Amazon plans to charge for Alexa in June—unless internal conflict delays revamp

Report claims Amazon is struggling to build a subscription version of Alexa.

Amazon Echo Show 8 with Alexa

Enlarge / Amazon demoed future generative AI capabilties for Alexa in September. (credit: Getty)

“If this fails to get revenue, Alexa is in trouble.”

A quote from an anonymous Amazon employee in a Wednesday Business Insider report paints a dire picture. Amazon needs its upcoming subscription version of Alexa to drive revenue in ways that its voice assistant never has before.

Amazon declined Ars' request for comment on the report. But the opening quote in this article could have been uttered by anyone following voice assistants for the past year-plus. All voice assistants have struggled to drive revenue since people tend to use voice assistants for basic queries, like checking the weather, rather than transactions.

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Indiana Jones and the Great Circle is a new first-person Nazi-whipping journey

Modern action/FPS is set inside Indy’s classic post-Ark, pre-Crusade era.

Indiana Jones in front of an alcove in a ruin.

Enlarge / CGI Harrison Ford just can't believe he's getting roped into another globe-trotting adventure. (credit: Bethesda/Machine Games)

Almost two years ago to this day, Bethesda told everyone its Machine Games subsidiary was working on a new Indiana Jones game, one with "an original story." Now we can see what Indiana Jones and the Great Circle is going to look like, with a gameplay trailer showing up during Microsoft's Developer Direct event, and when it's arriving: "2024." You can now wishlist it on Steam and the Xbox store; it's exclusive to those platforms.

Gameplay reveal trailer for Indiana Jones and the Great Circle.

While the game has Harrison Ford's likeness, it's not Ford voicing your character. Troy Baker, the original voice of Joel in The Last of Us, picks up the role of the archaeologist.

From the trailer, Great Circle looks a lot like the modern Wolfenstein games that Machine Games made—and that's a good thing. The New Order and The New Colossus excelled at making you feel more like a human action hero than a shooting tank. They've got a knack for first-person platforming, stunts, and cinematic moments that are nowhere near as painful as in many shooters. They excel at balancing immersing you as a player and letting your character have a personality.

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Samsung may charge users for Galaxy S24 AI features after 2 years

Samsung says Galaxy S24 AI features are “free until the end of 2025.”

Samsung may charge users for Galaxy S24 AI features after 2 years

Enlarge (credit: Samsung)

Samsung's big Galaxy S24 launch was yesterday, and to hear Samsung tell the story, the big highlight of the event was "Galaxy AI." Another view is that Galaxy AI is the usual bundle of baked-in Samsung features skinned on top of Android, but with generative AI being the hot new thing, Samsung went with AI-centric branding. Whatever value you want to place on Samsung's AI features, you might soon have to place an actual monetary value on them: Despite devices like the Galaxy S24 Ultra costing $1,300, Samsung might start charging for some of these AI phone features.

The fine print on Samsung's Galaxy S24 promotional page features 44 asterisks and footnotes, and tucked away in that pile of caveats is the line "Galaxy AI features will be provided for free until the end of 2025 on supported Samsung Galaxy devices." That means Samsung reserves the right to charge for Galaxy AI after 2025.

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Sky’s Industrial-Scale Pirate IPTV Blocking Becomes a War of Attrition

Last summer, Sky TV obtained a somewhat mysterious pirate IPTV blocking injunction at the High Court in London. In the months up to November 2023, that led to UK ISPs blocking at least 400 IPTV domains/subdomains, potentially many more. Available data today suggests a perpetual war of attrition on an unprecedented scale. In the last four weeks alone, Sky blocked almost 4,200 IPTV service URLs; the pirates’ response is simple: churn out more.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

blocked tvLast summer, UK broadcaster Sky obtained a High Court injunction that requires local ISPs to block pirate IPTV services illegally offering its content.

Blocking injunctions aren’t new or unusual but since limited information is made available to the public, anyone interested in the mechanisms involved and whether blocking is working must find out for themselves.

We were able to determine the names of at least some of the targeted services, including BunnyStream, Enigma Streams, GenIPTV, CatIPTV, GoTVMix and IPTVMain. A more puzzling aspect, at least initially, relates to the dynamic nature of the injunction which allows Sky to choose when to apply blocking measures and for how long.

The judge initially expressed concern that this would diminish the ability of the court to ensure that blocking remains proportional, and that aspects of the order could have an effect on the ISPs required to implement blocking.

Unprecedented Blocking Measures

The details of the judge’s concerns remain confidential but, since the UK’s other major ISPs didn’t object to the proposals, the injunction was granted. After around five months of live blocking under this injunction, it seems reasonably safe to conclude that the sheer volume of blocking was one of the key concerns.

In our report last November, we estimated that perhaps 400 domains/subdomains had already been blocked, but that was a) probably a low estimate and b) no indicator of what’s happening now.

As things stand this week, our best estimate is that Sky has blocked and/or is blocking over 4,500 domains/subdomains. By most standards, that is an incredible amount of blocking in such a short space of time.

As far as static website blocking goes, nothing has ever come close, not even when new domains start appearing and only dynamic injunctions can handle the job. This certainly doesn’t look like any ordinary job.

Ordinary (and less ordinary) Domains

While Sky has targeted many domains with an ordinary appearance, such as mainiptv.com, iptvmain.live, main-iptv.com, iptvmain.co.uk, geniptv.world, ky-iptv.com, mag.4k-beast.co, and gotvmix.org, the overwhelming majority are noticeably different.

sky-iptv-dga

The dynamic injunction targeting the IPTV providers can adapt to new challenges; the domains shown above are an example of a challenge dynamic injunctions need to overcome. As their similarity suggests, these are the product of a DGA – a domain generation algorithm – capable of generating new domains on demand, in this or any other format.

Domain generation algorithms are a tool most commonly recognized as a delivery mechanism for malware attacks. Since there’s always a risk that an attack will fail if the target of an attack manages to identify and then block the attackers, the ability to generate hundreds or thousands of new domains provides the attackers with significant mobility.

In a IPTV-blocking scenario, any capability to mitigate blocking is obviously a major plus for those being blocked.

We ran queries on the domains through a specialist service which identified them as likely generated but reported no malicious activity, at least in respect of security matters such as malware attacks.

Purpose of the Domains

Investigating these domains is possible to an extent but, since almost all operate from behind Cloudflare in this case, direct methods produce limited and disproportionately time-consuming results. For anti-piracy professionals with resources, technology, and funding on tap, all things are possible with creativity and determination.

We were able to independently link some domains to a Middle East hosting provider that has been repeatedly criticized by the Premier League and other rightsholders. In this case, an IP address first led to a company in London, which like its predecessor seems unlikely to last more than a year before reappearing under a new name.

Who’s Winning the War?

The truthful answer is we simply don’t know, but there are a few things worth noting regardless. Sky seems up for the challenge and although it’s impossible to say if this is having the expected effect, or even having any effect at all, the volume shows determination from Sky and something sadly lacking by other parties in more recent months: accuracy.

When blocking at this scale, errors seem almost inevitable. Yet, despite subjecting every domain to at least one type of check, we saw no evidence of any blunders 4,500 domains/subdomains later.

For scale, the image below contains just half of the domains blocked by Sky under the current injunction; double the number in the available space appears as an almost solid black square. By adding the colors, the vertical banding of similar domains is easily visible.

sky-blocked-iptv

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Bing Search shows few, if any, signs of market share increase from AI features

Bing’s US and worldwide market share is about the same as it has been for years.

Bing Search shows few, if any, signs of market share increase from AI features

Enlarge (credit: Microsoft)

Not quite one year ago, Microsoft announced a "multi-year, multi-billion dollar investment" in OpenAI, a company that had made waves in 2022 with its ChatGPT chatbot and DALL-E image creator. The next month, Microsoft announced that it was integrating a generative AI chatbot into its Bing search engine and Edge browser, and similar generative AI features were announced for Windows in the apps formerly known as Microsoft Office, Microsoft Teams, and other products.

Adding AI features to Bing was meant to give it an edge over Google, and reports indicated that Google was worried enough about it to accelerate its own internal generative AI efforts. Microsoft announced in March 2023 that Bing surpassed the 100 million monthly active users mark based on interest in Bing Chat and its ilk; by Microsoft's estimates, each percentage of Google's search market share that Bing could siphon away was worth as much as $2 billion to Microsoft.

A year later, it looks like Microsoft's AI efforts may have helped Bing on the margins, but they haven't meaningfully eroded Google's search market share, according to Bloomberg. Per Bloomberg's analysis of data from Sensor Tower, Bing usage had been down around 33 percent year over year just before the AI-powered features were added, but those numbers had rebounded by the middle of 2023.

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Unihertz Tank Mini 1 is a smaller, cheaper rugged phone built for the outdoors

A few months after launching the Unihertz Tank 3 rugged smartphone with a massive 23,800 mAh battery, Unihertz has unveiled a new model that’s significantly smaller and cheaper. But the Unihertz Tank Mini 1 keeps some of the rugged, outdoorsy fe…

A few months after launching the Unihertz Tank 3 rugged smartphone with a massive 23,800 mAh battery, Unihertz has unveiled a new model that’s significantly smaller and cheaper. But the Unihertz Tank Mini 1 keeps some of the rugged, outdoorsy features. The new smartphone has a 4.3 inch display and a rugged body with an […]

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Netflix won’t have a Vision Pro app, compromising the device’s appeal

You’ll be able to watch via the web browser, but that’s far from ideal.

Vision Pro will allow users to watch movies on a virtual TV set.

Enlarge / Vision Pro will allow users to watch movies on a virtual TV set. (credit: Apple)

In the leadup to Vision Pro preorders tomorrow, Apple has seemingly been prioritizing the message that the device will be an ideal way to watch movies and TV shows. In many ways, that might be true, but there's one major caveat: Netflix.

In a statement reported by Bloomberg today, Netflix revealed that it does not plan to offer an app for Vision Pro. Instead, users will have to use a web-based interface to watch the streaming service.

Netflix compares the experience to the Mac, but there are a few reasons this won't be an ideal experience for users. First, the iPad and iPhone mobile apps support offline viewing of downloaded videos. That's particularly handy for when you're flying, which is arguably one of the best use cases for Vision Pro.

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Daily Deals (1-18-2024)

The Kensington Expert Wireless Trackball Mouse is on sale for $66 at Amazon right now, down from its list price of $100. Trackballs can be a bit of an acquired taste – the learning curve is kind of steep if you’re used to using a mouse. Bu…

The Kensington Expert Wireless Trackball Mouse is on sale for $66 at Amazon right now, down from its list price of $100. Trackballs can be a bit of an acquired taste – the learning curve is kind of steep if you’re used to using a mouse. But since you don’t need to move your wrist […]

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Google lays off 100 at YouTube; CEO says more layoffs are coming

Sundar Pichai tells employees to brace for “tough choices… throughout the year.”

Google is looking pretty dilapidated these days.

Enlarge / Google is looking pretty dilapidated these days. (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Today's Google layoff announcement concerns YouTube, which plans to lay off 100 employees. Tubefilter was the first to report the news. This is the third Google layoff announcement in eight days (the other two were at Google Assistant/Hardware and Google Ads) and the 10th Google layoff announcement we've covered in the past 12 months. It feels like we could be doing this kind of reporting via a template by now.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai says to expect more layoffs. The Verge got hold of an internal memo from Pichai to Google's remaining employees on January 10, telling them to brace for "tough choices" in the future and that "to be upfront, some teams will continue to make specific resource allocation decisions throughout the year where needed, and some roles may be impacted." Last year Google cut 12,000 jobs in January and continued to make smaller additional cuts all year. Pichai told his employees that this year, "these role eliminations are not at the scale of last year’s reductions, and will not touch every team."

The January 10 date of the memo means Googlers got a heads up about the Google Assistant, Hardware, Google Ads, and YouTube layoffs, but no one knows when the layoffs will stop. Making investors happy is a big factor in all these layoffs, so if you're interested in the Wall Street perspective on Google's headcount, back in March 2023, activist investor Christopher Hohn of TCI Fund Management wanted to see Pichai cut another 25,000 people after the 12,000 original layoffs. Hohn wants to see Alphabet/Google go back to 150,000 employees, which was the company headcount at the end of 2021.

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Game developer survey: 50% work at a studio already using generative AI tools

But 84% of devs are at least somewhat concerned about ethical use of those tools.

The future of game development?

Enlarge / The future of game development? (credit: Getty Images)

A new survey of thousands of game development professionals finds a near-majority saying generative AI tools are already in use at their workplace. But a significant minority of developers say their company has no interest in generative AI tools or has outright banned their use.

The Game Developers Conference's 2024 State of the Industry report, released Thursday, aggregates the thoughts of over 3,000 industry professionals as of last October. While the annual survey (conducted in conjunction with research partner Omdia) has been running for 12 years, this is the first time respondents were asked directly about their use of generative AI tools such as ChatGPT, DALL-E, GitHub Copilot, and Adobe Generative Fill.

A full 49 percent of the survey's developer respondents said that generative AI tools are currently being used in their workplace. That near-majority includes 31 percent (of all respondents) that say they use those tools themselves and 18 percent that say their colleagues do.

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