photo, wait a few seconds, and the site will produce a new version of the original image without the background. You don’t even have to download the image to your device first — you can just input the URL instead, and the result is the same.
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This site automatically removes the background of any image in 5 seconds flat originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 20:08:57 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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NASA is reconstructing the InSight lander site here on Earth
NASA’s InSight lander touched down on Mars a few weeks ago and the team of engineers and scientists handling the robot are in the midst of preparing for its very first science activity on the planet. In a new blog post, NASA explains exactly how it tests the maneuvers that InSight will perform before actually sending those commands to Mars.
One of the coolest tools NASA has constructed in preparation for the mission is a full scale replica of the InSight’s landing sight, complete with a fully functional model of the robot itself. Before any commands are issued to the InSight lander those same commands are sent to the model in order to see how things will play out.
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NASA is reconstructing the InSight lander site here on Earth originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 19:37:05 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Why is Apple allowing iPad Pros to leave the factory with a slight bend?
A number of iPad Pro owners have taken to social media as well to MacRumors forums to complain about a physical flaw they’ve seen develop with their iPad Pros. It’s a small bend — not a dramatic one, by any means, but enough to let the average user see it and realize it’s not right.
So MacRumors went ahead and wrote up a post this afternoon with straightforward headline, after getting confirmation from Apple that these bends are indeed a thing but also nothing to worry because Apple doesn’t consider them a defect. “Apple Says Some 2018 iPad Pros Ship Bent,” MacRumors announced, “But It’s Normal and Not a Defect.” Which, of course, did not go over well with commenters. To put it mildly.
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Why is Apple allowing iPad Pros to leave the factory with a slight bend? originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 19:14:13 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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New leak teases exciting new camera features for the Galaxy S10
The Galaxy S10 won’t launch for another two months if recent reports are to be believed, and Samsung will not reveal any details about the flagship phone until the comapny’s next Unpacked press conference.
But we already know plenty of things about the handset thanks to an increasing number of leaks, as well as Samsung’s various moves. The company already unveiled smartphone features we expect to see on the Galaxy S10 on new mid-range devices. On top of that, Samsung filed new trademarks that tease exciting Galaxy S10 features.
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New leak teases exciting new camera features for the Galaxy S10 originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 19:06:25 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Consumer advocates file FTC complaint over Google Play Store marketing to kids
Apps available for download in Google’s Play Store marketplace frequently expose kids to content that’s inappropriate and even trick some youngsters into unwittingly making in-app purchases. That’s according to a complaint that a collection of consumer and privacy advocates has filed today with the FTC.
The complaint calls for the FTC to “investigate whether Google is misrepresenting to parents that the apps in the Family section of the Play Store are child-appropriate when they are not, in violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act.”
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Consumer advocates file FTC complaint over Google Play Store marketing to kids originally appeared on BGR.com on Wed, 19 Dec 2018 at 18:35:09 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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