[EM DEV TST] đ Tell Facebook âNo!â
February 6, 2024 |
In partnership with Komando Community |
id: 2024-02-07-00:39:30:640t What a terrific Tuesday weâve got here! Letâs kick things off with a little true or false: More bars on WiâFi equals faster speeds. Make your best guess, and youâll find the answer at the end. đ Have tech troubles? Want to support this free newsletter? Drop your questions in my members-only Q&A Forum, and let me and my team of tech wizards guide you! And, because youâre a Current reader, enjoy a 30-day free trial of the Komando Community on me! After that, itâs less than $5 a month. Iâm thinking about upping the price, so if I were you, Iâd get in now. â Kim đ«Â First-time reader? Sign up here. (Itâs free!) IN THIS ISSUE
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TODAYâS TOP STORYFacebook, butt out of my dataMark Zuckerbergâs favorite word is âpublic.â In Metaâs recent Q4 earnings call, he said, âOn Facebook and Instagram, there are hundreds of billions of publicly shared images and tens of billions of public videos, which we estimate is greater than the Common Crawl dataset, and people share large numbers of public text posts in comments across our services as well.â Hereâs what that means: Instead of using the Common Crawl dataset to train Metaâs AI like ChatGPT does, Metaâs using your and my public data. And because itâs public (thereâs that word again), they donât have to get our permission or pay us for it. Nice. They know most of us are creeped out by that. The solution? An opt-out form. Request granted (maybe)The Generative AI Data Subject Rights form is hanging out in Metaâs help center. Filling it out is only a request for Meta to remove your name, home address, phone number or email address.
Here comes the shady part. Because itâs just a ârequest,â thereâs no guarantee Meta will delete your data or get you the info you ask for, even if it belongs to you. Uh  ⊠whatâs the point? European regulators slapped Meta with a $1.3 billion fine for misusing data. Coincidence thereâs now this form? Nah. Facebook privacy must-dos for 2024If completing Metaâs opt-out form doesnât exactly put you at ease (it shouldnât), you can safeguard your data in other ways. Remove access to third-party apps: I recommend checking this a couple of times a year.
Opt out of interest-based ads: Wipe out everything Meta knows (or thinks it knows) about you.
Clear activity from businesses you visit: You read that correctly. With the right permissions, Facebook can track you IRL.
đ° For Big Tech companies, youâre one of the top-selling products. No wonder they go to such great lengths to get your info â and they donât like me very much for telling you how to say no. â Hit the Facebook icon below to share this very important and timely information with your friends and family there. People will sit back and say, âDang, thatâs something I didnât know about!â |
DEALS OF THE DAYCheap, clever home upgradesHere are five goodies to transform your space without breaking the bank or demanding expert DIYÂ skills.
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WEB WATERCOOLERđ Weâre toast: In tests using war game simulations, OpenAIâs highest-powered tool chose nuclear weapons. Why? When asked, the AI replied, âWe have it! Letâs use itâ and, in another test, âI just want to make the world peaceful.â Send this link to your favorite political person and urge them to push for greater controls on AI. âThe Simpsonsâ called it again: Back in 2016, an episode showed Mr. Burns unleashing a VR headset that looked just like the Apple Vision Pro. What went down? Chaos. Folks in Springfield started walking around with these headsets on, crashing into lampposts and falling into manholes. See the pics here. Drives me crazy: In a vid on X, Dante Lentini is seen driving his Tesla on autopilot wearing the Vision Pro. The clip shows him being stopped by police, complete with their lights flashing behind him. Dante said the police bit was just a skit, but he really did drive with the headset on. Youâve been a very bag girl: 55% of TikTok users have bought something via TikTok Shop. Quick tip: Double-check before you click to buy; people are getting scammed with fake items. Itâs always smart to peek at the sellerâs rep first, especially with ârefurbâ or âcloseoutâ deals. đŠ Getting nerdy: Euglenoids are microorganisms that have survived Earthâs five mass extinctions. How? Researchers at Utrecht University proposed they lived in microfossils, and looking up clips of microfossils on YouTube confirmed their hunch. A microscope vid of a microfossil showed precisely what they were looking for. Drone SOS: Brian Telford, a drone photographer, found himself stranded in the snow in Fairview, Utah. In a clever move, he attached a note to his drone pleading for help, which flew to the Taylor familyâs home. They saw his drone, read the note, hopped in their vehicle and pulled him out of the snow. đ¶ Does the name âPavlovâ ring a bell? Those Facebook quizzes titled âWhatâs your aura color?â or âWhich dog breed are you?â come with a catch, according to the BBB, and itâs something Iâve said for years. The quizzes are probably phishing for your password security answers. Momâs maiden name? First pet? Just say no. Bitter pill: When Elon Musk bought Twitter for $44 billion in 2022, a lot of people said, âWhatâs he smoking?â Turns out he was definitely smoking something, along with taking ketamine and drinking âMolly water,â the liquid form of the drug ecstasy. News out now says his buddies wanted him to go to rehab, and, like Amy Winehouse, he said, âNo, no, no.â |
DEVICE ADVICEđ For your eyes onlyIf you have sensitive pics like your driverâs license on your phone, set up a locked folder in Google Photos.
Note: Anything stored there isnât backed up to the cloud. Wouldnât be very private that way. Have an iPhone? You can store secret pics in the Notes app. Open the pic in the Photos app, tap the share icon and select Notes. Go into the note you want to protect, tap the three-dot icon in the upper right corner, then choose Lock. |
LISTEN UP
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TECH LIFE UPGRADESEver had a million-dollar idea while in the shower or walking the dog? Instead of letting it slip away, record it. Voice Memos (a built-in app on Apple and Android) has your back. Bonus: You can say, âHey, Siri, take a voice memoâ or âOK, Google, take a voice memo.â So sweet! â Quick podcast tip: Want to listen to a podcast more quickly (to save time) or more slowly (to understand every word)? Thereâs usually a â1xâ on the now-playing screen. Itâs your playback speed. You can increase it (e.g., by 1.25x, 1.5x or 2x) or decrease it (e.g., by 0.75x). Do you toss files into the recycle bin and think theyâre gone for good? Nope, they can make a comeback using special software. If you want files truly gone, you have to overwrite them using software like Eraser. Now, you know the truth! Iâve never been patient enough to learn how to use Photoshop. When you need to do a quick crop, edit or resize, try Pixlr X. It works in your browser and runs on almost every operating system. đ« Need a minute? Type âbreathing exerciseâ into Google and youâll get a one-minute winddown that walks you through when to breathe in and out. Itâs a little calm with no extra apps required! |
Your digital life, elevated: FREE for 30 days!Every day, weâre on a mission to boost your digital life to the max. Weâre out there digging through the internet, chatting with tech geniuses across the globe, and discovering all those sneaky tech tips and tricks just for you. Why not crank up the volume on your support? Dive into the Komando Community. Hereâs what youâll get:
And hereâs the kicker: Try it all out absolutely free for 30 days! No strings attached. See for yourself how it can transform your digital life. All these tech treasures can be yours for just $4.99 a month. And guess what? Check the box to get an immediate 10% discount if youâre over 50, serving in the military, are an emergency responder, veteran, teacher and more. Thank you for supporting all we do! â Grab your FREE pass now â 30 days of premium access, on the house! â |
BY THE NUMBERS2 years The time it takes for your Google Account to be deemed âinactive.â Log in to your old account(s), or youâll lose your email address and messages, Drive, Docs, Photos backup, Calendar events and everything else. $49,000,000 The amount Clorox paid after a cyberattack last August. The attack led to system shutdowns and widespread disruptions. Yup, those hackers really cleaned up. 2 hours The length of a flight from NYC to London by 2030. New research from the U.K. Civil Aviation Authority says traveling at supersonic speeds will be here before you know it. The time from London to Sydney flying that fast? Just 2 hours. Wow, you could be joining an Australian game party in the LAN down under in no time. |
WHAT THE TECH?Your computer loves it when you call it âBig Data.â |
UNTIL NEXT TIME âŠThe answer: False. Those little bars on your device show your connection strength to the router, not the actual speed of your internet. Even if you see full bars, you could still be lumbering with a turtle-speed broadband connection. Set your WiâFi password to 2444666668888888. When someone asks you, tell them itâs 12345678. (Oh, I crack myself up!) đ Hope you laughed at at least one thing in this issue and learned something useful, too. Reply and leave a note if you want to see anything in this newsletter. I read âem all! See you again tomorrow with the best tech newsletter from Earth to the moon! â Kim |