Episode 89: Never Let the Internet Name Anything - a podcast by Sanjay Parekh & Adam Walker
from 2019-06-24T10:00
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In this Episode:
- Shock Samsung Confession Risks Galaxy Smartphone Cancellation (1:48)
- Spies may have used an AI-generated face to infiltrate US politics (3:50)
- “Amazon’s Choice” Does Not Necessarily Mean A Product Is Good (6:30)
- Hackers, farmers, and doctors unite! Support for Right to Repair laws slowly grows (8:10)
- Samsung Deletes Tweet Warning Users to Virus-Scan Their Smart TVs (10:22)
- How to replace Google’s Trips app (13:40)
- Google turns to retro cryptography to keep data sets private (16:10)
- Firefox zero-day was used in attack against Coinbase employees, not its users (18:10)
Weird and Wacky (20:05):
- Boaty McBoatface mission gives new insight into warming ocean abyss
- The flying saddle: Would you give it a try?
- Genius hid a Morse code message in song lyrics to prove Google was copying them
- Lyrics Site Accuses Google of Lifting Its Content
Tech Recs (24:57)
Adam - Skitch
Sanjay - https://catalogchoice.org/
Links:
- Shock Samsung Confession Risks Galaxy Smartphone Cancellation
- Spies may have used an AI-generated face to infiltrate US politics
- “Amazon’s Choice” Recommends Some Obviously Crappy Products. Blame The Algorithm.
- Hackers, farmers, and doctors unite! Support for Right to Repair laws slowly grows | Ars Technica
- Samsung Deletes Tweet Warning Users to Virus-Scan Their Smart TVs
- How to replace Google’s Trips app - The Verge
- Google Turns to Retro Cryptography to Keep Datasets Private
- Firefox zero-day was used in attack against Coinbase employees, not its users | ZDNet
- Boaty McBoatface mission gives new insight into warming ocean abyss -- ScienceDaily
- Tech Talk Y'all
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