Here’s how to check if Facebook shared your data with Cambridge Analytica
In keeping with earlier promises, Facebook has rolled out a tool that will show users whether or not their data was in the hands of Cambridge Analytica or any other company that has since been banned from the platform for illicitly accessing people’s personal data.
“Starting on Monday, April 9, we’ll show people a link at the top of their News Feed so they can see what apps they use — and the information they have shared with those apps. People will also be able to remove apps that they no longer want. As part of this process, we will also tell people if their information may have been improperly shared with Cambridge Analytica,” Facebook stated.
All right, so how can you find out if your data was shared? Simple. Just open Facebook in your browser or on your phone, then navigate to your news feed. If your data was shared or improperly accessed by Cambridge Analytica or any other company now banned from Facebook, you’ll have a notification at the top of your feed explaining just who had your data.
The images above show what the new privacy notifications will look like. They very clearly state whether or not you were affected, as well as how to double-check which apps and websites currently have access to your data. It’s an important step for Facebook in the face of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, but it remains to be seen whether or not these new notifications will help keep you secure in the long run.
“Overall, we believe these changes will better protect people’s information while still enabling developers to create useful experiences,” the Facebook statement reads. “We know we have more work to do — and we’ll keep you updated as we make more changes.”
Facebook has been on its back foot ever since the Cambridge Analytica story broke, and founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg is testifying before Congress this week, answering questions about what Facebook knew and when. Zuckerberg delivered a written statement that was released by Congress, in which he takes responsibility and promises to do better in the future.
“Over the past few weeks, we’ve been working to understand exactly what happened with Cambridge Analytica and taking steps to make sure this doesn’t happen again,” Zuckerberg wrote. “We took important actions to prevent this from happening again today four years ago, but we also made mistakes, there’s more to do, and we need to step up and do it.”
Editors’ Recommendations
- Facebook was always too busy selling ads to care about your personal data
- Public trust in Facebook fades in light of privacy concerns
- Zuckerberg releases first statement on Cambridge Analytica, vows more security
- Facebook: Yes, we track your calls and texts, but you told us we could
- After data scandal, Zuckerberg promises to ‘do better for you’ in newspaper ads
What laptop are you looking forward to most in 2018?
Looking to buy a new laptop? We’ve already reviewed several major news releases in 2018, including the Dell XPS 15 2-in-1, the MateBook X Pro, and the Dell XPS 13. While we have a good idea of what the year will look like for laptops, there’s still quite a few new laptops yet to come.
In early June, we’re expecting Apple to announce a new MacBook at its annual conference, WWDC. While MacBook Pros will probably only get a processor bump, you should see a significant revamp of its entry-level laptops. We don’t know if it’ll be an updated MacBook Air, a lower-cost 12-inch MacBook, or something else entirely — we just know we’re getting something.
If you’re more in the Windows camp, there are some exciting things to look forward to as well. Although we haven’t heard much in terms of rumors yet, we should see a new Surface Book launched later this year, presumably named the Surface Book 3. Microsoft has released a new Surface Book every year in October since its initial launch in 2015, so this year shouldn’t be any different.
We could also see a new Surface Pro launched as well, though the rumor mill has been quiet on that front lately. Last year, the update to the fifth generation Surface Pro was announced in late May, while in previous years its been launched alongside the Surface Book in the fall.
A lot of the biggest 2018 #laptops have already come out, but some of the best are still to come. What’s your most anticipated laptop still to come in 2018?
Please RT for a larger sample size.
— Digital Trends (@DigitalTrends) April 9, 2018
Outside of those, there’s several exiting laptops that we’ve seen at trade shows, but haven’t hit store shelves yet. One of the most important is HP’s Spectre x360 15, which comes boasting Intel’s G-series chipset with AMD’s Radeon Vega graphics on board. So far, the only other laptop to feature it was the Dell XPS 15 2-in-1, which had great gaming performance — but less-than-stellar battery life.
We’re also excited about the release of the entire lineup of Always Connected PCs, which are a new line of affordable Windows 2-in-1s powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 835 rather than a traditional Intel CPU. While these won’t be high-performing laptops, they come with built-in LTE support and make claims of up to 20 hours of battery life. Whether they can deliver on any of its ambitious claims is still to be determined, but you’ve a choice between the Lenovo Miix 630, the HP Envy x2, and the Asus NovaGo. All three are set to be released this summer.
There are a number of other laptops that could possibly show up, such as an updated Pixelbook — but that’s most of what we’ve expecting so far. Vote in the Twitter poll above or drop a comment down below to tell us which laptop you’re most excited for.
Editors’ Recommendations
- The best MacBook
- Spring is the season to buy a new laptop
- Dell XPS 13 9370 review
- Dell XPS 15 2-in-1 review
- The best laptops
Leap Motion’s prototype augmented reality headset includes hand tracking
Leap Motion just revealed a new prototype headset that mixes hand tracking with augmented reality. The device, dubbed as North Star, relies on ellipsoidal reflectors, which are typically sections cut from a larger, curved ellipsoid mirror. In this case, the reflectors are based on optical-grade acrylic coated with a thin layer of silver.
For the first version of Leap Motion’s prototype, the company mounted these reflectors inside a huge head-mounted device seemingly ripped out of a 1980s mad scientist movie. On each side of the helmet’s inner wall was a 5.5-inch LCD panel along with bulky ribbon cables connecting to display drivers mounted on the top of the HMD. Needless to say, it wasn’t sleek and compact like Microsoft’s HoloLens.
“While it might seem a bit funny, it was perhaps the widest field of view, and the highest-resolution AR system ever made,” the company says. “Each eye saw digital content approximately 105 degrees high by 75 degrees wide with a 60 percent stereo overlap, for a combined field of view of 105 degrees by 105 degrees with 1440 × 2560 resolution per eye.”
Sound confusing? Imagine putting on a helmet, and inside you see two reflective surfaces curving outward, with one end connecting close to the bridge of your nose, and the other end extending forward and out. Meanwhile, there is an LCD screen mounted to the left and right of your eyes, reflected on the curved mirrored surface. This provides a huge field of view both horizontally and vertically.
Eventually, the team whittled the headset down from a mad scientist contraption to something that looks more like a current VR headset. The prototype now relies on two fast-switching 3.5-inch LCD screens manufactured by BOE Displays that are powered by an Analogix display driver. While it has fewer parts than the previous gargantuan prototype, Leap Motion managed to preserve “most” of our natural field of view.
In its current state, Leap Motion’s prototype provides a 1,600 x 1,440 resolution for each eye — lower than the hulking first-gen model — running at 120 frames per second. It also sports a field of view “covering over a hundred degrees” with the two screens combined. Meanwhile, the hand-tracking runs at 150 frames per second over a 180- x 180-degree field of view.
According to the post, the team pulled the reflectors away from the user’s face just slightly to make room for a disassembled wide field-of-view camera manufactured by Logitech to record the augmented reality headset in action. But they’re still not done — other refinement tasks include better cable management, better curves, additional room for enclosed electronics and sensors, and more.
Once Leap Motion makes those refinements, there are other details that could improve the headset’s AR experience, such as inward-facing cameras for precise augmented image alignment, face tracking, and eye tracking. Head-mounted ambient light sensors would support 360-degree lighting estimation while directional speakers would provide “discrete” localized audio feedback. Micro-actuators could be used to adjust the displays.
Leap Motion plans to release this design to the open source community next week.
Editors’ Recommendations
- Magic Leap finally unveils ‘goggles’ with wireless processing, tracking
- Asus joins the Windows Mixed Reality party with its own official headset
- Apple AR glasses: News and rumors about ‘Project Mirrorshades’
- Magic Leap wants to take AR mobile via partnership with ‘major telco’
- Google’s upcoming OLED display for VR headsets may pack a 3182p resolution
Essential Phone and Earphones HD bundle costs just $550 in Canada right now
A rare Canadian discount.

The Essential Phone is one of the best-looking phones on the market, and while the overall experience is not perfect, it continues to get better with software updates.
As part of Amazon’s Innovation Day, which promotes and discounts awesome products from up-and-coming startups, Amazon Canada is now selling the $500 Essential Phone and its ordinarily-$125 Earphones HD USB-C headphones for $550 CAD total, which is a pretty great deal. The phone sells for $460 outright at TELUS, its exclusive carrier partner in Canada, but this is the first time it’s been sold unlocked from an online retailer.
The phone is available from Amazon in both Pure White and Halo Gray colors, neither of which are offered by TELUS at the moment. Given that premium phones are becoming more and more expensive in Canada — the OnePlus 5T cost $620 while it was available — this is a bargain for a very nice phone and a decent pair of USB-C headphones.
See at Amazon Canada
Video: Recap of the Mobile Nations reader meetups
Check out this video recap of our most recent reader meetups in New York City and San Francisco.
We had a couple of reader meetups this week in New York City and San Francisco. Rene Ritchie of Vector and Phil Nickinson a.k.a. Modern Dad were hanging out at the San Francisco party, while Mr. Mobile and I were mingling with the New York City crowd.
There was free food, and free giveaways, but the highlight of the night was being in the same room with like-minded people. It made me happy seeing smiles on peoples’ faces as we talk about phones, gadgets, and tech. We hope to have more of these meetups in the future if you missed out, but you can watch all the fun that night in our video recap.

Thanks to AT&T for sponsoring the meetups. At the venue, readers were able to experience their new virtual reality (VR) experience as part of the It Can Wait campaign. Nearly nine in 10 people admit to using their smartphone behind the wheel. Yet nearly a quarter of people don’t identify using a smartphone while driving as a major problem. With the new 3D experience, AT&T hopes it will help raise awareness and ultimately save lives.
You won’t have to sign for credit card purchases much longer
For all of the progress the US has made in payment technology, it still clings to the past when it comes to credit card payments. You still have to sign for many in-person purchases, which is downright backwards in an era of chip-based cards and digital tokens. And the financial industry is finally ready to kiss them goodbye. As of later in April, four of the biggest credit card networks (AmEx, Discover, Mastercard and Visa) will no longer require signatures for these credit card transactions. It’s up to retailers to decide whether or not to ditch handwritten approvals. As the New York Times noted, though, it’s doubtful many retailers will keep up the tradition.
Walmart, for instance, said it already deems signatures “worthless” and doesn’t bother recording them with most purchases. Target, meanwhile, expects to scrap them entirely before April is over. Merchant groups also expect the requirements to disappear before long. Both stores and credit card networks have largely stuck to the signature requirement simply because it took years for chip-based cards to become relatively common in the US. They’ve been popular for considerably longer in other parts of the world.
There are occasional advantages to signatures. It can help stores when they challenge customers making dodgy claims about past bills. However, the scribbles have largely become pointless outside of the very largest transactions. Even before chip cards and NFC payments, the rise of online shopping prompted credit card providers to develop far stronger anti-fraud protections besides inspecting a shopper’s penmanship. This move could significantly speed up the line at your local store with little to no effect on your financial security.
Source: New York Times
Cambridge Analytica tries to shoot down Facebook data sharing claims
Cambridge Analytica is facing incredible pressure over the Facebook data sharing scandal — and not surprisingly, it’s determined to share its version of events before Mark Zuckerberg testifies in congressional hearings. The company has posted a “series of facts” that challenge some of the allegations made against the company. Not surprisingly, it started by insisting that it didn’t do anything illegal: GSR “legally obtained” the data about Facebook users, and “did not illegally or inappropriately” scoop up and share data. Later on, it maintained that it “only collects data with informed consent.”
After that, Cambridge Analytica jumped into specifics. The company “did not use” GSR data during the US presidential election or the UK’s Brexit referendum, according to its statement. In the US, it relied on data from the RNC, voter registry, “commercial data brokers” and consensual data. In the UK, it subcontracted marketing and software work to AggregateIQ but didn’t do any work for major Leave or Remain websites. The company also stressed that it was an affiliate of SCL Elections, not the same company, and denied Christopher Wylie’s assertions that he’s both a whistleblower and a Cambridge Analytica co-founder. Wylie was an SCL contractor who “has no recent knowledge” of what was happening, the company said.
The firm stressed that it was going through audits to show that it had deleted the data, and that the data for ‘just’ 30 million users of the estimated 87 million affected wounded up in its hands.
This is Cambridge Analytica’s account, of course, and there’s a lot it isn’t addressing. While the company itself may gather data with permission, the whole uproar started because it sourced that data from someone who didn’t. The “thisisyourdigitallife” app not only collected the info of users under the guise of academic research, but those of millions of friends who weren’t even aware the app existed. And it’s not up to Cambridge Analytica to decide whether or not it did anything wrong — Facebook is dealing with an FTC investigation for potentially violating a consent decree, while numerous lawsuits are underway.
However accurate the rebuttal may be, the company’s fate isn’t really in its hands at this point. It’s up to politicians and regulators to decide who’s right, and they won’t necessarily sympathize with Cambridge Analytica even if some of the claims about its practices are wildly off the mark.
Source: Cambridge Analytica
Microsoft’s object-detecting playmat brings toys to life
From Amiibos to Skylanders, game companies have led the ‘toys to life’ charge to translate real-world objects into digital worlds. But those have only transferred proprietary products. Microsoft researchers have developed a prototype smart playmat called Project Zanzibar that can scan in everyday items, even those that don’t have a shred of computer tech.
Zanzibar is a ‘sensing platform’ that combines capacitive sensing to track finger movements with Near Field Communication (NFC) to detect objects. It’s also flexible, both literally and systematically: Just hook it up to any tablet or screen and unroll the mat, and you’re ready to go. It can sense objects simply by placing an NFC sticker on their bottoms, which tracks them spatially and even vertically, identifying distinct items stacked on top of each other.
There’s obvious benefits for play and learning — the video demonstration above shows off an ad hoc programming lesson made from stringing command blocks together, much like other kid-oriented ‘learn-to-code’ sets. But there’s no reason it couldn’t also be used at work for modeling real model objects in a digital space for architects, civic planners, or home designers. While Zanzibar is a long way off from becoming a consumer product, the team behind it will present their findings at the ACM CHI Conference in Montreal later this month, though their paper is downloadable here right now.
Via: The Verge
Source: Microsoft
Backpage.com officials indicted following FBI shutdown
Last week, the US government seized the classified website Backpage.com, disabled it, and replaced its front page with a disclaimer announcing its shutdown. The site’s cofounders had been the subject of law enforcement investigations into pimping, sex trafficking and money-laundering over the years. Today, a grand jury in Phoenix indicted seven officials associated with the website with alleged money laundering and facilitating prostitution.
The indictment specifically charged Backpage enabling the trafficking of 17 victims, some of whom were 14 years old. Hosting ads for these people was no accident — “This is not a website that let the occasional ad slip thru the cracks of their review system,” a US official said upon the site’s seizure, according to The Washington Post. Since it launched in 2004, Backpage has laundered some of the $500 million in prostitution revenue it’s received; Almost every dollar the website made was through illegal activity, according to the indictment.
Previous court cases against Backpage failed when the site invoked particular sections of the Communications Decency Act, which shields websites from responsibility for content posted by third parties. The controversial FOSTA-SESTA bills Congress passed last month seek to fix those loopholes — though not without consequences, as critics complained the pieces of legislation essentially legalize sex censorship.
In any case, the indictment against Backpage doesn’t rely on FOSTA-SESTA, instead accusing its seven officials of “50 different instances in which the defendants are alleged to have knowingly facilitated a prostitution crime,” according to The Washington Post.
Source: The Washington Post
What’s on TV: ‘The Expanse,’ ‘Lost in Space’ and ‘Chef’s Table’
This week The Expanse comes back on Syfy, while on AMC The Walking Dead passes the baton to Fear the Walking Dead and on Fox it’s finally time for more New Girl. Netflix’s highly anticipated Lost in Space series is also streaming, while Amazon drops in season four of Bosch. There’s a new season of Chef’s Table arriving this week, but we’ll be checking out the second episode of Killing Eve on BBC America. On Blu-ray several titles are making the jump to 4K, and for gamers there’s Rick and Morty: Virtual Rick-ality on PS VR. Look after the break to check out each day’s highlights, including trailers and let us know what you think (or what we missed).
Blu-ray & Games & Streaming
- The Greatest Showman (4K)
- Outlander (S3)
- The Incredible Hulk (4K)
- Knowing (4K)
- Push (4K)
- Molly’s Game
- Phantom Thread
- All the Money in the World
- Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay (4K)
- Proud Mary
- Braven
- Extinction (PC, PS4, Xbox One)
- Owlboy (Xbox One, PS4)
- Time Carnage (PS4)
- Project Nimbus: Code Mirai (PS4)
- Rick and Morty: Virtual Rick-ality (PS VR)
- Call of Duty: WWII – The War Machine DLC (PS4)
- Bombslinger (Xbox One, PC, PS4)
- Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice (Xbox One, PS4)
- Robocraft Infinity (Xbox One, PC)
- Ys Origin (Xbox One)
- Masters of Anima (Xbox One, PS4)
- League of Evil (PS4)
- Operation Warcade (PS VR)
- Earthlock: Festival of Magic (Xbox One)
- Deep Ones (Xbox One, PS4)
- Don’t Starve (Switch)
- The Snack World (Switch)
- Skies of Fury DX (Switch)
Monday
- Amo (S1), Netflix, 3 AM
- D.C.’s Legend’s of Tomorrow (season finale), CW, 8 PM
- The Voice, NBC, 8 PM
- American Idol, ABC, 8 PM
- Kevin Can Wait, CBS, 8 PM
- WWE Raw, USA, 8 PM
- Man with a Plan, CBS, 8:30 PM
- iZombie, CW, 9 PM
- Sled Dogs, Starz, 9 PM
- The Terror, AMC, 9 PM
- Living Biblically, CBS, 9:30 PM
- The Crossing, ABC, 10 PM
- McMafia, AMC, 10 PM
- Good Girls, NBC, 10 PM
- Scorpion, CBS, 10 PM
- Final Space, TBS, 10:30 PM
- Desus & Mero, Viceland, 11 PM
Tuesday
- Greg Davies: You Magnificent Beast, Netflix, 3 AM
- Shadowhunters, Freeform, 8 PM
- WWE Smackdown, USA, 8 PM
- The Voice, NBC, 8 PM
- Lethal Weapon, Fox, 8 PM
- The Middle, ABC, 8:30 PM
- NCIS, CBS, 8 PM
- New Girl (season premiere), Fox, 9 PM
- Elton John: I’m Still Standing – A Grammy Salute, CBS, 9 PM
- Black-ish, ABC, 9 PM
- Black Lightning, CW, 9 PM
- The Challenge, MTV, 9 PM
- LA to Vegas, Fox, 9 PM
- Rise, NBC, 9 PM
- Deadliest Catch (season premiere), Discovery, 9 PM
- Splitting Up Together, ABC, 9:30 PM
- Andre the Giant, HBO, 10 PM
- Legion, FX, 10 PM
- Chicago Med, NBC, 10 PM
- For the People, ABC, 10 PM
- NCIS: NO, CBS, 10 PM
- Unsolved: The Murders of Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G., USA, 10 PM
- Chicago Med, NBC, 10 PM
- Tosh.0, Comedy Central, 10 PM
- The Last O.G., TBS, 10:30 PM
- Adam Ruins Everything, TruTV, 10:30 PM
- The Jim Jefferies Show, Comedy Central, 10:30 PM
- Desus & Mero, Viceland, 11 PM
- The President Show, Comedy Central, 11 PM
- The Chris Gethard Show, TruTV, 11 PM
Wednesday
- The Looming Tower, Hulu, 3 AM
- Harry Potter: A History of Magic, CW, 8 PM
- Famous in Love, Freeform, 8 PM
- Survivor, CBS, 8 PM
- Empire, Fox, 8 PM
- The Goldbergs, ABC, 8 PM
- The Blacklist, NBC, 8 PM
- Alex, Inc., ABC, 8:30 PM
- The Expanse (season premiere), Syfy, 9 PM
- Modern Family, ABC, 9 PM
- Seal Team, CBS, 9 PM
- Star, Fox, 9 PM
- Suits, USA, 9 PM
- I Am MLK Jr., Paramount, 9 PM
- American Housewife, ABC, 9:30 PM
- The Americans, FX, 10 PM
- Catfish, MTV, 10 PM
- Chicago PD, NBC, 10 PM
- Krypton, Syfy, 10 PM
- Designated Survivor, ABC, 10 PM
- Criminal Minds, CBS, 10 PM
- Hap & Leonard (season finale), Sundance, 10 PM
- Desus & Mero, Viceland, 11 PM
Thursday
- 30 for 30: The Last Days of Knight, ESPN+, 3 AM
- Innocent (season finale), Sundance Now, 3 AM
- Pickpockets, Netflix, 3 AM
- Gotham: A Dark Knight, Fox, 8 PM
- Superstore, NBC, 8 PM
- Grey’s Anatomy, ABC, 8 PM
- Jersey Shore Family Vacation, MTV, 8 PM
- Supernatural, CW, 8 PM
- Siren, Freeform, 8 PM
- The Big Bang Theory, CBS, 8 PM
- A.P. Bio, NBC, 8:30 PM
- Young Sheldon, CBS, 8:30 PM
- Station 19, ABC, 9 PM
- Showtime at the Apollo, Fox, 9 PM
- Arrow, CW, 9 PM
- Mom, CBS, 9 PM
- Life in Pieces, CBS, 9:30 PM
- Champions, NBC, 9:30 PM
- Chicago Fire, NBC, 10 PM
- Nobodies, Paramount, 10 PM
- S.W.A.T., CBS, 10 PM
- Atlanta, FX, 10 PM
- Scandal, ABC, 10 PM
- Black Card Revoked, BET, 10 PM
- Thursday Night Darts, BBC America, 10 PM
- The Rundown with Robin Thede (season finale), BET, 11 PM
- Desus & Mero, Viceland, 11 PM
Friday
- Bosch (S4), Netflix, 3 AM
- Chef’s Table (S4), Netflix, 3 AM
- Lost in Space (S1), Netflix, 3 AM
- The Magic School Bus Rides Again (S2), Netflix, 3 AM
- Come Sunday, Netflix, 3 A
- I Am not an Easy Man, Netflix, 3 AM
- The Remix, Amazon Prime, 3 AM
- Vice, HBO, 7:30 PM
- Once Upon A Time, ABC, 8 PM
- Taken, NBC, 8 PM
- Macgyver, CBS, 8 PM
- Jane the Virgin, CW, 9 PM
- Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., ABC, 9 PM
- Hawaii Five-0, CBS, 9 PM
- Rellik (series premiere), Cinemax, 10 P
- Blue Bloods, CBS, 10 PM
- Wyatt Cenac’s Problem Areas (series premiere) HBO, 11:30 PM
Saturday
- Elvis Presley: The Searcher Part 1 & 2, HBO, 8 PM
- Ransom, CBS, 8 PM
- UFC Fight Night, Fox, 8 PM
- Christiane Amanpour: Sex & Love Around the World, CNN, 10 PM
- Saturday Night Live: John Mulaney / Jack White, NBC, 11:30 PM
Sunday
- F1 Chinese GP, ESPN2, 2 AM
- The Good Fight, CBS All Access, 3 AM
- The Joel McHale Show, Netflix, 3 AM
- Bob’s Burgers, Fox, 7:30 PM
- Howard’s End, Starz, 8 PM
- American Idol ABC, 8 PM
- Killing Eve, BBC America, 8 PM
- The 53rd Annual Academy of Country Music Awards, CBS, 8 PM
- The Circus: Inside the Greatest Political Show on Earth (season premiere), Showtime, 8 PM
- The Simpsons, Fox, 8 PM
- The Untold Story of the 90s, History, 8 PM
- Brooklyn Nine-nine, Fox, 8:30 PM
- Genius Junior, NBC, 9 PM
- American Dynasties (season finale), CNN, 9 PM
- The Walking Dead (season finale), AMC, 9 PM
- Unsung: Brand Nubian, TV One, 9 PM
- NCIS: LA, CBS, 9 PM
- Here and Now (season finale), HBO, 9 PM
- Homeland, Showtime, 9 PM
- Ash vs. Evil Dead, Starz, 9 PM
- Unforgotten, PBS, 9 PM
- Last Man on Earth, Fox, 9:30 PM
- Silicon Valley, HBO, 10 PM
- Fear the Walking Dead (season premiere), AMC, 10:10 PM
- Trust, FX, 10 PM
- Billions, Showtime, 10 PM
- Pope: The Most Powerful Man in History (season finale), CNN, 10 PM
- Naked & Afraid, Discovery, 10 PM
- Timeless, NBC, 10 PM
- Barry, HBO, 10:30 PM
- Talking Dead, AMC, 11:17 PM
- Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, HBO, 11 PM
[All times listed are in ET]



