Techmeme
May 22, 2023, 4:20 PM

Top News

Sam Schechner / Wall Street Journal:
The EU fines Meta €1.2B for sending European user data to the US, a record GDPR fine, and orders Meta to end the transfers and delete the data within six months  —  Decision places pressure on Washington to implement surveillance changes for Europe to allow Meta to keep the data spigot open
More: Meta, TechCrunch, Data Protection Commission, New York Times, European Data Protection Board, noyb.eu, Politico, The Verge, Reuters, BleepingComputer, Bloomberg, The Guardian, Washington Post, European Data Protection Board, BBC, CNN, Ars Technica, CSO, Fast Company, Sky News, NPR, The Register, Search Engine Land, SiliconANGLE, CNBC, Insider, Fortune, Financial Times, ABC News, Reuters, Thurrott, Associated Press, ZDNet, Castlebridge, CCIA, Real Facebook Oversight Board, The Week, The Record, Security Affairs, Wired, Engadget, RTÉ, GovInfoSecurity.com, Silicon Valley Business …, PetaPixel, iPhone in Canada Blog, Observer, TIME, Quartz, Total Telecom, The Information, Bloomberg, The Hill, The Guardian, Cryptopolitan, Silicon Republic, 9to5Mac, SC Media, Tech Monitor, Reclaim The Net, Neowin, BGR, KnowTechie, zylstra.org, BetaNews, BigTechWire, RestorePrivacy, Infosecurity, MarTech, New York Post, WinBuzzer, SlashGear, iMore, 24/7 Wall St., gHacks Technology News, Tech Startups, Tech Xplore, Security Boulevard, WRAL TechWire, AppleInsider, and Slashdot
Chloe Xiang / VICE:
Some blue-check Twitter accounts, one pretending to be Bloomberg, spread an AI-generated image of an explosion at the Pentagon; the stock market briefly dipped  —  An AI-generated image of a fake explosion near the Pentagon went viral thanks to blue-check Twitter accounts.  —  Chloe Xiang
James Vincent / The Verge:
Some users say Twitter is restoring tweets and retweets that they had deleted, in what appears to be a new bug  —  Earlier this year on the 8th of May I deleted all my tweets, just under 5,000 of them. … This morning, though, I discovered that Twitter has restored a handful of my old re-tweets …
New York Times:
After Google Photos labeled two Black people as “gorillas” in June 2015, photo apps from Google, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft still can't identify most primates  —  Eight years after a controversy over Black people being mislabeled as gorillas by image analysis software …
John Harris / The Guardian:
An interview with AI researcher Timnit Gebru on her controversial sacking by Google in 2020, biases in AI and Big Tech, racism in Silicon Valley, and more  —  The Ethiopian-born computer scientist lost her job after pointing out the inequalities built into AI.
Devin Coldewey / TechCrunch:
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, President Greg Brockman, and Chief Scientist Ilya Sutskever say we'll likely need an international regulatory body for superintelligence  —  AI is developing rapidly enough and the dangers it may pose are clear enough that OpenAI's leadership believes that the world needs …
Paul Alcorn / Tom's Hardware:
Top500: 121 of the fastest supercomputers globally are powered by AMD's silicon, up 29% YoY; AMD also powers seven of the top ten systems on the Green500 list  —  AMD's silicon churns out the flops.  —  The Top 500 list of the fastest supercomputers in the world was released today …
Ivan Mehta / TechCrunch:
Kellen Browning / New York Times:
Email: Uber suspends its diversity head, Bo Young Lee, for hosting sessions on race titled “Don't Call Me Karen”, which attendees felt were insensitive to PoC  —  The executive hosted sessions about race and being a white woman that were titled “Don't Call Me Karen,” prompting an employee uproar.
Wall Street Journal:
China's Micron ban may boost Samsung's and SK Hynix's sales, an uncomfortable position for South Korea given the companies' exposure to Chinese and US pressure  —  Samsung, SK Hynix would be best positioned to fill Micron's void, though geopolitical pressure from both Beijing and Washington make for a tough choice
Bloomberg:
Sidhartha Shukla / Bloomberg:
A researcher says hackers took over crypto mixer Tornado Cash on May 20 using a malicious governance proposal to give themselves fake votes to gain full control  —  Tornado Cash, a service that allows users to mask cryptocurrency transactions, suffered a hostile takeover by hackers through a malicious governance proposal.
RT Watson / The Block:
Australian blockchain-based fitness app Stepn says iOS users can now buy and sell NFTs inside its app, signaling that Apple may have softened its crypto policy  —  - Stepn users will be able to buy, sell and trade the game's NFT sneakers without having to leave the app.

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Earlier Picks

Subhrojit Mallick / The Economic Times:
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