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Lawsuit Claims Microsoft Tracked Sex Toy Shoppers With ‘Recording In Real Time’ Software

Samantha Cole reports via 404 Media: A woman is suing Microsoft and two major U.S. sex toy retailers with claims that their websites are tracking users without their consent, despite promising they wouldn’t do that. In a complaint (PDF) filed on June 25 in the Northern District of California, San Francisco resident Stella Tatola claims that Babeland and Good Vibrations — both owned by Barnaby Ltd., LLC — allowed Microsoft to see what visitors to their websites searched for and bought.

“Unbeknownst to Plaintiff and other Barnaby website users, and constituting the ultimate violation of privacy, Barnaby allows an undisclosed third-party, Microsoft, to intercept, read, and utilize for commercial gain consumers’ private information about their sexual practices and preferences, gleaned from their activity on Barnaby’s websites,” the complaint states. “This information includes but is not limited to product searches and purchase initiations, as well as the consumer’s unique Microsoft identifier.” The complaint claims that Good Vibrations and Babeland sites have installed trackers using Microsoft’s Clarity software, which does “recording in real time,” and tracks users’ mouse movements, clicks or taps, scrolls, and site navigation. Microsoft says on the Clarity site that it “processes a massive amount of anonymous data around user behavior to gain insights and improve machine learning models that power many of our products and services.”

“By allowing undisclosed third party Microsoft to eavesdrop and intercept users’ PPSI in such a manner — including their sexual orientation, preferences, and desires, among other highly sensitive, protected information — Barnaby violates its Privacy Policies, which state it will never share such information with third parties,” the complaint states. The complaint includes screenshots of code from the sexual health sites that claims to show them using Machine Unique Identifier (“MUID”) cookies that “identifies unique web browsers visiting Microsoft sites,” according to Microsoft, and are used for “advertising, site analytics, and other operational purposes.” The complaint claims that this violates the California Invasion of Privacy Act, the Federal Wiretap Act, and Californians’ reasonable expectation of privacy.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Apple Developing New Way To Make iPhone Batteries Easier To Replace

According to a report from The Information, Apple is developing a new “electrically induced adhesive debonding” technology that would make iPhone batteries easier to replace. 9to5Mac reports: Currently, replacing an iPhone battery requires using tweezers to remove the existing battery, which is held in place by adhesive strips. Then, you must use a “specialized machine and tray” to press the new battery into place. The new process uses metal instead of foil to cover the battery, as The Information explains: “The new technology — known as electrically induced adhesive debonding — involves encasing the battery in metal, rather than foil as it is currently. That would allow people to dislodge the battery from the chassis by administering a small jolt of electricity to the battery, the people said. Consumers still have to pry open the iPhone themselves, which is not an easy process because of the adhesives and screws that keep the iPhone’s screen sealed in place.”

Even with this change, however, Apple will still recommend that iPhone users visit a professional to replace their battery. If Apple’s development of this new bonding technology goes according to plan, it could debut it with at least one iPhone 16 model this year. According to the report, it would then expand to all versions of the iPhone 17 next year.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Real Relationship Hustlers of TikTok

TikTok is host to one of the most influential, fastest-growing online industries: relationship misinformation.

Quora’s Chatbot Platform Poe Allows Users to Download Paywalled Articles on Demand

WIRED was able to download stories from publishers like The New York Times and The Atlantic using Poe’s Assistant bot. One expert calls it “prima facie copyright infringement,” which Quora disputes.

The 19 Best Movies on Amazon Prime Right Now (July 2024)

The Idea of You, Road House, and American Fiction are just a few of the movies you should be watching on Amazon Prime Video this week.

Apple Vision Pro Launches In First Countries Outside the US

After launching in the United States earlier this year, Apple’s Vision Pro is now available to buy in China, Japan, and Singapore. “The Apple Vision Pro will also roll out to Germany, France, Australia, the UK, and Canada on July 12th, with preorders for those regions available starting today at 5AM PT,” notes The Verge. Apple is documenting the international launch via a recent blog post.

According to CNBC, the device starts at $4,128 (29,999 yuan) in China, compared to $3,500 in the U.S. Meanwhile, Apple is already hard at work on a more budget-friendly model. In Bloomberg’s “Power On” newsletter, Apple news-breaker Mark Gurman reports today that the tech giant is “working on a cheaper headset, a second Vision Pro model and augmented-reality glasses to better compete with Meta.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Why Streaming Services Keep Screwing Up Binge-Watching

All 10 episodes of the new season of The Bear just hit Hulu. Maybe they shouldn’t have.

The 21 Best Movies on Apple TV+ Right Now (July 2024)

Fancy Dance, Argylle, Mad Max: Fury Road, and Blade Runner 2049 are just a few of the movies you should be watching on Apple TV+ this month.

Amazon Is Investigating Perplexity Over Claims of Scraping Abuse

AWS hosted a server linked to the Bezos family- and Nvidia-backed search startup that appears to have been used to scrape the sites of major outlets, prompting an inquiry into potential rules violations.

Zuckerberg Disses Closed-Source AI Competitors as Trying To ‘Create God’

Mark Zuckerberg has criticized the notion of a singular, dominant AI in a new interview. He argued against the idea of AI technology being “hoarded” by one company, taking aim at unnamed competitors who he suggested view themselves as “creating God.” Zuckerberg advocated for open-source AI development, emphasizing the need for diverse AI systems reflecting varied interests.

He likened the future AI landscape to the current ecosystem of phone apps, content creators, and businesses, where no single entity dominates. Meta announced early U.S. tests of AI Studio, software enabling creators to build AI avatars for Instagram messaging. These AIs will be clearly labeled to avoid confusion. Zuckerberg stressed the importance of empowering many to experiment with AI, stating, “That’s what culture is, right? It’s not one group of people getting to dictate everything for people.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.