Facebook knew about Russian meddling well before the US election

Despite once saying that it was "crazy" to believe Russians influenced the 2016 election, Facebook knew about a possible operation as early as June, 2016, the Washington Post reports. It only started taking it seriously after President Obama met privately with CEO Mark Zuckerberg ahead of Trump’s inauguration. He warned that if the social network didn’t take action to mitigate fake news and political agitprop, it would get worse during the next election. Obama’s aids are said to regret not doing more to handle the problem.

At the time, Zuckerberg admitted the social network knew about problems, but told Obama that it wasn’t widespread and that there wasn’t a lot Facebook could do in any case. In June 2016, Facebook’s security team found suspicious accounts set up by the Kremlin-backed APT28 hacking team, also known as Guccifer 2.0, the Post says.

However, it found no solid proof of Russian disinformation and turned over everything it found to the US government. Reportedly, neither US law enforcement nor national security personnel met with Facebook to share or discuss the information.

After Obama pulled Zuckerberg aside, Facebook starting taking the problem more seriously, but again failed to find clear links to Russian operatives, the WaPo says. On July 20th this year, Facebook actually told CNN that "we have seen no evidence that Russian actors bought ads on Facebook in connection with theh election."

It finally uncovered proof of suspicious activity after tracking a firm called the Internet Research Agency, a known Russian hacking operation. By working backwards, it discovered over 3,000 ads around social and political issues it had posted between 2015 and 2017.

Right now they are operating in an arena where they have some, but very few, legal responsibilities. We are going to keep seeing examples of this kind, and at some point the jig is going to be up and the regulators are going to act.

Putin-backed Russian groups paid up to $100,000 to buy the ads, and boosted anti-immigrant rallies in Idaho, among other activities. Facebook recently turned over the ads to the US Intelligence Committee and congressional investigators, who say the findings are likely just "the tip of the iceberg." Facebook executives will also testify before a Senate Intelligence committee.

While it appears that Facebook turned over any evidence to US law enforcement as soon as it found it, ads and fake news are filtered mostly by algorithms. Facebook’s human content gatekeepers, often contractors, are mostly on the watch for violent or sexually explicit materials, not foreign propaganda.

In response the latest report, a company spokesman says that "we believe in the power of democracy, which is why we’re taking this work on elections integrity so seriously, and have come forward at every opportunity to share what we’ve found."

However, many observers think that Facebook can’t be trusted on the problem. "It’s rooted in their overconfidence that they know best, their naivete about how the world works, their extensive effort to avoid oversight and their business model of having very few employees so that no one is minding the store," Professor Zeynep Tufekci from UNC Chapel Hill told the Post.

Other critics believe that Facebook is going to need much more oversight. "Right now they are operating in an arena where they have some, but very few, legal responsibilities," Stanford Law School scholar Morgan Weiland told The Atlantic earlier this month. "We are going to keep seeing examples of this kind, and at some point the jig is going to be up and the regulators are going to act."

Source: The Washington Post

from Engadget http://ift.tt/2xAoRCG
via IFTTT

An Air Conditioner That Works Without Electricity

An Air Conditioner That Works Without Electricity

Sure, most people in first world countries take air conditioning for granted, but for people living in Africa or India where many do not even have electricity, AC is a luxury the vast majority cannot afford.

But now, thanks to the people from New Delhi’s Ant Studio, cooling your home without electricity is now a possibility! The studio has worked with Deki Electronics to create the “Beehive,” a device that is composed of hundreds of terracotta clay tubes arranged in a circular metal frame that can blow cool air inside your home with no electric power!

Here’s how the device works:

When soaked, the terracotta tubes absorb the water, and evaporate cool breezes as warm air pushes through them. It’s low maintenance, economical (due to the low cost and high availability of clay), and kind to the environment. “As an architect, I wanted to find a solution that is ecological and artistic, and at the same time evolves traditional craft methods,” Monish Siripurapu, founder of Ant Studio, told Arch Daily.

[Via Neatorama | Bored Panda]

Advertisement



Geeks are Sexy
General, Technology

0 Comments

from [Geeks Are Sexy] Technology News http://ift.tt/2fuYOq9
via IFTTT

App That Paid Users to Exercise Owes Nearly $1 Million for Not Paying Users to Exercise

In the capitalistic nightmare we live in, everything has to be a transaction. So, when Pact launched its fitness app that let you make money for working out—or else pay a fee for failing to do so—it seemed to be the perfect motivational tool. There was just one problem: The company apparently wasn’t that great at paying up, and was it too good at collecting fees.

Article preview thumbnail

If you have a gym membership, there’s a good chance you’re just throwing your money away. …

Read more

On Thursday, the FTC announced that it has settled its complaint against the makers of Pact for failing to live up to their agreement with users. A $1.5 million judgment will be partially suspended based on Pact’s apparent lack of funds, the FTC writes, but Pact will be required to pay out $948,788 to customers who were wronged by the company.

Supported by investors like PayPal co-founder Max Levchin, Pact was initially called GymPact before it changed its name to reflect its additional meal-tracking features. The idea behind the app was relatively straightforward: A user could set a goal like, “I’ll go the gym for an hour five days in a row.” Then, the user set an amount of money that they’d be willing to pay as a penalty if they failed to meet their goal. When setting a goal, the app would tell you how much money you’d be rewarded with if you managed to achieve your goal—usually a small amount that was pulled from the pool of failures out there. At first, Pact had a deal with thousands of gyms that the user could check into and that feature was expanded to GPS tracking.

It seems like many people had a good experience with Pact since it launched in 2012. iMedical Apps, a site that covers medical apps, ran a positive review in 2014. After two years of use, the reviewer claimed they’d earned $147.17. PC Magazine ran a glowing review of the app in 2016 and gave it four-and-a-half out of five stars. When the company shut down in July, some users on Reddit were confused and disappointed. But not everyone loved it.

Article preview thumbnail

If you’re anything like me, one of your New Years Resolutions may have been to get in better…

Read more

According to the FTC complaint:

Defendants have not paid, and in fact have charged, many consumers who satisfied their pacts. These charges have ranged from $5 to $50 per purportedly missed activity. Moreover, many consumers who have attempted to cancel Defendants’ service instead have continued to be charged in subsequent weeks without their consent. Defendants have received at least tens of thousands of consumer complaints about unauthorized charges billed through the Pact app, with many consumers reporting hundreds of dollars of losses in such charges.

Pact, and its principals Yifan Zhang and Geoffrey Oberhofer, were accused of not clearly informing consumers about the charges they’d receive before they entered billing information—a violation of the Restore Online Shoppers’ Confidence Act. Pact also apparently failed to adequately inform users on how to cancel the service, resulting in months of overcharges for some.

The FTC names a few examples:

One military consumer complained that the defendants charged her for missed pacts when she could not get the app to recognize the gym at the Air Force base where she was stationed. Another consumer said she deleted her account but continued to be billed more than $500 in recurring charges.

What’s more, even though the folks at Pact acknowledged the bogus charges as a “known issue,” they proceeded to roll out the meal-tracking programs with the same problems.

It’s a particular sort of irony that a startup founded on the idea of paying a penalty for failing to live up to a pledge is ending its days by paying a penalty for failing to live up to a pledge. It’s an irony that feels all too familiar in the era of Juicero.

[FTC]

from Kotaku http://ift.tt/2xlVq5q
via IFTTT

DTV Shredder gets U.S. approval, hauls tracks to dealers in October

Four years after going on sale in other global markets, the

DTV Shredder

— a motorized insolence described as “a combination of a tank, skateboard, and motocross bike” — has passed all the tests to become an American citizen. Formally introduced to the buying public during the weekend’s

AIM Expo

in Columbus, Ohio, the DTV Shredder rumbles into U.S.

dealers

in October. Shredder-maker

BPG Werks

won’t comment on U.S. pricing, but when the Shredder went on sale overseas in 2013, the

rumored

U.S. price was $5,000 to $5,500. Right now in the U.K., the Dual Tracked Vehicle sells for £4,500 minus the UK value-added tax — about $6,000 at current rates.

This new genus in powersports puts a 196-cc, one-cylinder, four-stroke, 14-horsepower engine between two rubber tank treads mounted to an aluminum and tubular steel frame. The rider stands over the engine on a skateboard-like deck with 15 degrees of lean, working the thumb throttle for speeds up to 25 miles per hour, leaning that deck and the jet-ski-like handlebars to turn with the help of two CVTs controlling tread speeds. Bolt on some hydraulic brakes, and the ready-to-ride package weighs 319 pounds and comes with claims of all-weather, all-terrain capability.

Translogic tested the Shredder

when it launched and walked away smiling, impressed, and tired. Sometime between then and now, the top speed dropped from 30 mph, perhaps because of the EPA-certified model’s addition of an electric carburetor, oil filter, pump, and cooler. Check out

Translogic

‘s review below.

Related Video:

from Autoblog http://ift.tt/2wPoSng
via IFTTT

In Devastated Dominica, ‘Hams’ Become Vital Communications Link

Brian Machesney (Call sign: K1LI), left, and Gordon Royner, Jr. (J73GAR), in Dominica earlier this year, discussing the operation of a ham radio set.

Michelle Guenard


hide caption

toggle caption

Michelle Guenard

Brian Machesney (Call sign: K1LI), left, and Gordon Royner, Jr. (J73GAR), in Dominica earlier this year, discussing the operation of a ham radio set.

Michelle Guenard

When Hurricane Maria smashed into the tiny island of Dominica in the Eastern Caribbean earlier this week, phone service went down, virtually cutting off the island. But within hours, amateur radio operators got on the air and have been providing a vital link to the outside world.

Speaking to ABS Television/Radio in his first interview since Maria made landfall, Dominican Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, on a visit Antigua, said at least 15 people were dead and at least 20 others missing amid “unprecedented” destruction.

View of damage caused the day before by Hurricane Maria in Roseau, Dominica, on Wednesday.

AFP/Getty Images


hide caption

toggle caption

AFP/Getty Images

View of damage caused the day before by Hurricane Maria in Roseau, Dominica, on Wednesday.

AFP/Getty Images

An estimated 95 percent of roofs on homes in some towns were blown off in the 160 mph winds brought by the hurricane, which topped out at Category 5 when it hit the island. Debris-strewn roads are impassable, he said. “We have to access villages by sea and also by helicopter,” said Skeritt, whose own home was among those severely damaged in the storm.

“Every village on Dominica, every street, every cranny, every person was impacted by the hurricane,” he told ABS, saying that the main hospital in the capital Roseau is without power because authorities are afraid of starting back-up generators due to extensive flooding.

“It has been brutal. We have never seen such destruction. Unprecedented,” he said.

Shortly before the storm struck, ham-radio enthusiasts Michelle Guenard and her husband, Brian Machesney, set up a Facebook page from their home in Craftsbury, Vt., to act as a clearing house for whatever information they could glean through the ham airwaves via ham operators on Dominica, many of whom they know personally. There’s also a livestream of the HF radio frequency being used for the emergency network.

The couple have been traveling to Dominica on and off for the past decade, where they’ve trained ham operators, helping get them licensed, bringing in radio equipment and getting them set up.

“We know through these emergency situations that ham radio is the only way to get information when everything else goes down,” Guenard tells NPR.

One of the operators the couple helped train, Gordon Royer, Jr. is now a primary contact in hard-hit Roseau.

Guenard says that Dominica’s mountainous interior complicates radio communications from one side of the island to the other, so hams use a mid-island repeater, known as echolink. Remarkably, echolink survived the storm intact.

Michelle Guenard, left, and husband Brian Machesney, overlooking Scott’s Head and Soufriere Bay, Dominica, earlier this year.

Tom Stearns


hide caption

toggle caption

Tom Stearns

Michelle Guenard, left, and husband Brian Machesney, overlooking Scott’s Head and Soufriere Bay, Dominica, earlier this year.

Tom Stearns

Although many ham operators lost antennas in the ferocious winds, they’ve been able to “put up a scrap of wire” and get back on the air, Guenard says. A second repeater, based in nearby St. Lucia, has also been pressed into service “kind of like smoke signals from one mountain top to the next,” she tells NPR.

The storm passed over Dominica around midnight on Monday. By Tuesday afternoon, hams were broadcasting reports of damage, she says. “For the longest time, the chatter was very basic reports. No one could get anywhere” to see the extent of the destruction.

Gradually, more detailed reports started to flow in.

“The way the storm hit, all of the palm trees came off the island to the west and then swept back in,” leaving the island “armpit deep in timber,” she says.

“They are having to go from town to town via fishing boat,” she says. “But they haven’t been able to get anywhere except for major ports.”

Which means it could be some time before the full extent of the death and destruction is known, Guenard says.

One of the two cell phone providers on the island has reportedly managed to restore service in some areas, but customers are being asked to use text only to keep from overwhelming the still-fragile network.

For the moment anyway, Dominica’s ham radio is more reliable.

from NPR Topics: News http://ift.tt/2wK5GT1
via IFTTT

To save the planet, scientists figured out how to fix cow farts

Raising cattle contributes to global warming in a big way. The animals expel large amounts of methane when they burp and fart, a greenhouse gas many times more potent than carbon dioxide. U.S. beef production, in fact, roughly equals the annual emissions of 24 million cars, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists. That’s a lot of methane.

Still, most people probably wouldn’t be inclined to swap their juicy steak for a bowl of beans.

Researchers think there may be a better way. Rather than ask people to give up beef, they are trying to design more climate-friendly cattle. The goal is to breed animals with digestive systems that can create less methane. One approach is to tinker with the microbes that live in the rumen, the main organ in the animals’ digestive tract. These tiny organisms enable fermentation during digestion and produce the methane released by the cattle.

Scientists in the United Kingdom last year found that a cow’s genes influence the makeup of these microbial communities, which include bacteria and also Archaea, the primary producers of methane. This discovery means cattle farmers potentially could selectively breed animals that end up with a lower ratio of Archaea-to-bacteria, thus leading to less methane.

“The methanogens — or Archaea, which produce methane — are totally different from bacteria, so we could determine their abundances in the rumen samples,” said Rainer Roehe, professor of animal genetics at Scotland’s Rural College. Roehe studied the composition of microbes in sample animals and established that the host animals’ genes were responsible for their makeup. “The higher the Archaea-to-bacteria ratio, the larger the amount of methane emissions,” he said.

His study, which appeared in PLOS Genetics, recently won the journal’s prestigious genetics research prize. The journal called the work “the first step toward breeding low-emission cattle, which will become increasingly important in the face of growing global demand for meat.” The research identified specific microbial “profiles,” that is, combinations of microbes, which could help determine which cattle digest their feed more efficiently, and emit less methane.

“These can then be used as selection criteria to mitigate methane emissions,” Roehe said. “The selection to reduce methane emissions would be permanent, cumulative and sustainable over generations as with any other trait, such as growth rate, milk yield, etc. used in animal breeding.” This, over time, “would have a substantial impact on methane emissions from livestock,” Roehe said.

He predicted the approach not only would reduce the environmental footprint of beef production, but it would also enable farmers to produce meat more cost effectively. It also likely would improve animals’ health and improve the quality of meat, since rumen microbial fermentation enhances the production of omega-3 fatty acids, he said.

He and his colleagues tested 72 animals — eight descendants from each of nine sires — in order to predict the effect of their genes on the microbial community, Roehe explained. “The only common factor of these progenies was its genes inherited from its sire,” he said.

“Archaea and bacteria are available in the rumen of all ruminates,” he said. “What we determined are the abundances of these Archaea and bacteria in the rumen of each animal and then calculated their ratio, which was correlated to methane emissions.”

They analyzed the samples and found that inherited genes “influenced significantly methane emissions [and] the Archaea-to-bacteria ratio,” he said. They determined that more than 80 percent of the methane emissions could be explained by the “relative abundance” of 20 genes, he said. Even with different diets and different breeds of cattle, the outcome remained the same. “That means that the animals’ genetics shapes the composition of its own microbial community,” he said.

There also likely are biological factors involved, including salvia production, which influences pH in the rumen — “and thus the living conditions of the rumen microbial community” — the physical size, structural differences and contraction of the rumen, which affects the rate at which digested food passes through the rumen, and even “crosstalk” between rumen microbes and other cells, he said.

In practice, breeders would need rumen samples from many animals to determine their genetic makeup. While the research still is in the experimental stages, Roehe said, “we are working with breeding organizations together to prove the efficiency of the system under practical conditions.”

Marlene Cimons writes for Nexus Media, a syndicated newswire covering climate, energy, policy, art and culture.

from Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now http://ift.tt/2wD2dul
via IFTTT

Check Your L.A. Home’s Likelihood of Collapsing During an Earthquake With This Tool

The recent earthquakes in Mexico, including a 7.1 that just decimated Mexico City, are raising eyebrows in Southern California, where a “big one” has been expected for years. If you live in the Los Angeles area, you might want to know how safe your building is.

http://ift.tt/2hkUk2a

Article preview thumbnail

Depending on where you live, earthquakes can be fairly common. They may not be the earth-shattering …

Read more

This tool from the Los Angeles Times uses data from the L.A. Department of Building and Safety and the L.A. Country Assessor to highlight buildings in danger of collapse during an earthquake. Officials have identified nearly 13,500 of these “soft-story” buildings around Los Angeles that may be in need of retrofitting to prevent any serious damage or injury. Most of the large apartment buildings are in the San Fernando Valley, but buildings at risk can be found all throughout the county. To check on your home, all you need to do is head to the link below and plug in your street name and zip code.

Do you know if your L.A. home is at risk in an earthquake? | Los Angeles Times

from Lifehacker http://ift.tt/2hjI85F
via IFTTT