Google’s driverless car prototypes are now cruising the streets of Mountain View

Google’s self-driving car prototypes are now cruising themselves along the streets of Mountain View, California, just as the company promised. Although each one of the prototypes are designed to work without steering wheels and pedals, during this phase of the testing process Google has put safety drivers onboard each one with a removable steering wheel, accelerator pedal and brake pedal in case something goes awry.
Google explains:
The prototypes’ speed is capped at a neighborhood-friendly 25mph, and they’ll drive using the same software that our existing Lexus vehicles use—the same fleet that has self-driven over 1 million miles since we started the project.
As the cars have now (almost) fully hit the road, Google has created a contact page urging folks in Mountain View to give feedback based on their experiences with the cars.
Google recently announced that it would begin to publicly report all accidents in which its self-driving cars were involved. As of the beginning of June, there have been a total of 10 accidents with the driverless vehicles, though the search giant claims that none were actually the car’s fault.
Troubleshoot Issues on Apple Watch by Backing Up and Restoring [iOS Blog]
No matter how much research and testing goes into ensuring the Apple Watch runs smoothly with no problems, there’s always a chance that you will have to perform a few IT-style actions in order to fix a minor issue with your device.
The best way to troubleshoot a problem on Apple Watch is to backup the data and restore it. We’ve got a guide for backing up your Apple Watch to your iPhone and then restoring data from a backup.
Backups include most data collection, like system settings, language, Mail, Calendar, Stocks, app-specific data, and health and fitness data (if you are using iCloud or an encrypted iTunes backup).
Backups do not include calibration data, synced playlists, credit and debit cards used for Apple Pay, and your Apple Watch passcode
Backup iPhone First
Before starting the process on your Apple Watch, it is a good idea to sync the data on your iPhone to iCloud or iTunes. When you do, any previously backed up Apple Watch data is included.
Unpair Apple Watch
The only way to force a backup on Apple Watch is to unpair it from your iPhone. Unfortunately, this is a time consuming process.
Read more 
Amazon making its voice technology available for all, announces $100M in funding for devs

Amazon just recently made the Amazon Echo available for all to purchase a few days ago, and now the company has yet another big announcement that will help bring the connected speaker into more consumers’ homes. The company has just announced that it’s now allowing third party developers to add Alexa, the software that powers the device, to be integrated into additional hardware. With only a few lines of code, devs will now be able to integrate the Alexa Voice Service (AVS) into their own hardware without needing extra experience with natural language understanding or speech recognition. The only requirement is that the hardware must contain a microphone, a speaker and an Internet connection. The AVS is free, and interested developers can download it from this website.
Here are a few nifty examples of what developers might be able to do with Alexa:
- A Wi-Fi alarm clock that lets a customer talk to Alexa—“What’s the weather today?” or “What’s on my calendar today?”
- A car that enables a driver to press the Alexa button on the steering wheel and request anything from Alexa, such as “Read my book” or “Remind me to pick up flowers after work.”
- A movie ticket machine that lets a moviegoer say “Buy six tickets for the next showing of Jurassic World.”
- A countertop weather station that enables customers to get more information by asking “What will the weather be next weekend?” or “What was the rainfall in June last year?”
Additionally, the company today announced the Alexa Fund, which will provide up to $100 million in investments to support developers and startups of all sizes to integrate the human voice in their products. The Alexa Fund has officially launched today with seven different hardware companies already onboard. The company says it’s looking to these particular areas of interest in which to place its investments:
- New hardware products for inside or outside the home that would benefit from Alexa’s voice interface.
- New features and functionality for Alexa.
- New contributions to the science behind voice technology, including text-to-speech, natural language understanding, and automatic speech recognition.
The Amazon Echo is already a pretty nifty product, and now we should begin hearing Alexa’s voice in more products over the coming years.
NASA is putting Microsoft’s HoloLens to work in space
When its mixed reality headset was first announced, Microsoft touted its ability to lend a hand in a variety of enterprise scenarios. The company teamed up with NASA for Sidekick: a project that is putting HoloLens on the International Space Station to give virtual aid to astronauts. The project uses the tech in two ways to offer support a crew member wouldn’t ordinarily have while completing a task. First, Remote Expert Mode uses Skype to give someone on the ground a view of exactly what the astronaut is seeing. From there, a colleague can remotely guide the task or scribble notes and drawings in the astronaut’s view — all in real time. A Procedure Mode overlays animated holographic illustrations on top of real objects for reference. Not only could this cut down on training time, but it could provide a valuable guide in situations plagued by communication delays.
Microsoft’s gadget has already been tested on NASA’s Weightless Wonder C9 jet to ensure it would still function properly in a free-fall environment. The first HoloLens headsets are scheduled to be delivered to the ISS as part of SpaceX’s resupply trip on June 28th. NASA projects that astronauts will begin using the device as part of Sidekick by the end of 2015.
Filed under: Science, Microsoft
Source: NASA
Women, LGBT least safe on Facebook, despite ‘real name’ policy
Despite Facebook’s insistence that its “real names” policy keeps its users safe, a new report reveals that Facebook is the least safe place for women online. And things are turning more explosive, as stories emerge that Facebook has been changing its users’ names without their consent — and the company isn’t allowing them to remove their real names from their accounts. Meanwhile, a furious LGBT coalition has rallied around the safety threats posed to its communities by the policy. Though, it was unsuccessful in blocking the company from marching in America’s largest gay pride parade.
Facebook’s ongoing war on pseudonyms became well-documented in 2011 when a blogger risking her life to report on crime in Honduras was suspended by the company, under its rule requiring everyone to use their real name on the social network. The problem re-emerged in September 2014 when Facebook’s policy locked an eye-opening number of LGBT accounts in violation of the “real names” rule. Facebook met with Bay Area LGBT community representatives, offered an apology, then suggested a policy change was in the works. Surprise: It never came. Nine months later, Facebook has failed to solidify or clarify this policy, and one organization has bad news for Facebook’s years of “real name” policy implementation.
Epicenter of online abuse for over 23 million women

The Safety Net Project (at the National Network to End Domestic Violence, NNEDV) recently released a report based on results from victim service providers called A Glimpse From the Field: How Abusers Are Misusing Technology.
The report found that nearly all (99 percent) the responding programs reported that Facebook is the most misused social media platform by abusers. Facebook is a key place for offenders to access information about victims or harass them by direct messaging or via their friends and family. The respondents included national domestic violence programs, sexual assault programs, law enforcement, prosecutor’s offices and civil legal services.
Facebook is the most misused social media platform by abusers.
NNEDV’s report (PDF) concluded that, “It is unsurprising that nearly every program reported Facebook as the main social media abusers use to harass victims.” That’s because, “Facebook is the hardest for survivors to shut down or avoid because they use it to keep in contact with other friends and family.” And no wonder, because NNEDV recognizes the critical need to avoid isolation for abuse victims. “Although we often hear suggestions that survivors shouldn’t use social media, we don’t agree that this is a solution.”
NNEDV tells us that one in four American women are domestic abuse survivors; in one recent 24-hour survey, NNEDV found that US domestic violence programs served more than 65,000 victims and answered more than 23,000 crisis hotline calls in one day alone. It’s widely accepted that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender survivors of violence experience the same rates of violence as straight individuals.

Pew currently estimates that 71 percent of American adults (188 million) use Facebook; if half are female, and one in four of those are victims of domestic violence — that’s a little over 23 million women whose “real names” put them in danger. And that’s 23 million users who, especially if they are using the social network by its own rules, are experiencing Facebook as their primary avenue of abuse, harassment and stalking.
When reached for comment about the How Abusers Are Misusing Technology report, a Facebook spokesperson referred us to this Facebook post explaining how the company’s “authentic name” policy “creates a safer community for everyone.”
The Facebook prison experiment

On its website resource for survivor support, NNEDV adds, “Getting off social media doesn’t guarantee any level of safety or privacy. Additionally, online spaces can decrease isolation and offer much support for survivors, especially when they offer privacy and security controls to the user. Survivors shouldn’t have to worry about their safety when they want to connect with friends and family online.”
Facebook’s very public 2013 partnership announcement with NNEDV shows that the company is fond of saying one thing, and instead doing the opposite.
Obviously, the status of that relationship is “complicated.”
NNEDV’s own Survivor Privacy Guide instructs survivors of abuse to never use their real names on social media accounts. “Survivors can maximize their privacy by using being careful about what they share, strategic in creating accounts (not using your real name in your email or username) and using privacy settings in social networks.”
The Survivor Privacy Guide isn’t just the policy on “real names” for domestic violence victims; is the bedrock instruction and most-cited policy for digital safety by every national sexual assault organization in the United States (including the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence, National Sexual Violence Resource Center and numerous state coalitions against rape and Violence Against Women).
In NNEDV’s Facebook guide for abuse survivors, it acknowledges both that Facebook’s policy is to only use your “real name” and that an account’s user name is one of the only things that can never be made private. The official NNEDV guide tells abuse victims and assault survivors the only option to avoid being abused, stalked and harassed by perpetrators by your real name on Facebook is… to not use Facebook.
“Victims of domestic violence, sexual violence and stalking have even more complex safety risks and concerns when their personal information ends up on the internet,” says NNEDV’s Being Web Wise guide — where NNEDV advises only posting online anywhere using a “pen name.”

In the nine months since drag queens made headlines about Facebook’s “real names” problem, the situation for LGBT people, sex workers, and female users has continued, and worsened.
Facebook, in the meantime, has kept its assurance in “expanding the options available for verifying,” which now includes portals where users are told to upload their driver’s licenses and passports (among many other official documents) to unlock their suddenly locked accounts. By May, the steady stream of reports that LGBT people were still being locked out of their accounts and forced to provide their legal name documentation (a terrifying predicament for many LGBT people) hadn’t abated.
Believing Facebook is more interested in appearances than the LGBT community’s worsening user safety problem, Bay Area LGBT figureheads concretized a movement, the MyNameIs Coalition, with a campaign to ban Facebook from this Sunday’s SF Pride parade — placing Facebook in the same category as other corporations who discriminate or behave harmfully toward LGBT people as a group, such as Coors and Exxon Mobil.

Local headlines read that the Pride board bent to pressure from Facebook.
The decision prompted the SF Examiner to write, “If you’re a high-profile donor to San Francisco Pride, you might be able to discriminate against the LGBT community and get away with it.” In at least one instance, Mark Zuckerberg placed at least one personal call to a board member.
According to meeting minutes, Pride board member Jesse Oliver Sanford railed at those who voted for Facebook saying, “What does it say if all it takes is a 15-minute phone call from Zuckerberg for Pride to sell out our own community?”
When reached for comment, SF Pride President Gary Virginia explained to Engadget that SF Pride would be focusing on finding a “solution to expand [Facebook’s] authentication policies and procedures” in community meetings sometime in the “next 12 months.”
“What does it say if all it takes is a 15-minute phone call from Zuckerberg for Pride to sell out our own community?”
Regarding the decision to keep Facebook in the parade, Virginia said, “We look at the totality of intentional support or harm to our queer community when vetting a potential sponsor or parade contingent. FB has been a staunch supporter of our queer community and has a perfect 100 score on the Human Rights Campaign Corporate Equality Index. These are the main factors that drove the board’s decision to continue to welcome Facebook’s LGBT employee group in the parade and Facebook’s sponsorship.”
When reached for comment about SF Pride’s decision in light of MyNameIs Campaign opposition, a Facebook spokesperson told Engadget, “Facebook is proud of our commitment to diversity and our support of the LGBTQ community as a company and an employer. We have been strong supporters of the San Francisco parade for many years. … We look forward to joining this year’s 45th annual celebration.”
However, Facebook didn’t have anything to say to us about reports that the company is changing its users’ names without their consent.
At the same time MyNameIs began organizing its movement, some Facebook users discovered that Facebook is changing the names on their accounts to what Facebook believes is their “real name” — and they have no choice about it.
Stupid facebook, logged me out & changed my name on me. now I can’t change it back for 60days. YES, Sherry Ann Ey is me ‘Rooster’ 
– Sherry Ey (@sherryey) May 27, 2015
User Sherry Ey wrote on May 26th, “Stupid Facebook, logged me out & changed my name on me.” MziAMARt tweeted on June 10th, “They kept me from my account for the last two days then CHANGED MY NAME.” On June 12th, Marilyn Ollie wrote, “So freakin upset with Facebook. How you gone send me an email and tell me that you changed my name and I can’t change it back.” User Modar Almouhammad wrote on June 16th, “Facebook changed my name without even asking me?”
One woman, who spoke under condition of anonymity, told Engadget that six weeks ago, Facebook flagged her name as “inauthentic” and was told to change her name. She did — to the name on her ID. She said, “Two weeks later I received another notification that they didn’t think that the name I had entered was my ‘authentic’ name and that I had to submit documents confirming that.”

She uploaded her ID and submitted her user name to be her first and middle name, as seen on her ID. She told Engadget, “I found that when I had my profile set to my name [first and last] that I had unwanted attention from people at my day job tracking me down and able to view my profile pictures, generally available photos, view my website and essentially able to stalk me in a way that made me feel unsafe.”
But Facebook had its own plans after the company obtained her ID. “I received notification within two days of uploading my driver’s license that they didn’t accept my [first and middle name] as my legal name and would change my name to my [first and last name] unless I could provide other identity.”
She said Facebook told her, “I would not be able to change my name again. Not in three months — never.”
This flies in the face of Facebook’s own publicly stated policy following the September drag queen dust-up, when CPO Chris Cox released a statement saying:
“Our policy has never been to require everyone on Facebook to use their legal name. The spirit of our policy is that everyone on Facebook uses the authentic name they use in real life. For Sister Roma, that’s Sister Roma. For Lil Miss Hot Mess, that’s Lil Miss Hot Mess.”
The biggest unregulated private database on earth?

Facebook appears to have started forcing birth names on its users around the time of the September 2014 LGBT name purge, as seen in this nine-month-old plea for help on Facebook’s Help Community page. Triex Keiseki wrote, “I provided Facebook with my original birth certificate and my name change certificate — instead they changed my name to my birth name, which I have hidden for the past years. … and I SPECIFICALLY DID NOT WANT people to know.”
Engadget spoke with two other women, and one gay male performer who has received actionable threats, each of which are terrified to experience Facebook changing their names without consent, or recourse.
Facebook maintains that its “real names” (aka “authentic names”) policy is essential for user safety. It believes its “authentic names” policy protects users from abuse on the social network, “like when an abusive ex-boyfriend impersonates a friend to harass his ex-girlfriend” because “no one can hide behind an anonymous name to bully, taunt or say insensitive or inappropriate things.” But rumblings about Facebook’s real motivations — to prioritize the financial value of its database are the inevitable chorus it receives in the media; Facebook’s stock tanked in 2012 when it revealed 8.7 percent of its accounts to be fake.
Facebook maintains that its “real names” (aka “authentic names”) policy is essential for user safety.
As Reed Albergotti wrote in The Wall Street Journal last year, “Facebook’s advertising product, which will bring in an estimated $12 billion in revenue this year, rests almost solely on its ability to gather detailed, accurate information about users.”
Either way, it’s a hell of a database score, though it stands to reason there are humans in there somewhere: That Facebook is changing user names based on the submitted documents shows that Facebook is indeed recording submitted ID information with the user account record, somewhere.

It’s interesting to note that databases such as this are usually subject to citizen protections; for instance, the Drivers Privacy Protection Act (DPPA) restricts what state motor vehicle departments can do with our driver’s license data — as well as who can handle that data.
Collecting passports, marriage certificates, state ID, birth certificates, library cards, Social Security cards, insurance cards and more as part of Facebook’s identity verification data set must make for an unimaginably impressive candy store for governments, advertisers, stalkers, unethical corporations, and all the creeps in the internet’s clown car.
As someone who writes about privacy and security for a living, I’d say it’s easily one of the most dangerous, highly targeted, unregulated private databases on the planet.
But no matter its monetary value, the view from here looks as if the cost is too high.
[Image credits: Getty (Protest, Pride parade), Facebook (Lisbon), AP (Lil Ms. Hot Mess, Sister Roma and Heklina), Flickr (Driver’s licenses), Shutterstock (Facebook app)]
BlackBerry planning on building Android smartphones if security requirements are met
Blackberry has been below the smartphone competition partly due its proprietary operating system, BlackBerry OS, that even after its partnership with the Amazon Appstore, lacks access to the more than a million applications available on android and iOS smartphones. Despite of that, Blackberry’s focus is and has always been security and productivity, and is respected for those qualities. Now, how great would an Android-based BlackBerry smartphone with added security would be for professionals looking for a more flexible and familiar user experience? Well, rumors have been around that BlackBerry has been in the works of making their first smartphones running on Android.
During a CNBC interview, BlackBerry’s CEO John Chen was asked about the possibility of an Android-based BlackBerry smartphone, and replied with the following:
“We only build secure phones, and BlackBerry is the most secure phone. So, if I can find a way to secure the Android phone, I will also build that.”
According to an earlier report from N4BB, BlackBerry will be unveiling its first Android smartphone in August, known to this day as the BlackBerry Prague. The device is said to share design elements from the BlackBerry Z3. In addition, BlackBerry is reportedly making a high-end android smartphone codenamed BlackBerry Venice and will feature a Quad HD display with other high-end specs such as a snapdragon 808 SoC, 3GB of RAM and an 18-megapixel rear-facing camera.
All of these claims however have not yet been confirmed by Blackberry, and might not necessarily hold true. BlackBerry is committed to making highly secure smartphones, and no precise information was given by CEO John Chen on the progress of this potential project during the interview. Either way, such a device would be a huge milestone for BlackBerry and might allow the company to attract a large number of new customers.
Source: IBTimes
Via: CNBC
Come comment on this article: BlackBerry planning on building Android smartphones if security requirements are met
App Store Search Bug Prevents iPads From Seeing iPhone-Only Apps [iOS Blog]
It appears some iPad users are seeing a bug in the iOS App Store that prevents them from being able to locate and download iPhone-only apps. When using an iPad to search for an app that’s only available on the iPhone like Instagram or Snapchat, results do not list iPhone-only apps even when the “iPhone Only” filter is turned on.
For example, in a search for “Snapchat” on an iPad Air 2 with the “iPhone Only” option selected, the results that are displayed include only universal apps made by third-party companies. The actual Snapchat app does not come up in the results at all, preventing it from being installed on an iPad. A test for several other iPhone-only apps revealed the same search error.

It is not clear when this App Store search bug started, but we first saw an issue last night and a MacRumors reader alerted us to the problem this morning. It is also not clear if all users are experiencing the issue, but each of the iPads we tested failed to bring up the proper search results.
It’s likely this is an error that Apple will fix shortly, and while iPhone only apps can’t be downloaded via search, they’re still available in the list of purchased apps. Installing an iPhone-only app on the iPad can be done by installing it on an iPhone first and then downloading it on the iPad from the purchased list. It’s also possible to search for the app in Safari to get a direct link to it in the App Store.
(Thanks Tim!)
Sony’s Xperia Z3+ begins its global rollout

After its announcement last month, Sony’s Xperia Z3+ is finally going global. In an official blog post, Sony announced that the Z3+ will be available this week in select markets around the globe, directly following Sony’s launch of the Xperia Z3+ to the UK earlier this week.
Crafted from premium materials and carrying Sony’s latest and greatest technologies, the Xperia Z3+ still seems like more of a minor spec bump from the previous Xperia Z3 and not a full-fledged successor, but that doesn’t make it a bad phone. Underneath the 5.2 inch 1080p Full HD screen lies the 64 bit Snapdragon 810 with 3GB RAM, all powered by a massive 2930mAh battery that is said to get roughly 2 days of battery life. Early reviews of the Xperia Z3+ seem to confirm that Sony isn’t embellishing with their battery life claims either.
It’s not just the battery and processor that have been upgraded. Over the previous generation the Z3+ got a little thinner and a lot lighter, now weighing in at 144 grams. The Xperia Z3+ also comes with IP65 and IP68 certifications which make it waterproof and dust resistant, a trend we’ve seen in Sony’s most recent smartphone offerings.
Turning to the camera, the Xperia Z3+ packs a 20.7MP rear-facing camera that produces sharp images that are on the colder side with a simple press of the dedicated camera button. The Z3+ also brings the ability to shoot videos with a 4k resolution.
If you are looking for a new phone that has a solid camera, good specs, and a great battery life, then the Xperia Z3+ may be for you. For those with camp Verizon, it is worth noting that you’ll instead have the option of the QHD-packing Sony Xperia Z4v. What do you think about Sony’s latest moves with the Z4, Z3+, and Z4v? Let us know in the comments.
Tumblr TV makes sure you never run out of GIFs to watch
You already know Tumblr is like GIF heaven. But now, with Tumblr TV, the social network wants to make the animated-image viewing experience better for people. Not only does the newly minted site let you easily search for GIFs, but those results can be enjoyed in fullscreen mode, played continuously and shared with other Tumblr members. So say you search for “Drake,” as this editor would do, you can then watch a feed of nothing but Drake-related content that’s been uploaded by the community. Unfortunately, it’s not as easy to share a specific GIF’s URL if you don’t have a Tumblr account — instead, your only option is to use the link related to the topic you’ve searched for. Either way, Tumblr TV is definitely worth bookmarking.

Filed under: Internet
Source: Tumblr
Microsoft’s CEO rallies the troops with a new mission statement
It was only a matter of time until Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella updated the company’s mission statement with his own twist, and today, a week after a major executive shakeup, he revealed it a “State of the Union” message to Microsoft employees. “Our mission is to empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more,” Nadella wrote in an email message, which was published by Geekwire. If you’ve been paying attention, you’d notice that it’s pretty much the same goal former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer was aiming for in his 2013 mission statement update, except it’s much clearer and easier to understand. It’s also a fitting vision for Nadella, who’s been focused on making Microsoft more streamlined and nimble, rather than the lumbering giant that’s too slow to innovate.
“This mission is ambitious and at the core of what our customers deeply care about,” Nadella added. “We have unique capability in harmonizing the needs of both individuals and organizations. This is in our DNA. We also deeply care about taking things global and making a difference in lives and organizations in all corners of the planet.”
Nadella reiterated Microsoft’s need to focus on the cloud and mobile, and he was quick to point out that the concept of “mobile” also refers to creating mobile experiences for customers (likely across multiple devices), all powered by the cloud. Windows Phone hasn’t been much of a success for Microsoft so far, but with Windows 10 it’ll have a platform that finally unites its mobile and desktop experiences. That may finally help Microsoft sell more phones, though that’s probably less of a priority now that the company is also supporting iOS and Android with flagship software like Office.
Somewhat ominously, Nadella also mentioned that the company will have to make some “tough choices in areas where things are not working.” Carving out the fat has been a big part of his tenure — last year he announced Microsoft’s biggest round of layoffs ever, which hit 18,000 employees — but it’ll be interesting to see what gets chopped next. It could mean the company is changing the way it approaches building phones and tablets, especially since last week’s exec shuffle pushed out Stephen Elop, Nokia’s former CEO who served as Microsoft’s EVP of devices and services, and Jo Harlow, its head of phones (who came over with Elop). The Surface tablets, in particular, might get the axe now that Microsoft is also working directly with computer manufacturers like HP for flagship hardware like the Spectre x360.
[Photo credit: Stephen Brashear/Getty Images]
Filed under: Microsoft
Source: Geekwire








