Amazon Luna game streaming comes to (some) Android devices

When Amazon launched the early access version of its Luna game streaming service in October, users could stream games to a PC, Mac, Amazon Fire TV device, or iPhones and iPads (thanks to a web app that works with Safari on iOS 14). Android users were …

When Amazon launched the early access version of its Luna game streaming service in October, users could stream games to a PC, Mac, Amazon Fire TV device, or iPhones and iPads (thanks to a web app that works with Safari on iOS 14). Android users were out of luck… until now. Amazon Luna is now […]

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Lilbits: Google acquires company that lets you turn Windows PCs into Chromebooks

A company called Neverware has been offering software called CloudReady that lets you turn old computers into pseudo Chromebooks since 2015. But in order to do that, the company has been using software based on Chromium OS, the open source version of …

A company called Neverware has been offering software called CloudReady that lets you turn old computers into pseudo Chromebooks since 2015. But in order to do that, the company has been using software based on Chromium OS, the open source version of Chrome OS. Now Google has acquired the company and, among other things, that […]

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FDA authorizes use of a nonprescription home COVID test

Test works with a cellphone app that can alert local health authorities.

Image of the test hardware next to a cell phone.

Enlarge (credit: Ellume)

The FDA's ability to issue Emergency Use Authorizations isn't limited to treatments; the administration can also hand them out for medical equipment and tests. And today, it approved the first over-the-counter, at-home SARS-CoV-2 test kit. The kit detects the presence of a protein found on the surface of the virus and sends the results to a user's smartphone via a Bluetooth connection. While it's less accurate than the diagnostic approaches used by large testing centers, the FDA cited an accuracy of over 90 percent when issuing the authorization.

This isn't the first at-home test kit given approval by the FDA. In November, the FDA issued an Emergency Use Authorization to a company called Lucira, which is offering a test that requires a prescription. Lucira's test is based on sensing the virus' genetic material, using a series of enzyme-catalyzed reactions that work at room temperature.

The new test comes from a company called Ellume and is based on identifying the presence of one of the virus' proteins. Typically, these tests rely on the use of antibodies to the protein, typically linked to a chemical that can induce a color change; Ellume tags its antibodies with fluorescent quantum dots. The sample—in Ellume's case, a swab of material from the nose—flows across the device while mixing with antibodies, producing a change in color at a specific location on the device.

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Ubuntu Linux on the GMK NucBox 2.4 inch mini PC

The GMK NucBox is a tiny computer that fits in the palm of your hand, but which is a full-fledged desktop computer with a 10-watt Intel Celeron J4125 quad-core processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 128GB SSD. It ships with Windows 10, and when I reviewed a pre…

The GMK NucBox is a tiny computer that fits in the palm of your hand, but which is a full-fledged desktop computer with a 10-watt Intel Celeron J4125 quad-core processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 128GB SSD. It ships with Windows 10, and when I reviewed a pre-release version of the NucBox this summer, I […]

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California fines Uber $59M for defending sexual assault victims’ privacy

Victim rights group RAINN said Calif. request risks “re-traumatization of victims.”

Young businesswoman sitting on backseat of a car using cell phone

Enlarge (credit: Westend61 / Getty)

The California Public Utility Commission has slapped Uber with a $59 million fine for refusing to hand over detailed records about more than 1,200 alleged sexual assaults involving Uber drivers in California between 2017 and 2019.

"The CPUC has been insistent in its demands that we release the full names and contact information of sexual assault survivors without their consent," Uber said in a Monday statement. "We opposed this shocking violation of privacy, alongside many victims’ rights advocates."

Uber disclosed the existence of thousands of sexual assaults nationwide in its 2019 safety report. Afterwards, the CPUC demanded detailed information about cases that occurred in California—including the time and place where assaults happened and names and contact information of witnesses. The CPUC order doesn't specifically ask for the names of victims. However, in many cases the victim would be the only witness, so CPUC was essentially seeking to unmask hundreds of sexual assault victims.

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California fines Uber $59M for defending sexual assault victims’ privacy

Victim rights group RAINN said Calif. request risks “re-traumatization of victims.”

Young businesswoman sitting on backseat of a car using cell phone

Enlarge (credit: Westend61 / Getty)

The California Public Utility Commission has slapped Uber with a $59 million fine for refusing to hand over detailed records about more than 1,200 alleged sexual assaults involving Uber drivers in California between 2017 and 2019.

"The CPUC has been insistent in its demands that we release the full names and contact information of sexual assault survivors without their consent," Uber said in a Monday statement. "We opposed this shocking violation of privacy, alongside many victims’ rights advocates."

Uber disclosed the existence of thousands of sexual assaults nationwide in its 2019 safety report. Afterwards, the CPUC demanded detailed information about cases that occurred in California—including the time and place where assaults happened and names and contact information of witnesses. The CPUC order doesn't specifically ask for the names of victims. However, in many cases the victim would be the only witness, so CPUC was essentially seeking to unmask hundreds of sexual assault victims.

Read 12 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Digitale-Märkte-Gesetz: EU-Kommission droht mit Zerschlagung von IT-Konzernen

Die EU will Missstände bei Plattformen mit einem neuen Gesetz bekämpfen. Als letztes Mittel ist eine Abspaltung von Firmenteilen nicht ausgeschlossen. (EU-Kommission, Google)

Die EU will Missstände bei Plattformen mit einem neuen Gesetz bekämpfen. Als letztes Mittel ist eine Abspaltung von Firmenteilen nicht ausgeschlossen. (EU-Kommission, Google)