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Submission + - SPAM: YouTube CEO Wojcicki says the video site has plans to capitalize on Web3

Ewezzymodz writes: YouTube published CEO Susan Wojcicki’s annual letter on Tuesday, laying out the company’s priorities.
Wojcicki touched on YouTube’s plans to focus on NFTs as new web technologies capture the attention of creators.
The company said its short video platform, which competes with TikTok, has “5 trillion all-time views.”
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Susan Wojcicki, CEO, YouTube speaking at #VidCon, July 23, 2015.
Susan Wojcicki, CEO, YouTube speaking at #VidCon, July 23, 2015.
Harriet Taylor | CNBC
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said on Tuesday that the video site will be expanding in ways that can “help creators capitalize” on new technologies like NFTs.

In her annual letter laying out the Google-owned company’s priorities, Wojcicki wasn’t specific about YouTube’s plans, but she made clear the popular video site will be playing in areas that have been heavily hyped of late.

“The past year in the world of crypto, non-fungible tokens (NFTs), and even decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) has highlighted a previously unimaginable opportunity to grow the connection between creators and their fans,” Wojcicki wrote.

“We’re always focused on expanding the YouTube ecosystem to help creators capitalize on emerging technologies, including things like NFTs, while continuing to strengthen and enhance the experiences creators and fans have on YouTube.”

Wojcicki said YouTube has been getting inspiration from “everything happening in Web3,” a term that’s been hotly debated on Twitter and has come to represent the next evolution of the internet, involving blockchain technologies, crypto and decentralized platforms. It’s a very different world from the current internet model dominated by Google and a handful of other giant corporations over the past two decades.

YouTube is the latest social media company to adopt such futuristic language and steer its strategy around the idea of a changing digital economy. YouTube, in vague terms, is telling creators that they’ll have ways to earn money as the new model arises.

In the third quarter, YouTube ads revenue rose 43% to $7.21 billion from $5.04 billion a year ago, matching Google’s overall revenue growth. The company reports fourth-quarter earnings next week.

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Wojcicki also said YouTube is planning to go deeper in podcasting, which would provide another avenue for distribution and promotion.

“As podcast usage continues to grow, we expect it to be an integral part of the creator economy,” Wojcicki wrote.

Google has been ramping up its effort to compete with TikTok in short viral videos. Wojcicki said that YouTube’s rival product called Shorts has hit “5 trillion all-time views” since it was introduced in 2020. The last time Google provided an update on usage was July 2021, when CEO Sundar Pichai said Shorts were garnering 15 billion daily views.

Wojcicki said the company is now in the early phases of testing how shopping can be integrated with Shorts. She also wrote of YouTube’s plans to hire more people so it can provide creators with more specific details when it comes to policy violations.

Her letter closed by touching on regulation, an area of heightened importance for Google, which faces numerous investigations in the U.S. and abroad for alleged monopoly control and the spread of misinformation.

“We currently comply with regulation in countries across the globe,” Wojcicki wrote. “But we also have concerns about new regulation that could have unintended consequences that would impact the creator community, particularly around the regulation of legal speech.”

Link to Original Source

Submission + - SPAM: Open Source Community to Gather in Los Angeles for SCALE

An anonymous reader writes: After a 2 year COVID hiatus, SCALE is back for its 19th year of open source community gathering, education, and entertainment. SCALE is the largest community run open source conference in North America, drawing over 3500 attendees annually. This year will include keynotes by Aeva Black, Vint Cerf, Seamus Blackley, and Demetris Cheatham.
Link to Original Source

Submission + - SPAM: Fortnite and the SCI-FI behind it

PenPaperPins writes: Fortnite may be a battle royale supported Science and it’s very cool, the story revolves around the island, not as in most games where the story is usually about characters. Which apparently could be a real stuff a minimum of in physics. It's described because the lowest point of energy within the universe, it exists everywhere because it makes up quantum vacuum energy which could be a special case of zero-point energy.
Link to Original Source

Submission + - Scientists Find a Means to Boil Water More Efficiently (mit.edu)

joshuark writes: MIT engineers design surfaces that boil more efficiently.

The improved efficiency comes from a combination of three different kinds of surface modifications, at different size scales. The new findings are described in the journal Advanced Materials in a research paper.

The potential impact of the improved efficiency; boiling water is an energy-intensive step at the heart of a wide range of industrial processes, including most electricity generating plants, many chemical production systems, and even cooling systems for electronics.

Perhaps this discovery will give new meaning to the old adage, "A watched pot never boils..."

Josh K.

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Disable web-assembly to reduce browser-based abuse?

Tablizer writes: This Github bloglet by Steve Springett suggests disabling WASM (Web Assembly) in browsers for security purposes unless you need it often, and includes commands for switching it off in the common browsers. WASM potentially has some of the same risks that Java Applets and Flash did. What's Slashdotters view of this?

Browsers should have a way to easily disable it, including whitelisting. For example, if you need it for specific gaming site, you can whitelist just that site and not have WASM exposed for other sites.

Submission + - National Safety Shelters Partners With School District to Improve School Securit (globenewswire.com)

Joce640k writes:

PORT SAINT LUCIE, Fla., July 12, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A recent survey conducted with school teachers indicates that nearly half are contemplating transferring schools or quitting altogether due to their concerns about safety. The time to invest in better safety and security measures for schools is now. As the Quitman School District in Arkansas can attest, installing and utilizing National Safety Shelters' safety pods has made a positive impact on the peace of mind of parents and educators and has been the catalyst for driving more revenue and enrollment.

The Quitman school board made the decision to install National Safety Shelters' safety pods in every classroom in 2018. Superintendents and school board members from other districts who have since personally toured the Quitman campus emphatically remarked that the safety pods are the best safety feature that a school district could invest in to protect their students and staff.


Submission + - How One Company Survived a Ransomware Attack Without Paying the Ransom (esecurityplanet.com)

storagedude writes: The first signs of the ransomware attack at data storage vendor Spectra Logic were reports from a number of IT staffers about little things going wrong at the beginning of the day. Matters steadily worsened within a very short time and signs of a breach became apparent. Screens then started to display a ransom demand, which said files had been encrypted by the NetWalker ransomware virus. The ransom demand was $3.6 million, to be paid in bitcoin within five days.

Tony Mendoza, Senior Director of Enterprise Business Solutions at Spectra Logic, laid out the details of the attack at the annual Fujifilm Recording Media USA Conference in San Diego late last month, as reported by eSecurity Planet.

“We unplugged systems, as the virus was spreading faster than we could investigate,” Mendoza told conference attendees. “As we didn’t have a comprehensive cybersecurity plan in place, the attack brought the entire business to its knees.”

To make matters worse, backups were also corrupted, but with the help of recovery specialist Ankura, uncorrupted snapshots and tape backups helped the company get back online in days, although full recovery took a month.

“We were able to restore everything and paid nothing,” said Mendoza. “Other than a few files, all data was recovered.”

The attack, which started from a successful phishing attempt, "took us almost a month to fully recover and get over the ransomware pain," said Mendoza.

Submission + - What will remain of all of us? 1

InterGuru writes: When geology reduces the evidence of man to a thin geological layer, what other evidence will remain?
The high communication satellites and the James Webb telescope will still be there.
When the dying sun expands and perhaps engulfs and vaporizes the Earth, the Mars landers may survive.
The two deep-space probes that have left the solar system will probably survive until the end of the Universe.

Submission + - SPAM: LEGO Pulls out of Russia, Indefinitely

joshuark writes: LEGO, the Danish toymaker, is pulling out of Russia indefinitely. LEGO had been one of the few Western companies that remained after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

A spokeswoman stated, "When the Lego Group stopped shipments to Russia in early March, we also ceased all commercial activity and put almost all our employees on extended leave."

The invasion of Ukraine was not mentioned for their definite, indefinite pullout, and LEGO did not directly comment on the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

However, they are definite in this indefinite time frame.

Link to Original Source

Submission + - Covid learning loss has been a global disaster (economist.com)

schwit1 writes:

When covid-19 first began to spread around the world, pausing normal lessons was a forgivable precaution. No one knew how transmissible the virus was in classrooms; how sick youngsters would become; or how likely they would be to infect their grandparents. But disruptions to education lasted long after encouraging answers to these questions emerged.

New data suggest that the damage has been worse than almost anyone expected. Locking kids out of school has prevented many of them from learning how to read properly. Before the pandemic 57% of ten-year-olds in low and middle-income countries could not read a simple story, says the World Bank. That figure may have risen to 70%, it now estimates. The share of ten-year-olds who cannot read in Latin America, probably the worst-affected region, could rocket from around 50% to 80% (see chart 1).

Children who never master the basics will grow up to be less productive and to earn less. McKinsey, a consultancy, estimates that by 2040 education lost to school closures could cause global gdp to be 0.9% lower than it would otherwise have been—an annual loss of $1.6trn. The World Bank thinks the disruption could cost children $21trn in earnings over their lifetimes—a sum equivalent to 17% of global gdp today. That is much more than the $10trn it had estimated in 2020, and also an increase on the $17trn it was predicting last year.


Submission + - NSF to Match Dollars Tech Billionaires Spend on Kids' STEM Education Research 1

theodp writes: One of the criticisms of philanthropic strategies that require the government to match private sector donor grants with tax revenues is that they can effectively skew the priorities of democratically elected governments to support the wealthy philanthropists' interests over those of the community. But that downside didn't discourage the National Science Foundation (NSF) — which has a $10.5 billion budget request pending for FY 2023 — from agreeing to match millions of dollars in grants for K-12 STEM education research from charities founded by the billionaire ex-CEOs of Microsoft and Google.

On Wednesday, the NSF issued a press release with details on what the agency called a 'historic collaboration': "Today, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), together with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Schmidt Futures, and Walton Family Foundation announced a new [$8.6 million] partnership to help fund initiatives that will improve the quality of U.S. STEM education for all students, particularly those whose talents, intelligence, and entrepreneurship have been underutilized in the nation’s STEM enterprise. NSF will be matching the money from the foundations for each funded activity."

In May, the NSF issued a Dear Colleague Letter advising STEM education researchers seeking funding of its collaboration with the tech billionaires' nonprofits, which the NSF said it hoped would "conceptualize and consolidate viable infrastructure ideas to support STEM education research that will transform teaching and learning." A recent $2.87 million grant disclosure suggests the Gates Foundation is the biggest private sector backer of the NSF collaboration. Bill Gates has long advocated for K-12 STEM education, as has Eric Schmidt. Back in 2010, the movie Waiting for 'Superman lamented how U.S. public schools are producing 'American Idiots' of no use to high tech firms like Microsoft in a segment that featured an interview with Gates and highlighted his Congressional lobbying for STEM education.

Submission + - Rogers services down across Canada (www.cbc.ca)

Toth writes: Telecommunications giant Rogers is experiencing a massive outage on Friday morning that is impacting wireless, cable and internet customers across the country.

The outage began some time in the early hours of Friday morning, with a wide variety of services impacted.

"We are currently experiencing an outage across our wireline and wireless networks and our technical teams are working hard to restore services as quickly as possible," a spokesperson for the company told CBC News Friday.

"On behalf of all of us at Rogers, we sincerely apologize to our customers, and we will continue to keep you updated as we have more information to share, including when we expect service to be back up. Thank you for your patience as we work to resolve this issue."

Internet monitoring watchdog group Netblocks.org reports that total internet traffic in Canada was at 75 per cent of its normal level on Friday morning.

Submission + - Rogers Communications down. No cell service or Internet for millions in Canada (www.cbc.ca)

farrellj writes: Eary Friday morning, Rogers Communications ((TSX:RCI.B)(NYSE:RCI)) network went down. As the third-largest Cell and Internet provider in Canada, that means millions of Canadians have no contact with the outside world. Rogers also provides connectivity for INTERAC bank and debit services, so people currently can only use cash for their purchases. In many places, they also provide 911 Emergency services, and that is unavailable, too. The call centers themselves are still available, I assume they have multiple/redundant service providers, and users of other cell networks can still call 911. Internet traffic across Canada is down by 25% due to this outage. Currently, there is no indication of when they will be back online, or what has caused the outage.

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