Oh Good, Hurricanes Are Now Made of Microplastics

https://www.wired.com/story/oh-good-hurricanes-are-now-made-of-microplastics/

As Hurricane Larry curved north in the Atlantic in 2021, sparing the eastern seaboard of the United States, a special instrument was waiting for it on the coast of Newfoundland. Because hurricanes feed on warm ocean water, scientists wondered whether such a storm could pick up microplastics from the sea surface and deposit them when it made landfall. Larry was literally a perfect storm: Because it hadn’t touched land before reaching the island, anything it dropped would have been scavenged from the water or air, as opposed to, say, a highly populated city, where you’d expect to find lots of microplastics.

As Larry passed over Newfoundland, the instrument gobbled up what fell from the sky. That included rain, of course, but also gobs of microplastics, defined as bits smaller than 5 millimeters, or about the width of a pencil eraser. At its peak, Larry was depositing over 100,000 microplastics per square meter of land per day, the researchers found in a recent paper published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment. Add hurricanes, then, to the growing list of ways that tiny plastic particles are not only infiltrating every corner of the environment, but readily moving between land, sea, and air.

As humanity churns out exponentially more plastic in general, so does the environment get contaminated with exponentially more microplastics. The predominant thinking used to be that microplastics would flush into the ocean and stay there: Washing synthetic clothing like polyester, for instance, releases millions of microfibers per load of laundry, which then flow out to sea in wastewater. But recent research has found that the seas are in fact burping the particles into the atmosphere to blow back onto land, both when waves break and when bubbles rise to the surface, flinging microplastics into sea breezes.

The instrument in a clearing on Newfoundland was quite simple: a glass cylinder, holding a little bit of ultrapure water, securely attached to the ground with wooden stakes. Every six hours before, during, and after the hurricane, the researchers would come and empty out the water, which would have collected any particles falling—both with and without rain—on Newfoundland. “It’s just a place that experiences a lot of extreme weather events,” says Earth scientist Anna Ryan of Dalhousie University, lead author of the paper. “Also, it’s fairly remote, and it’s got a pretty low population density. So you don’t have a bunch of nearby sources of microplastics.”

The team found that even before and after Larry, tens of thousands of microplastics fell per square meter of land per day. But when the hurricane hit, that figure spiked up to 113,000. “We found a lot of microplastics deposited during the peak of the hurricane,” says Ryan, “but also, overall deposition was relatively high compared to previous studies.” These studies were done during normal conditions, but in more remote locations, she says.

The researchers also used a technique known as back trajectory modeling—basically simulating where the air that arrived at the instrument had been previously. That confirmed that Larry had picked up the microplastics at sea, lofted them into the air, and dumped them on Newfoundland. Indeed, previous research has estimated that somewhere between 12 and 21 million metric tons of microplastic swirl in just the top 200 meters of the Atlantic, and that was a significant underestimate because it didn’t count microfibers. The Newfoundland study notes that Larry happened to pass over the garbage patch of the North Atlantic Gyre, where currents accumulate floating plastic.

via Wired Top Stories https://www.wired.com

December 18, 2023 at 06:12AM

Banishing Instagram Bots Is About to Get Much Easier

https://lifehacker.com/tech/new-instagram-bot-spam-moderation-tools

Instagram creators will soon find it much easier to deal with spammy followers and bots. According to a new post on the Instagram blog, you will soon be able to process the removal of spam and bot followers in bulk, cutting down on the time it takes to properly moderate your account. These feature are rolling out over the coming weeks.

Further, the Instagram team says that it will begin rolling out new tools that should automatically detect more spam, allowing for spammy comments, tags, story views, and fake followers to be detected automatically. This improved detection will be key to the bulk-removal options that are coming and will help advance the tools you use to control who has access to your account more easily.

screenshot of instagram asking to delete follow invites

Credit: Instagram

Instagram says that spammy comments and followers will now be automatically filtered into a separate inbox, allowing you to review them and delete them in bulk. It’s a good move that should prove helpful for content creators on Instagram, especially since the Meta-run social media site has had more than its fair share of issues with bots and spam.

Meta also says accounts deleted using the new spam detection tools will not be alerted to your choice to remove them from your followers list, which should help cut down on any concerns over possible backlash from removed users.

Additionally, the new auto detection systems helps filter out spammy tags, requiring you to view them and then mark them as real if they don’t actually fall under spam. Any that appear to just be spam, though, can easily be removed and deleted with a new Delete all requests option. And if you don’t want to deal with the tag requests at all, then you can just wait 30 days, as they’ll automatically be deleted after this time if you don’t take action yourself.

Another addition to the app includes a warning that your content might be against the recommendations guidelines or community guidelines, as well as an experimental feature that will hide possible spam views from your stories, making it easier to see your actual exposure on various posts.

via Lifehacker https://ift.tt/Hde6XwE

December 14, 2023 at 05:27PM

Ad Company Claims ‘It’s True. Your Devices Are Listening to You’

https://gizmodo.com/cmg-local-solutions-ads-listening-on-devices-1851102426

There’s little to no evidence suggesting that “your devices are listening to you,” but that hasn’t stopped people from believing big tech is monitoring every word you say. Now, a marketing subsidiary of Cox Media Group is throwing fuel on the fire with claims that it can deploy “active listening” through your smartphone, smart TV, and other devices to target ads for its clients.

Google’s Antitrust Case Is the Best Thing That Ever Happened to AI

First reported by 404 Media, Cox Media Group Local Solutions plastered the theory on its website as an advertising strategy. “With Active Listening, CMG can now use voice data to target your advertising to the EXACT people you are looking for,” the company wrote.

Screenshot: CMG Local Solutions

CMG has since redirected the “Active Listening” page of its website, but you can find it on the internet archive, and it’s still listed as a strategy. The marketing company asks you to “imagine” what it would do for your business if you could target clients using specific phrases in their day-to-day conversations. “The AC is on it’s last leg!” the company uses as an example. The marketing company seems to be promoting a conspiracy theory, and privacy nightmare, that your phone’s microphone is recording everything you say and selling it to advertisers. CMG Local Solutions provides very few details on how they do this, and its claims are dubious, to say the least.

Cox Media Group and its marketing subsidiary did not immediately respond to Gizmodo’s request for comment.

Screenshot: CMG Local Solutions

Past research has shown very little evidence that your phone’s microphone is listening to you. There is much more conclusive evidence that the combination of your search queries, social media usage, and cookies is more than enough for advertisers to track your data and understand your life. However, CMG Local Solutions seems to be making ad deals with “active listening” as a product.

So is this legal? CMG Local Solution’s website says “YES- it is totally legal for phones and devices to listen to you. That’s because consumers usually give consent when accepting terms and conditions of software updates or app downloads.” However, the marketing company provides very few details about how the data is truly gathered or who is giving it to them, and these claims cannot be verified. Apple also lets users know if their microphone or screen is being actively recorded with a small icon on your screen, so you’d likely know if your iPhone was monitoring ambient audio.

The marketing company says they create an audience with voice data and retarget ads to users via streaming, social media, YouTube, and Google search. CMG Local Solutions says it has partnered with Google for 12 years, and lists other partners like Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon. These partners and the Federal Communications Commission did not immediately respond to Gizmodo’s request for comment.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

December 15, 2023 at 09:39AM

Apple Shuts Down Flipper Zero’s Ability to Shut Down iPhones

https://gizmodo.com/apple-fixes-flipper-zero-shutting-down-iphones-1851102972

The Flipper Zero is billed as a fun tool for tech enthusiasts, but it has also been used to perpetrate annoying and more serious attacks on various devices.
Photo: Flipper

Apple silently fixed an exploit that let Flipper Zero devices mass-bombard nearby iPhones with popup notifications, so much so they would essentially disable users’ phones requiring a restart.

Apple Unveils Its iPhone 15 and Apple Watch Series 9

Flipper Zero is a small multi-tool able to mimic NFC, RFID, or other radio signals. Billed as a toy-like device for “pentesters and geeks,” the device has come under fire for being an easy-to-use tool for hackers or other ne’er-do-wells.

Still, Flipper Zeros natively doesn’t have this unique denial of service (DOS) capability. Instead, it requires the Xtreme third-party firmware, which comes with the BLE Spam app used to hit devices with spam Bluetooth messages. With that, a Flipper Zero user could stand in a busy intersection and hit all iPhones in a 30-foot radius with popup notifications, enough to make the Apple device lock up and require a restart. The attack also hits other operating systems, including Android and Windows, but—while annoying—the attack could only effectively shut down Apple devices. Still, connected to a bigger antenna, a user could send out these spam messages at a range of 50 feet or more.

ZDNet went ahead and tested the latest Extreme firmware against the iOS 17.2 update. Tests showed that while the phone would still get a range of annoying popups, they wouldn’t crash the phone. Gizmodo has been unable to confirm the exploit is totally fixed independently. We reached out to Apple for confirmation, and we’ll update this story if we hear back.

You can’t get the Xtreme firmware from Flipper’s own third-party app store, but it is still easy for anybody to download and install it on their NFC-replicating device. The Flipper Zero has been knocked down as a hacking tool and was even banned from the Amazon store page. The devices have yet to receive any more widespread ban, but Flipper devices have become notorious among law enforcement circles.

The latest iOS update added a number of handy features like the Journal app, but as usual, Apple doesn’t expand on all its security fixes in its release notes. Notably, iOS 17.3 is supposed to add a heap of anti-theft features, but we’ll need to wait and see whether Apple or any other device maker can put a stop to these annoying Bluetooth messages altogether.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

December 15, 2023 at 11:21AM

Apple is testing App Store discount packages so developers can pull users into more subscriptions

https://www.engadget.com/apple-is-testing-a-feature-to-help-app-store-developers-undercut-competitors-subscription-prices-222205325.html?src=rss

Apple says it has begun piloting a new App Store feature called “contingent pricing” that will help developers lure in customers with cheaper subscriptions based on their other purchases. The contingent pricing model will let developers offer discounts to customers who already have subscriptions to other services, be it those developers’ own apps or participating partners’. It’s starting with a select group of participants before rolling it out to more developers “in the coming months.”

“Contingent pricing for subscriptions on the App Store — a new feature that helps you attract and retain subscribers — lets you give customers a discounted subscription price as long as they’re actively subscribed to a different subscription,” Apple wrote in a post on the Apple Developer website. “It can be used for subscriptions from one developer or two different developers.” Per 9to5Mac, Apple further explained that these bundled discounts will be highly visible to customers both on the App Store and “in off-platform marketing channels” so they can easily find and get in on the perks. 

It comes at a time of ongoing scrutiny into Apple’s practices with its App Store and how it handles in-app purchases, which came to a head in Apple’s battle with Fortnite owner Epic Games. Just this fall, Apple asked the Supreme Court to reverse its previous ruling that required it to allow developers to circumvent its 30 percent transaction fee by supporting outside payment systems. But it’s still looking for ways to get back in developers’ good graces. The company says it will release more information on the new program next month.

Correction, December 17, 2023, 3:30PM ET: This story originally stated that contingent pricing allowed developers to offer cheaper plans than competitors. It actually only works between participating parties. We apologize for the error.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/w69SWGx

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 16, 2023 at 04:27PM

A Chinese EV squeezed 650 miles of range from its 150 kWh battery

https://www.engadget.com/a-chinese-ev-squeezed-650-miles-of-range-from-its-150-kwh-battery-092427301.html?src=rss

An EV from Chinese manufacturer Nio will soon go on sale with a "semi-solid state" 150kWh battery (140kWh usable) that’s the largest in any passenger car, Car News China reported. To show much range that will deliver, Nio CEO William Li drove a prototype version of the ET7 1,044km (650 miles) in 14 hours, a distance surpassing many gas-powered vehicles. 

The test was run in relatively cool temperatures (between 28 – 54 F) and livestreamed. Driving was done mainly in semi-autonomous (or Navigate-on-Pilot+, as Nio calls it), and speed-limited to 90 km/h (56 MPH). The average speed was 83.9 km/h (a respectable 52.4 MPH), with a travel time of 12.4 hours excluding stops.

"The completion of this endurance challenge proves the product power of the 150kWh ultra-long endurance battery pack," said Li in a Weibo post (Google translation). "More importantly, all models on sale can be flexibly upgraded to 150kWh batteries through the Nio battery swap system."

In fact, the ET7’s 150kWh battery will only be available on a lease separate from the car, much as we’ve seen with some cars sold in Europe. Previously, the company said that the battery alone would cost as much as an entire car (the company’s entry-level ET5 EV), or around $42,000. 

A Chinese EV with a locally-made 150kWh battery went 650 miles on a charge
WeLion New Energy Technology

Manufactured by WeLion New Energy Technology, the battery has a single-cell energy density of 360 Wh/kg or 260 Wh/kg for the entire pack (Tesla’s latest cells are under 300 Wh/kg). Semi-solid state batteries use gel, clay or resin electrolytes, offering greater energy density and fire-resistance than current batteries. However, they’re still far from the promised land of full solid-state batteries, which could feasibly double energy density. 

We likely won’t see the 150kWh battery pack stateside, though. With the Biden administration’s latest rules, some US cars like Tesla’s Model 3 Long Range that use specific Chinese battery components will no longer receive the full $7,500 tax credit. 

Nio is a luxury EV manufacturer in China that offers vehicles without a battery, letting you sign up to a battery-as-a-service (BAAS) monthly subscription. That service also allows you to swap out your battery at any time for a larger one. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/LwcqbVU

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 18, 2023 at 03:33AM