Month: August 2024

Can a YouTube video really fix your wet phone?

Phones have been getting wet for years — but now they’re getting better at dealing with it. | Photo: The Verge

Millions of viewers are turning to videos to get the water out of their phones. I tried to figure out whether they actually work. Every day for the last four years, dozens of people have shown up in the comments of one particular YouTube, declaring their love and appreciation for the content. The content: two minutes and six seconds of deep, low buzzing, the kind that makes your phone vibrate on the table, underscoring a vaguely trippy animation of swirled stained glass.
It’s not a good video. But it’s not meant to be. The video is called “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED ).” There are many others like it, too. And the comments — “the community,” as so many there refer to it — are almost all people who just got their phone wet in one way or another. “Walked through a river with the phone in my pocket,” one recent one says. “Yeah the steam from the shower is the reason I’m here,” says another. “Was using my phone in the shower this is a lifesaver.” They go on and on like this, many of them from repeat offenders. “We are back once again the 3rd time this month.” “its been 3 weeks and im back again.” “Dropped my shit in the shower AGAIN!”

For more on our wet phone mystery (and the future of AR headsets), check out this episode of The Vergecast.
If you believe the comments, about half the video’s 45 million views come from people who bring their phone into the shower or bathtub and trust that they can play this video and everything will be fine. I encountered it for the first time earlier this year after my nephew’s phone slipped out of his pocket and into a river near our Airbnb in a tiny town in Virginia. We semi-miraculously found his phone, then brought it inside and started trying to dry it off. A moment later, one of his friends just casually suggested playing “one of those videos that gets the water out.” We put on “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED ),” and ultimately, the phone was fine.
Ever since, I’ve been trying to figure out whether these videos really work. Are all these lucky shower scrollers just the beneficiaries of phones that have become far more waterproof and rugged in recent years? Or should we stop recommending rice and start recommending “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED )”?
The first thing I did was ask phone makers what they thought. No one at Apple, Google, or Samsung offered a more interesting answer than to point to a generic “what to do if your phone gets wet” support page, but a couple of other folks I talked to indicated they thought the theory seemed reasonable enough.

The theory goes like this: all a speaker is really doing is pushing air around, and if you can get it to push enough air, with enough force, you might be able to push droplets of liquid out from where they came. “The lowest tone that that speaker can reproduce, at the loudest level that it can play,” says Eric Freeman, a senior director of research at Bose. “That will create the most air motion, which will push on the water that’s trapped inside the phone.” Generally, the bigger the speaker, the louder and lower it can go. Phone speakers tend to be tiny. “So those YouTube videos,” Freeman says, “it’s not, like, really deep bass. But it’s in the low range of where a phone is able to make sound.”
The best real-world example of how this can work is probably the Apple Watch, which has a dedicated feature for ejecting water after you’ve gotten it wet. When I first reached out to iFixit to ask about my water-expulsion mystery, Carsten Frauenheim, a repairability engineer at the company, said the Watch works on the same theory as the videos. “It’s just a specific oscillating tone that pushes the water out of the speaker grilles,” he said. “Not sure how effective the third-party versions are for phones since they’re probably not ideally tuned? We could test.”
The company did, in fact, test. Shahram Mokhtari, iFixit’s lead teardown engineer, and Chayton Ritter, an engineering student who also works with iFixit’s editorial department, took four phones and got them wet. We went with an iPhone 13, a Pixel 7 Pro, a Pixel 3, and a Nokia 7.1, all chosen not scientifically but because they were the devices I had handy and was willing to destroy in the name of science. Each phone went into a UV bath for about a minute, after which Ritter took it out, tapped it to get some water out, played one of the water-ejection videos, and left it out overnight. The next day, he checked to see where there was still residue from the UV dye, an indication that liquid had gotten in and not come out.

Image: Chayton Ritter / iFixit
Four phones were dropped into this green sludge. For science.

The results were all over the place. The Pixel 7 Pro was essentially bone dry, the Nokia 7.1 was more or less ruined, and the iPhone 13 and Pixel 3 were somewhere in between. But these aren’t perfectly controlled tests, Mokhtari was careful to note: a phone’s seal can change over time or be broken in unnoticeable ways. He and Ritter both said emphatically that no matter what your phone maker advertises or what you’ve experienced before, it’s always a risk to get your phone wet. And it gets riskier over time.

Image: Chayton Ritter / iFixit
The inside of an iPhone 13, lit up with liquid residue. (All the green stuff is where liquid got in.)

As to the YouTube video’s role, though, the evidence was fairly clear. It works! A little. As he played the video on each phone, Ritter also took close-up video of the speaker on each phone, and in every case, the phone immediately blasted out a flurry of droplets. The effect didn’t last long, but it was clearly ejecting water that wasn’t coming out otherwise.
The videos weren’t a complete solution to the problem, though. A smartphone’s speaker seems to be powerful enough to push air out from right next to the speaker, but not to solve problems elsewhere in the device — particularly underneath the buttons, the USB port, or the SIM card slot, which were the other most common intrusion spots. And if it didn’t get the liquid out in that first burst, Ritter found it mostly just sloshed the droplets back and forth as the speaker moved. So, he says, “I say [the videos] kind of work. It can’t hurt, but I don’t see it being an end-all-be-all fix or a way to pull all the liquid out.”

Image: Chayton Ritter / iFixit
That burst of water comes right when the buzzing starts — but then stops pretty quickly.

That might be why companies like Apple and Samsung don’t offer water expulsion as a feature for their phones, when they do for their smartwatches. “There are fewer cavities and holes in the watches than there are on the phones, which allows them to design to push the water out from those cavities,” Mokhtari says. “On the phone, the speakers are located at the bottom and the top of the phone, which means you can’t get to cavities like the SIM card slot. It’s just not possible to push water out from those cavities.”
The good news for the shower scrollers is that phones really are getting more water-resistant: three of the four phones Ritter tested still worked fine, and the newest of them, the Pixel 7 Pro, had no lingering liquid at all. The bad news is that there’s no guarantee they’ll stay water-resistant forever. And the really bad news is that if you’re showering with your phone, you’re tempting fate even more. “I don’t know what other stuff is in shampoo,” Ritter says, “but it’s probably more conductive — very rarely are you getting what amounts to perfectly fresh water inside of your iPhone.”
So, sure, bookmark a water-expulsion video, and load it up in case of emergency. Join the “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED )” community, where everyone seems to root for each other’s device survival. But don’t trust it too much. Everyone I talked to ended up offering the same bit of advice: just keep your phone out of the shower.

Phones have been getting wet for years — but now they’re getting better at dealing with it. | Photo: The Verge

Millions of viewers are turning to videos to get the water out of their phones. I tried to figure out whether they actually work.

Every day for the last four years, dozens of people have shown up in the comments of one particular YouTube, declaring their love and appreciation for the content. The content: two minutes and six seconds of deep, low buzzing, the kind that makes your phone vibrate on the table, underscoring a vaguely trippy animation of swirled stained glass.

It’s not a good video. But it’s not meant to be. The video is called “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED ).” There are many others like it, too. And the comments — “the community,” as so many there refer to it — are almost all people who just got their phone wet in one way or another. “Walked through a river with the phone in my pocket,” one recent one says. “Yeah the steam from the shower is the reason I’m here,” says another. “Was using my phone in the shower this is a lifesaver.” They go on and on like this, many of them from repeat offenders. “We are back once again the 3rd time this month.” “its been 3 weeks and im back again.” “Dropped my shit in the shower AGAIN!”

For more on our wet phone mystery (and the future of AR headsets), check out this episode of The Vergecast.

If you believe the comments, about half the video’s 45 million views come from people who bring their phone into the shower or bathtub and trust that they can play this video and everything will be fine. I encountered it for the first time earlier this year after my nephew’s phone slipped out of his pocket and into a river near our Airbnb in a tiny town in Virginia. We semi-miraculously found his phone, then brought it inside and started trying to dry it off. A moment later, one of his friends just casually suggested playing “one of those videos that gets the water out.” We put on “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED ),” and ultimately, the phone was fine.

Ever since, I’ve been trying to figure out whether these videos really work. Are all these lucky shower scrollers just the beneficiaries of phones that have become far more waterproof and rugged in recent years? Or should we stop recommending rice and start recommending “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED )”?

The first thing I did was ask phone makers what they thought. No one at Apple, Google, or Samsung offered a more interesting answer than to point to a generic “what to do if your phone gets wet” support page, but a couple of other folks I talked to indicated they thought the theory seemed reasonable enough.

The theory goes like this: all a speaker is really doing is pushing air around, and if you can get it to push enough air, with enough force, you might be able to push droplets of liquid out from where they came. “The lowest tone that that speaker can reproduce, at the loudest level that it can play,” says Eric Freeman, a senior director of research at Bose. “That will create the most air motion, which will push on the water that’s trapped inside the phone.” Generally, the bigger the speaker, the louder and lower it can go. Phone speakers tend to be tiny. “So those YouTube videos,” Freeman says, “it’s not, like, really deep bass. But it’s in the low range of where a phone is able to make sound.”

The best real-world example of how this can work is probably the Apple Watch, which has a dedicated feature for ejecting water after you’ve gotten it wet. When I first reached out to iFixit to ask about my water-expulsion mystery, Carsten Frauenheim, a repairability engineer at the company, said the Watch works on the same theory as the videos. “It’s just a specific oscillating tone that pushes the water out of the speaker grilles,” he said. “Not sure how effective the third-party versions are for phones since they’re probably not ideally tuned? We could test.”

The company did, in fact, test. Shahram Mokhtari, iFixit’s lead teardown engineer, and Chayton Ritter, an engineering student who also works with iFixit’s editorial department, took four phones and got them wet. We went with an iPhone 13, a Pixel 7 Pro, a Pixel 3, and a Nokia 7.1, all chosen not scientifically but because they were the devices I had handy and was willing to destroy in the name of science. Each phone went into a UV bath for about a minute, after which Ritter took it out, tapped it to get some water out, played one of the water-ejection videos, and left it out overnight. The next day, he checked to see where there was still residue from the UV dye, an indication that liquid had gotten in and not come out.

Image: Chayton Ritter / iFixit
Four phones were dropped into this green sludge. For science.

The results were all over the place. The Pixel 7 Pro was essentially bone dry, the Nokia 7.1 was more or less ruined, and the iPhone 13 and Pixel 3 were somewhere in between. But these aren’t perfectly controlled tests, Mokhtari was careful to note: a phone’s seal can change over time or be broken in unnoticeable ways. He and Ritter both said emphatically that no matter what your phone maker advertises or what you’ve experienced before, it’s always a risk to get your phone wet. And it gets riskier over time.

Image: Chayton Ritter / iFixit
The inside of an iPhone 13, lit up with liquid residue. (All the green stuff is where liquid got in.)

As to the YouTube video’s role, though, the evidence was fairly clear. It works! A little. As he played the video on each phone, Ritter also took close-up video of the speaker on each phone, and in every case, the phone immediately blasted out a flurry of droplets. The effect didn’t last long, but it was clearly ejecting water that wasn’t coming out otherwise.

The videos weren’t a complete solution to the problem, though. A smartphone’s speaker seems to be powerful enough to push air out from right next to the speaker, but not to solve problems elsewhere in the device — particularly underneath the buttons, the USB port, or the SIM card slot, which were the other most common intrusion spots. And if it didn’t get the liquid out in that first burst, Ritter found it mostly just sloshed the droplets back and forth as the speaker moved. So, he says, “I say [the videos] kind of work. It can’t hurt, but I don’t see it being an end-all-be-all fix or a way to pull all the liquid out.”

Image: Chayton Ritter / iFixit
That burst of water comes right when the buzzing starts — but then stops pretty quickly.

That might be why companies like Apple and Samsung don’t offer water expulsion as a feature for their phones, when they do for their smartwatches. “There are fewer cavities and holes in the watches than there are on the phones, which allows them to design to push the water out from those cavities,” Mokhtari says. “On the phone, the speakers are located at the bottom and the top of the phone, which means you can’t get to cavities like the SIM card slot. It’s just not possible to push water out from those cavities.”

The good news for the shower scrollers is that phones really are getting more water-resistant: three of the four phones Ritter tested still worked fine, and the newest of them, the Pixel 7 Pro, had no lingering liquid at all. The bad news is that there’s no guarantee they’ll stay water-resistant forever. And the really bad news is that if you’re showering with your phone, you’re tempting fate even more. “I don’t know what other stuff is in shampoo,” Ritter says, “but it’s probably more conductive — very rarely are you getting what amounts to perfectly fresh water inside of your iPhone.”

So, sure, bookmark a water-expulsion video, and load it up in case of emergency. Join the “Sound To Remove Water From Phone Speaker ( GUARANTEED )” community, where everyone seems to root for each other’s device survival. But don’t trust it too much. Everyone I talked to ended up offering the same bit of advice: just keep your phone out of the shower.

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Nintendo Indie and Partner Direct: all the news and trailers

Image: The Verge

While we wait for a Switch 2 announcement, Nintendo is showing off 40 minutes of game announcements from indie developers and third-party partners. Even without a Switch 2 reveal, it’s been a busy period of announcements for Nintendo. There was a packed Direct in June filled with major reveals like Mario & Luigi: Brothership and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, and last week, the company showed off its upcoming museum in Kyoto. Now we have a pair of events squashed together: the Indie World Showcase followed by a Nintendo Direct: Partner Showcase.
Don’t expect any major first-party titles during either stream — sorry, Metroid fans — and Nintendo has confirmed it won’t be talking about its next console. Even still, there will likely be a lot on display. Nintendo says that the events will last around 40 minutes combined, which is a lot of airtime for video game trailers. (Here’s what went down at the spring Indie World Showcase for an idea of what to expect.)
Things kick off on August 27th at 10AM ET. You can follow along with all of the biggest announcements right here in the stream, and watch along at the embed below.

Image: The Verge

While we wait for a Switch 2 announcement, Nintendo is showing off 40 minutes of game announcements from indie developers and third-party partners.

Even without a Switch 2 reveal, it’s been a busy period of announcements for Nintendo. There was a packed Direct in June filled with major reveals like Mario & Luigi: Brothership and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom, and last week, the company showed off its upcoming museum in Kyoto. Now we have a pair of events squashed together: the Indie World Showcase followed by a Nintendo Direct: Partner Showcase.

Don’t expect any major first-party titles during either stream — sorry, Metroid fans — and Nintendo has confirmed it won’t be talking about its next console. Even still, there will likely be a lot on display. Nintendo says that the events will last around 40 minutes combined, which is a lot of airtime for video game trailers. (Here’s what went down at the spring Indie World Showcase for an idea of what to expect.)

Things kick off on August 27th at 10AM ET. You can follow along with all of the biggest announcements right here in the stream, and watch along at the embed below.

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Sonic the Hedgehog 3 trailer triples the action and the bad guys

Image: Paramount

Oh, hell yes! The first trailer for Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is out, giving fans a first listen of Keanu Reeves as Shadow the Hedgehog.
Reeves doesn’t put too much spin on his interpretation of Shadow, sounding very much like himself. But considering fans were hype as hell that he was doing Shadow’s voice, I think Keanu doing his best Keanu will go over fine with audiences. The trailer sets up Shadow the Hedgehog as the toughest enemy Team Sonic has ever had to face, requiring them to call in outside help. Jim Carrey returns as Dr. Robotnik, who has apparently let himself go. For Sonic 3, they’re not wasting a drop of Carrey’s comedic talent, having him play not one Robotnik but two.
Shadow’s arrival was teased at the end of Sonic 2. Although we didn’t get to hear him then, various outlets later reported that Reeves had been cast as the black-furred, gun-toting hedgehog with an attitude problem. Yesterday, Paramount began teasing the trailer’s imminent arrival by projecting images of Sonic, Shadow, and perennial baddie Dr. Robotnik on buildings all over the world.

Judging from the trailer’s sad narration of Shadow’s life of pain and suffering, Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is definitely taking its broader plot points from Sonic Adventure 2 — the 2001 game in which Shadow made his first appearance. We also got a glimpse of Maria, the girl Shadow befriends during his time as a lab hedgehog, and it’ll be interesting to see how the movie treats her fate.
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 chaos controls into theaters on December 20th.

Image: Paramount

Oh, hell yes! The first trailer for Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is out, giving fans a first listen of Keanu Reeves as Shadow the Hedgehog.

Reeves doesn’t put too much spin on his interpretation of Shadow, sounding very much like himself. But considering fans were hype as hell that he was doing Shadow’s voice, I think Keanu doing his best Keanu will go over fine with audiences. The trailer sets up Shadow the Hedgehog as the toughest enemy Team Sonic has ever had to face, requiring them to call in outside help. Jim Carrey returns as Dr. Robotnik, who has apparently let himself go. For Sonic 3, they’re not wasting a drop of Carrey’s comedic talent, having him play not one Robotnik but two.

Shadow’s arrival was teased at the end of Sonic 2. Although we didn’t get to hear him then, various outlets later reported that Reeves had been cast as the black-furred, gun-toting hedgehog with an attitude problem. Yesterday, Paramount began teasing the trailer’s imminent arrival by projecting images of Sonic, Shadow, and perennial baddie Dr. Robotnik on buildings all over the world.

Judging from the trailer’s sad narration of Shadow’s life of pain and suffering, Sonic the Hedgehog 3 is definitely taking its broader plot points from Sonic Adventure 2 — the 2001 game in which Shadow made his first appearance. We also got a glimpse of Maria, the girl Shadow befriends during his time as a lab hedgehog, and it’ll be interesting to see how the movie treats her fate.

Sonic the Hedgehog 3 chaos controls into theaters on December 20th.

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Hackers claim to have hit US Marshals Service with a major cyberattack

Ransomware group Hunters International claim to have hacked the federal agency.

The US Marshals Service (USMS) has reportedly been hit by a cyberattack from ransomware group Hackers International in which just under 380 gigabytes of data was exfiltrated.

The data, which was then listed on the dark web, is said to include sensitive information and classified documents relating to electronic surveillance, active cases, and gang activity.

As of yet, the ransom amount has not been publicly listed, but the deadline is said to be the 30th of August 2024. The group that took credit, Hunters International, is a Ransomware-as-a-service group (RaaS), which has been active since late 2023.

Repeat targets

The exact details of the attack are as yet unknown, but redacted screenshots of the data taken were posted onto the company’s data leak site, which included a breakdown of the contents of the information stolen. This revealed that an alleged 3,000 files were taken relating to confidential device info, and 2,800 were case files.

If confirmed, the attack is the second of its kind to hit the USMS in as many years, after the organization suffered a ‘major’ security breach that exposed sensitive data in early 2023. No one took credit for the previous attack, so it is unclear if the two incidents are connected.

The USMS computer network took over 10 weeks to restore after the 2023 attack, after the organization refused to pay the ransom. Instead, it opted to shut down the entire affected network and wipe the contacts of all who worked within the hacked system.

US Government agencies are particularly attractive targets for ransomware attacks as they hold sensitive information which can be leveraged for large ransoms, with an average demand of nearly $1 million. Some agencies are known to have paid, but cybercriminals can often list the sensitive data on the dark web and sell it to threat actors to profit even if the ransom is not paid.

Via Gizmodo

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‘Sonic the Hedgehog 3′ trailer puts Keanu Reeves’ Shadow up front

Watch the trailer for “Sonic the Hedgehog 3”, with a first look at Keanu Reeves’ Shadow.

Watch the trailer for “Sonic the Hedgehog 3”, with a first look at Keanu Reeves’ Shadow.

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Food delivery is seeing more consolidation: GrubMarket snaps up FreshGoGo

GrubMarket, the $3.6 billion food delivery and supply chain startup backed by Tiger Global, BlackRock and nearly 100 other investors, has snapped up another food delivery startup on its consolidation march: It is acquiring FreshGoGo, a New York-based, B2C platform selling Asian groceries and ready-made dishes. Terms of the deal are not being disclosed, but
© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

GrubMarket, the $3.6 billion food delivery and supply chain startup backed by Tiger Global, BlackRock and nearly 100 other investors, has snapped up another food delivery startup on its consolidation march: It is acquiring FreshGoGo, a New York-based, B2C platform selling Asian groceries and ready-made dishes. Terms of the deal are not being disclosed, but […]

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

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Supio brings generative AI to personal injury cases

Supio uses generative AI to automate bulk data collection and aggregation for legal teams. It emerged from stealth Tuesday with a $25 million investment.
© 2024 TechCrunch. All rights reserved. For personal use only.

Supio uses generative AI to automate bulk data collection and aggregation for legal teams. It emerged from stealth Tuesday with a $25 million investment.

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

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Samsung promises free updates for its TVs for 7 years, fixing one of their biggest issues

Samsung has revealed that it will commit to 7 years worth of upgrades to its Tizen smart TV platform – a long awaited announcement

Samsung has announced that it will release free updates to its Tizen smart TV platform for the next seven years, as reported by FlatpanelsHD

Starting with 2024 models, with some 2023 models to follow, Samsung TV owners can expect updates to the Tizen smart TV platform built-in to their TVs, and although specific details are scarce, it should mean users will receive many of the same new features you’ll find on newer models from 2025 onwards. 

This follows in the footsteps of LG, which announced a five-year commitment to upgrading models from 2024, 2023 and even 2022 with free updates to the relevant webOS, just behind newer TVs – for example 2022 models will receive webOS 23 in 2024, webOS 24 in 2025 and so on.

Samsung was one of the last brands to hold off on these upgrades, reserving the latest iteration of its Tizen smart TV platform to new models only, while the likes of Roku, Google TV, Fire TV and more all providing upgrades to their smart TV platforms across both older and newer models with each update – making it preferential to use a streaming box over your TV’s software if it’s older than a few years.

About time 

The Samsung Game Hub is one of Tizen’s best features (Image credit: Future)

It’s surprising that Samsung, maker of some of the best TVs on the market, has taken this long to provide these free updates to Tizen. Obviously, for Samsung fans and Tizen users, it generally forces them to move onto the latest models every time they’re wanting to access the latest iteration of Tizen – especially if they want to avoid having to switch to Fire TV, Roku and so on made available through some of the best streaming devices

Thankfully, it has now listened to users and seen what the competition, mainly LG, has done and has followed suit. In recent reviews of Samsung TVs, such as the Samsung S95D (the best OLED TV of 2024 when it comes to sheer performance) or Samsung QN85D (a more entry-level mini-LED set) Tizen has been a consistent highlight and while it may not be everyone’s favorite, its user-friendly layout and strong library of apps and features mean it is one of the better smart TV platforms around. 

By committing to these free updates, Samsung solves one of its biggest issues that garnered criticism from both users and critics alike – stopping users from feeling the need to have to upgrade their TVs needlessly, fearing the disappearance or stilted performance of apps or missing features. 

It’s a welcome announcement that puts the consumer first, which – after a year of smart TV platform news that’s included ads, ads and more ads – is a sight for sore eyes.

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Telegram CEO charges include distributing CSAM and money laundering

French authorities have now shared the why behind the August 24 arrest of Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov. His arrest came in response to a series of charges, including complicity in “distributing, offering or making available pornographic images of minors, in an organized group.” The charges stem from a judicial investigation opened on July 8 against an unnamed individual.
The release, penned by Prosecutor of the Republic Laure Beccuau, details 12 charges in total, including money laundering, drug trafficking, fraud, running an online platform that allows illegal transactions and possessing child pornography. Durov can be held in custody until Wednesday, August 28.
The arrest has raised questions about how much leaders are responsible for what happens on their platforms. Telegram shared a post stating the company “abides by EU laws” and “It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.” There have also been outcries from individuals like Elon Musk, the owner of X (formerly Twitter), who posted “#FreePavel” on X, and NSA whistleblower and now Russian citizen Edward Snowden, who called it politically motivated. Telegram is especially popular in Russia and Ukraine.
French President Emmanuel Macron responded on X (formerly Twitter) to “false information” that the arrest was politically motivated. “France is deeply committed to freedom of expression and communication, to innovation, and to the spirit of entrepreneurship. It will remain so,” Macron shared on August 26. “In a state governed by the rule of law, freedoms are upheld within a legal framework, both on social media and in real life, to protect citizens and respect their fundamental rights. It is up to the judiciary, in full independence, to enforce the law.”This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/telegram-ceo-charges-include-distributing-csam-and-money-laundering-125336547.html?src=rss

French authorities have now shared the why behind the August 24 arrest of Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov. His arrest came in response to a series of charges, including complicity in “distributing, offering or making available pornographic images of minors, in an organized group.” The charges stem from a judicial investigation opened on July 8 against an unnamed individual.

The release, penned by Prosecutor of the Republic Laure Beccuau, details 12 charges in total, including money laundering, drug trafficking, fraud, running an online platform that allows illegal transactions and possessing child pornography. Durov can be held in custody until Wednesday, August 28.

The arrest has raised questions about how much leaders are responsible for what happens on their platforms. Telegram shared a post stating the company “abides by EU laws” and “It is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner are responsible for abuse of that platform.” There have also been outcries from individuals like Elon Musk, the owner of X (formerly Twitter), who posted “#FreePavel” on X, and NSA whistleblower and now Russian citizen Edward Snowden, who called it politically motivated. Telegram is especially popular in Russia and Ukraine.

French President Emmanuel Macron responded on X (formerly Twitter) to “false information” that the arrest was politically motivated. “France is deeply committed to freedom of expression and communication, to innovation, and to the spirit of entrepreneurship. It will remain so,” Macron shared on August 26. “In a state governed by the rule of law, freedoms are upheld within a legal framework, both on social media and in real life, to protect citizens and respect their fundamental rights. It is up to the judiciary, in full independence, to enforce the law.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/telegram-ceo-charges-include-distributing-csam-and-money-laundering-125336547.html?src=rss

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Red Hat makes OpenStack services available on OpenShift in major open source cloud boost

Red Hat has announced the general availability of OpenStack Services and OpenShift integration for enterprises.

Red Hat is looking to enhance its infrastructure platforms by integrating its OpenStack Services with its Kubernetes-based OpenShift container platform.

The shift marks a new direction for the company’s strategy, with customers now able to manage OpenStack as a container-based workload on OpenShift.

OpenStack was initially developed as an alternative to AWS and VMware, gaining popularity for its open source background.

OpenStack will integrate with OpenShift

Red Hat’s newly announced integration, which it says is ideal for enterprise, particularly within the telecomms sector, will let organizations blend traditional virtualized applications with more modern, cloud-native applications, within one cohesive environment.

According to the company, the integration will offer “a new pathway for how organizations can rethink their virtualization strategies, making it easier for them to scale, upgrade and add resources to their cloud environments.”

Key benefits of the integration include a notably faster deployment of compute modules – up to four times faster than previous versions – alongside enhanced automation, improved security features, better cost management and AI-optimized infrastructure. 

Chris Wright, Senior VP of Global Engineering and CTO for Red Hat, emphasized the company’s ongoing commitment to OpenStack: “Red Hat’s dedication to OpenStack is demonstrated through our extensive contributions to the project, our leadership in the OpenStack community and our focus on delivering enterprise-grade OpenStack solutions to our customers.”

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