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TikTok Is Now Collecting Even More Data About Its Users

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: When TikTok users in the U.S. opened the app today, they were greeted with a pop-up asking them to agree to the social media platform's new terms of service and privacy policy before they could resume scrolling. These changes are part of TikTok's transition to new ownership. In order to continue operating in the U.S., TikTok was compelled by the U.S. government to transition from Chinese control to a new, American-majority corporate entity. Called TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC, the new entity is made up of a group of investors that includes the software company Oracle. It's easy to tap "agree" and keep on scrolling through videos on TikTok, so users might not fully understand the extent of changes they are agreeing to with this pop-up. Now that it's under U.S.-based ownership, TikTok potentially collects more detailed information about its users, including precise location data. Here are the three biggest changes to TikTok's privacy policy that users should know about. TikTok's change in location tracking is one of the most notable updates in this new privacy policy. Before this update, the app did not collect the precise, GPS-derived location data of U.S. users. Now, if you give TikTok permission to use your phone's location services, then the app may collect granular information about your exact whereabouts. Similar kinds of precise location data is also tracked by other social media apps, like Instagram and X. [...] Rather than an adjustment, TikTok's policy on AI interactions adds a new topic to the privacy policy document. Now, users' interactions with any of TikTok's AI tools explicitly fall under data that the service may collect and store. This includes any prompts as well as the AI-generated outputs. The metadata attached to your interactions with AI tools may also be automatically logged. [...] This change to TikTok's privacy policy may not be as immediately noticeable to users, but it will likely have an impact on the types of ads you see outside of TikTok. So, rather than just using your collected data to target you while using the app, TikTok may now further leverage that info to serve you more relevant ads wherever you go online. As part of this advertising change, TikTok also now explicitly mentions publishers as one kind of partner the platform works with to get new data.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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psyq
6 days ago
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When China is the lesser evil...
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InShaneee
6 days ago
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Chicago, IL
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LinkedIn verwijderde onze journalistieke video

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Het zakelijke socialmediaplatform LinkedIn heeft een video van De Correspondent zonder enige waarschuwing verwijderd van ons account. Ook volgers die de video wilden delen, melden dat hun posts worden verwijderd. In de video noemt hoofdredacteur Rob Wijnberg op basis van feiten de Amerikaanse president Donald Trump het grootste gevaar voor de wereld sinds Adolf Hitler. 


Het maken van dit verhaal kost tijd en geld. Steun De Correspondent en maak meer verhalen mogelijk voorbij de waan van de dag. Dankzij onze leden kunnen wij verhalen blijven maken voor zoveel mogelijk mensen. Word ook lid!

Zakelijk lid worden is ook mogelijk, dit kan al vanaf 5 medewerkers. Steun ons en vraag direct een zakelijk lidmaatschap aan.

Wil je eerst kennismaken met onze verhalen? Schrijf je dan in voor de proefmail en ontvang een selectie van onze beste verhalen in je inbox.

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psyq
7 days ago
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Switzerland
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EU Parliament Calls For Detachment From US Tech Giants

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The European Parliament is calling on the European Commission to reduce dependence on U.S. tech giants by prioritizing EU-based cloud, AI, and open-source infrastructure. The report frames "European Tech First," public procurement reform, and Public Money, Public Code as necessary self-defense against growing U.S. control over critical digital infrastructure. Heise reports: In terms of content, the report focuses on a strategic reorientation of public procurement and infrastructure. The compromise line adopted stipulates that member states can favor European tech providers in strategic sectors to systematically strengthen the technological capacity of the Community. The Greens even called for a stricter regulation here, where the use of products "Made in EU" should become the rule and exceptions would have to be explicitly justified. They also pushed for a definition for cloud infrastructure that provides for full EU jurisdiction without dependencies on third countries. With the decision, the MEPs want to lay the foundation for a European digital public infrastructure based on open standards and interoperability. The principle of Public Money, Public Code is anchored as a strategic foundation to reduce dependence on individual providers. Software specifically developed for administration with tax money should therefore be made available to everyone under free licenses. For financing, the Parliament relies on the expansion of public-private investments. A "European Sovereign Tech Fund" endowed with ten billion euros was discussed beforehand, for example, to specifically build strategic infrastructures that the market does not provide on its own. The shadow rapporteur for the Greens, Alexandra Geese, sees Europe ready to take control of its digital future with the vote. As long as European data is held by US providers subject to laws such as the Cloud Act, security in Europe is not guaranteed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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psyq
7 days ago
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I've been saying these things for 15, 20 years so it's nice it's finally moving in the right direction.
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Techlords als Musk en Bezos beloven technologische verlossing, maar eerst moet de aarde kapot

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De machtige techmiljardairs zijn in de ban van de absurdste toekomstvisioenen, geïnspireerd op oude sciencefiction. Wat blijft er over als je hun theorieën afpelt, vroeg astrofysicus Adam Becker zich af. Zijn conclusie: vooral de sloop van mens en planeet.

Ik wist dat veel techmiljardairs – Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Peter Thiel, dat soort mannen – er even rare als problematische wereldbeelden op nahouden. De een wil Mars koloniseren, de ander wil onsterfelijkheid – al eeuwen typische dromen voor de superrijken. Maar wat ik niet wist, is dat dit pas het begin is van hun fantasieën.


Het maken van dit verhaal kost tijd en geld. Steun De Correspondent en maak meer verhalen mogelijk voorbij de waan van de dag. Dankzij onze leden kunnen wij verhalen blijven maken voor zoveel mogelijk mensen. Word ook lid!

Zakelijk lid worden is ook mogelijk, dit kan al vanaf 5 medewerkers. Steun ons en vraag direct een zakelijk lidmaatschap aan.

Wil je eerst kennismaken met onze verhalen? Schrijf je dan in voor de proefmail en ontvang een selectie van onze beste verhalen in je inbox.

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psyq
46 days ago
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I didn't realize these techbros really meant it with the singularity/AGI bullshit.
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The Message

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An urgent message is sent by delivery raven (a la Game of Thrones). The royal recipient is concerned. Below cursive script, crude bird scrawl has been added to the scroll: "feed food gud raven"

The post The Message appeared first on The Perry Bible Fellowship.

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psyq
64 days ago
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HP and Dell Disable HEVC Support Built Into Their Laptops' CPUs

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An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Some Dell and HP laptop owners have been befuddled by their machines' inability to play HEVC/H.265 content in web browsers, despite their machines' processors having integrated decoding support. Laptops with sixth-generation Intel Core and later processors have built-in hardware support for HEVC decoding and encoding. AMD has made laptop chips supporting the codec since 2015. However, both Dell and HP have disabled this feature on some of their popular business notebooks. HP discloses this in the data sheets for its affected laptops, which include the HP ProBook 460 G11 [PDF], ProBook 465 G11 [PDF], and EliteBook 665 G11 [PDF]. "Hardware acceleration for CODEC H.265/HEVC (High Efficiency Video Coding) is disabled on this platform," the note reads. Despite this notice, it can still be jarring to see a modern laptop's web browser eternally load videos that play easily in media players. HP and Dell didn't explain why the companies disabled HEVC hardware decoding on their laptops' processors. A statement from an HP spokesperson said: "In 2024, HP disabled the HEVC (H.265) codec hardware on select devices, including the 600 Series G11, 400 Series G11, and 200 Series G9 products. Customers requiring the ability to encode or decode HEVC content on one of the impacted models can utilize licensed third-party software solutions that include HEVC support. Check with your preferred video player for HEVC software support." Dell's media relations team shared a similar statement: "HEVC video playback is available on Dell's premium systems and in select standard models equipped with hardware or software, such as integrated 4K displays, discrete graphics cards, Dolby Vision, or Cyberlink BluRay software. On other standard and base systems, HEVC playback is not included, but users can access HEVC content by purchasing an affordable third-party app from the Microsoft Store. For the best experience with high-resolution content, customers are encouraged to select systems designed for 4K or high-performance needs."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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psyq
69 days ago
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What a complete bitch move. It's not that I'd buy from a U.S. manufacturer anyway, but this surely won't do much to make them attractive.
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kazriko
69 days ago
Most likely it's licensing costs, It cost them an extra $0.24 per system that ships with HEVC to license the standard. Sony had a better solution for this sort of thing though, when they had a codec that cost an extra licensing fee, they made it so it was disabled by default then you could go online to activate it, so they only got charged if someone actually wanted to use it.
kazriko
69 days ago
Ohh, the comments say $4. LTT Wan show said 0.24, so maybe it's because they lost a lawsuit that they're having to pay more? That said, I personally only buy Valve and Framework hardware these days. And I consider System76 as an alternative.
psyq
69 days ago
Ah, thanks, I only read the Slashdot piece and it had " HP and Dell didn't explain why the companies disabled HEVC hardware decoding on their laptops' processors." so I thought it was just a sad move on their part. The other side of this is that AV1 has not had as much success getting into silicon precisely *because* MPEG LA put so much pressure on everyone :(
InShaneee
70 days ago
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Chicago, IL
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