Instagram has started putting all users….both current and new ones that are age 18 or under…into new ‘Teen Accounts.’ Theverge.com reports that the move will affect how tens of millions of teens are able to interact with Instagram. The new account type automatically applies a set of protections to young users, and only users 16 years of age and older can loosen some of these settings. The most notable thing for the teen accounts is that all the minors will have private accounts by default, and will prevent strangers from direct messaging them. Also on the way will be a Sleep Mode that silences interactions between 10 PM and 7 AM. Instagram is also updating parental controls. Parents that want to supervise their kids on the app will be able to see who the child has messaged in the past 7 days (but not the contents of the messages.) They can also view what topics their teens have looked at most often. The Teen accounts are rolling out to users in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia. They will show up in the EU later this year.
Meta has banned Russian media outlet RT, and other Russian state media outlets from all its platforms. According to 9to5mac.com, that includes Facebook, Instagram, Threads, and WhatsApp. The reason? Meta says ‘foreign interference activity’ in the US presidential election. in a statement, Meta said “After careful consideration, we expanded our ongoing enforcement against Russian state media outlets. Rossiya Segodnya, RT and other related entities are now banned from our apps globally for foreign interference activity.” Just a few days ago, the US Department of Justice announced charges against two employees for allegedly funneling almost $10 million to a Tennessee-based shell company that was providing controversial and misleading online content.
You may have heard that after getting non-warehouse workers back in the office 3 days a week, that Amazon will now require staff to be in the office 5 days a week beginning the first of the year. Geekwire.com says that the company is planning to flatten management layers, and that they actually expect the return to office mandate to get staff to self-separate. Sounds like a neat way to do a layoff without having to get hit for an increase in your unemployment insurance contributions, actually. Amazon is really swimming against the tide on this return full time to the office….time will tell if it works for them, or if they lose top talent who will flee to the open arms of startups and other tech companies that are still doing partial or total work from home.
Google (as well as Amazon, Meta, and OpenAI) has been working on tech to watermark AI created images or modified content. Engadget.com reports that Google is touting its latest version of Content Credentials as more secure and tamperproof. They claim it should soon be easier to tell if an image was created or modified using generative AI tools in your Google search results. If an image pops up that has C2PA metadata…C2PA is the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity…you should be able to find out what GAI has been used on it and how much with Google’s ‘About this Image’ tool. It will also be available in Google Images, Lens, and Circle to Search. They are working on how to use C2PA to tell YouTube viewers when footage was captured with a camera. Expect more on that later this year.
I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.