Month: May 2024

VC firm Antler’s CEO says Asia presents ‘biggest opportunity’ in the world for growth

We caught up with Antler founder and CEO Magnus Grimeland about the startup scene in Asia, the current tech startup trends in the region, and investment approaches during the rise of AI technology.
© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

We caught up with Antler founder and CEO Magnus Grimeland about the startup scene in Asia, the current tech startup trends in the region, and investment approaches during the rise of AI technology.

© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

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Inside the Google algorithm

Image: Alex Parkin / The Verge

The algorithm that powers Google Search is one of the most important, most complicated, and least understood systems that rule the internet. As of this week, though, we understand it a little better. Thanks to a huge leak of API documentation, we got an unprecedented look at what Google cares about, how it ranks content, and how it thinks the internet should work. The leaked documentation is dense, and it doesn’t tell us everything about how Google ranks, but it does offer a set of signals we’ve never seen before.
On this episode of The Vergecast, we discuss everything in the leaked documents, the SEO community’s reaction, the potential regulatory implications of it all, and what it means to build a website in 2024.

After that, we talk about the recent spate of media companies (including Vox Media, The Verge’s parent company) making content and technology deals with OpenAI. Are media companies making the same mistakes they did with Facebook and others, or are they actually trying to make sure they don’t make those mistakes again? We have a lot of thoughts, and we also want to hear from you in particular — disclosure is The Verge’s brand, after all, and we want to know how you think we should talk about all this. Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, call the hotline at 866-VERGE11, and tell us everything on your mind.
Finally, we do a lightning round of other tech news, including Apple’s AI plans at WWDC, Discord’s kinda-sorta pivot, a Fitbit for kids, “edgy” engagement, and the Sony party speaker The Verge’s Nilay Patel can’t stop talking about.

If you want to know more about everything we discuss in this episode, here are some links to get you started, beginning with the Google leak:

Google won’t comment on a potentially massive leak of its search algorithm documentation
Google confirms the leaked Search documents are real
From SparkToro: An Anonymous Source Shared Thousands of Leaked Google Search API Documents with Me; Everyone in SEO Should See Them

From iPullRank: Secrets from the Algorithm: Google Search’s Internal Engineering Documentation Has Leaked

From Search Engine Land: How SEO moves forward with the Google Content Warehouse API leak

And on OpenAI:

Vox Media and The Atlantic sign content deals with OpenAI
Apple’s WWDC may include AI-generated emoji and an OpenAI partnership
OpenAI has a new safety team — it’s run by Sam Altman
Why the OpenAI board fired Sam Altman

And in the lightning round:

David Pierce’s pick: Discord’s turning the focus back to games with a new redesign

Alex Cranz’s pick: The Fitbit Ace LTE is like a Nintendo smartwatch for kids
Nilay’s pick: X is hiding likes to encourage ‘edgy’ engagement

Image: Alex Parkin / The Verge

The algorithm that powers Google Search is one of the most important, most complicated, and least understood systems that rule the internet. As of this week, though, we understand it a little better. Thanks to a huge leak of API documentation, we got an unprecedented look at what Google cares about, how it ranks content, and how it thinks the internet should work. The leaked documentation is dense, and it doesn’t tell us everything about how Google ranks, but it does offer a set of signals we’ve never seen before.

On this episode of The Vergecast, we discuss everything in the leaked documents, the SEO community’s reaction, the potential regulatory implications of it all, and what it means to build a website in 2024.

After that, we talk about the recent spate of media companies (including Vox Media, The Verge’s parent company) making content and technology deals with OpenAI. Are media companies making the same mistakes they did with Facebook and others, or are they actually trying to make sure they don’t make those mistakes again? We have a lot of thoughts, and we also want to hear from you in particular — disclosure is The Verge’s brand, after all, and we want to know how you think we should talk about all this. Email us at vergecast@theverge.com, call the hotline at 866-VERGE11, and tell us everything on your mind.

Finally, we do a lightning round of other tech news, including Apple’s AI plans at WWDC, Discord’s kinda-sorta pivot, a Fitbit for kids, “edgy” engagement, and the Sony party speaker The Verge’s Nilay Patel can’t stop talking about.

If you want to know more about everything we discuss in this episode, here are some links to get you started, beginning with the Google leak:

Google won’t comment on a potentially massive leak of its search algorithm documentation
Google confirms the leaked Search documents are real
From SparkToro: An Anonymous Source Shared Thousands of Leaked Google Search API Documents with Me; Everyone in SEO Should See Them

From iPullRank: Secrets from the Algorithm: Google Search’s Internal Engineering Documentation Has Leaked

From Search Engine Land: How SEO moves forward with the Google Content Warehouse API leak

And on OpenAI:

Vox Media and The Atlantic sign content deals with OpenAI
Apple’s WWDC may include AI-generated emoji and an OpenAI partnership
OpenAI has a new safety team — it’s run by Sam Altman
Why the OpenAI board fired Sam Altman

And in the lightning round:

David Pierce’s pick: Discord’s turning the focus back to games with a new redesign

Alex Cranz’s pick: The Fitbit Ace LTE is like a Nintendo smartwatch for kids
Nilay’s pick: X is hiding likes to encourage ‘edgy’ engagement

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Google Pumps Brakes on AI Overviews Search After Telling Us to Eat Glue, Rocks – CNET

The internet giant’s public experiment with AI-generated summaries for search results has had a rough start.

The internet giant’s public experiment with AI-generated summaries for search results has had a rough start.

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Twitch removes every member of its Safety Advisory Council

Twitch signed up cyberbullying experts, web researchers and community members back in 2020 to form the Safety Advisory Council. The review board was formed to help it draft new policies, develop products that improve safety and protect the interests of marginalized groups. Now, CNBC reports that the streaming website has terminated all the members of the council. Twitch reportedly called the nine members into a meeting on May 6 to let them know that their existing contracts would end on May 31 and that they would not be getting paid for the second half of 2024. 
The Safety Advisory Council’s members include Dr. Sameer Hinduja, co-director of the Cyber Bullying Research Center, and Dr. T.L. Taylor, the co-founder and director of AnyKey, an organization that advocates for inclusion and diversity in video games and esports. There’s also Emma Llansó, the director of the Free Expression Project for the Center for Democracy and Technology.  
In an email sent to the members, Twitch reportedly told them that going forward, “the Safety Advisory Council will primarily be made up of individuals who serve as Twitch Ambassadors.” The Amazon subsidiary didn’t mention any names, but it describes its Ambassadors as people who “positively contribute to the Twitch community — from being role models for their community, to establishing new content genres, to having inspirational stories that empower those around them.”
In a statement sent to The Verge, Twitch trust and safety communications manager Elizabeth Busby said that the new council members will “offer [the website] fresh, diverse perspectives” after working with the same core members for years. “We’re excited to work with our global Twitch Ambassadors, all of whom are active on Twitch, know our safety work first hand, and have a range of experiences to pull from,” Busby added.
It’s unclear if the Ambassadors taking the current council members’ place will get paid or if they’re expected to lend their help to the company for free. If it’s the latter, then this development could be a cost-cutting measure: The outgoing members were paid between $10,000 and $20,000 a year, CNBC says. Back in January, Twitch also laid off 35 percent of its workforce to “cut costs” and to “build a more sustainable business.” In the same month, it reduced how much streamers make from every Twitch Prime subscription they generate, as well.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/twitch-removes-every-member-of-its-safety-advisory-council-131501219.html?src=rss

Twitch signed up cyberbullying experts, web researchers and community members back in 2020 to form the Safety Advisory Council. The review board was formed to help it draft new policies, develop products that improve safety and protect the interests of marginalized groups. Now, CNBC reports that the streaming website has terminated all the members of the council. Twitch reportedly called the nine members into a meeting on May 6 to let them know that their existing contracts would end on May 31 and that they would not be getting paid for the second half of 2024. 

The Safety Advisory Council’s members include Dr. Sameer Hinduja, co-director of the Cyber Bullying Research Center, and Dr. T.L. Taylor, the co-founder and director of AnyKey, an organization that advocates for inclusion and diversity in video games and esports. There’s also Emma Llansó, the director of the Free Expression Project for the Center for Democracy and Technology.  

In an email sent to the members, Twitch reportedly told them that going forward, “the Safety Advisory Council will primarily be made up of individuals who serve as Twitch Ambassadors.” The Amazon subsidiary didn’t mention any names, but it describes its Ambassadors as people who “positively contribute to the Twitch community — from being role models for their community, to establishing new content genres, to having inspirational stories that empower those around them.”

In a statement sent to The Verge, Twitch trust and safety communications manager Elizabeth Busby said that the new council members will “offer [the website] fresh, diverse perspectives” after working with the same core members for years. “We’re excited to work with our global Twitch Ambassadors, all of whom are active on Twitch, know our safety work first hand, and have a range of experiences to pull from,” Busby added.

It’s unclear if the Ambassadors taking the current council members’ place will get paid or if they’re expected to lend their help to the company for free. If it’s the latter, then this development could be a cost-cutting measure: The outgoing members were paid between $10,000 and $20,000 a year, CNBC says. Back in January, Twitch also laid off 35 percent of its workforce to “cut costs” and to “build a more sustainable business.” In the same month, it reduced how much streamers make from every Twitch Prime subscription they generate, as well.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/twitch-removes-every-member-of-its-safety-advisory-council-131501219.html?src=rss

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Leak suggests next week’s free Epic Games giveaway is one of our favorites of last year

While this week’s free game on the Epic Store has only been around for less than a day, leaks have… Continue reading Leak suggests next week’s free Epic Games giveaway is one of our favorites of last year
The post Leak suggests next week’s free Epic Games giveaway is one of our favorites of last year appeared first on ReadWrite.

While this week’s free game on the Epic Store has only been around for less than a day, leaks have already appeared suggesting that next week’s offering will be well worth making sure you grab if you don’t own it already.

Epic Games Store leaking expert Billbil-Kun has posted on their account on X that the final Mystery Game of Epic’s latest sale promotion will be none other than the excellent Marvel’s Midnight Suns.

MEGA SALE 2024

THE WAIT IS OVER

Here is the 4th and Final Mystery game that will go free next week on Epic Games Store

Jun 6th – 13th, 2024#EGShttps://t.co/63tviIC4gL

— billbil-kun (@billbil_kun) May 31, 2024

This tactical RPG took everybody by surprise when it was released, annoyed people because you could purchase skins in a single-player game – something we now look back on fondly as everybody else jumps on board that cash train, and captured people in with its immensely fun gameplay.

Billbil-Kun posted, “THE WAIT IS OVER. Here is the 4th and Final Mystery game that will go free next week on Epic Games Store.”

This week’s free games is the also-worth-having Chivalry 2 along with the new Regicide update. Epic runs free games on a Thursday to Thursday basis so you have until June 6th to pick up Chivalry 2, before, assuming the leak is correct, which is always a dangerous game, you will be able to get your hands on Marvel’s Midnight Suns for the following seven days. The event also started with the giveaway of Dragon’s Age: Inquisition, another classic game.

Once this event is over Epic will go back to letting us know what game is coming next week, at least until it wants to drum up some attention with bigger releases once more.

What is Marvel’s Midnight Suns

Besides being great, here is how the game is pitched to potential buyers: –

“Marvel’s Midnight Suns is the ultimate crossover event combining the rich story, character relationships, customization, and progression of an RPG with the tactical strategy and combat mechanics of a revolutionary new card-based tactics game. Set in the darker side of the Marvel Universe, you will forge unbreakable bonds with legendary Marvel superheroes and dangerous supernatural warriors in the fight against the world’s greatest threat yet…the demonic forces of Lilith and the elder god Chthon.

The post Leak suggests next week’s free Epic Games giveaway is one of our favorites of last year appeared first on ReadWrite.

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