Company that analyzes web traffic
POPULARITY
Apple TV amplía su alcance y llega a Android con opciones de streaming y contenido deportivo Por Félix Riaño @LocutorCo La llegada de la aplicación de Apple TV a Android pone sobre la mesa nuevas posibilidades de entretenimiento. Desde hoy, usuarios con teléfonos, tabletas o dispositivos plegables con Android 10 o versiones posteriores van a disfrutar de series y películas originales, eventos deportivos en vivo y la opción de un periodo de prueba gratuito de siete días antes de suscribirse. Este movimiento abre el panorama para quienes deseaban acceder a títulos como “Severance” y partidos de la Major League Soccer (MLS). También da más opciones de pago, pues las suscripciones van a poder manejarse desde la cuenta de Google Play. ¿Vamos a presenciar un cambio de rumbo en la guerra del streaming con esta expansión?La noticia sorprende, porque Apple tiende a mantener sus productos y servicios dentro de su propio ecosistema. Ahora, con la llegada de Apple TV a Android, vamos a ver un giro en la manera de consumir contenido. La aplicación ofrece la función de “Continuar Viendo” para retomar series y películas en diferentes dispositivos, junto con la lista personal de títulos guardados. El diseño se parece a su versión en iOS, aunque hay cambios, como la ausencia de la tienda de iTunes para comprar o rentar contenidos. Esta decisión señala el interés de Apple por atraer a usuarios que utilizan smartphones de distintas marcas. Al final, la expansión representa una invitación a quienes deseaban probar Apple TV+ sin tener que comprar un iPhone o iPad.La competencia entre plataformas de streaming se ha vuelto intensa. Cada servicio compite por la atención del público, y Apple TV+ todavía tiene un número de suscriptores menor que otros gigantes del sector. Además, en dispositivos Android, existen muchas opciones como Netflix, Prime Video y Disney+, que ya son parte de la rutina de muchos usuarios. El reto principal es la fragmentación: hay modelos antiguos que no soportan Android 10, así que no van a poder utilizar la aplicación de Apple TV. Esta barrera tecnológica puede limitar el alcance de la estrategia de Apple. Otros se preguntan si la oferta de contenidos exclusivos, como “Ted Lasso” o la cobertura de la Major League Soccer, va a ser suficiente para convencer a usuarios que prefieren otras plataformas.Apple ha decidido ampliar horizontes y confía en que esta estrategia va a sumar nuevos suscriptores a su servicio. La compañía entiende que muchos consumidores prefieren Android por su variedad de precios y marcas, así que brindarles la opción de instalar Apple TV sin necesidad de un dispositivo iOS es un paso importante. Además, Apple ofrece la posibilidad de un periodo de prueba de siete días para Apple TV+, algo que puede animar a quienes están indecisos. Las producciones populares como “Severance” y los partidos de la MLS son su carta de presentación para convencer a los aficionados al fútbol y a las series que buscan algo distinto. Algunos expertos señalan que Apple va a necesitar más contenido original y acuerdos deportivos de renombre para competir con otras plataformas. De todos modos, el aterrizaje de Apple TV en el ecosistema Android simboliza la intención de la empresa de crecer y posicionarse en el sector del streaming, con la mira puesta en millones de usuarios potenciales. No es la primera vez que Apple incursiona en Android: la compañía ya había lanzado Apple Music en la plataforma de Google hace algunos años. Ahora, con Apple TV, busca consolidar su división de servicios, la cual genera ingresos significativos y es la segunda más grande para la empresa, solo por detrás de la venta de iPhones. El costo mensual de Apple TV+ en Estados Unidos es de 10 dólares, y en Europa ronda precios similares en euros. El formato de cobro mediante Google Play facilita los procesos de suscripción y reduce las barreras de entrada para usuarios que buscan rapidez y comodidad. Según datos de Statcounter, Android domina el mercado global de smartphones con un 72% de participación, lo cual significa un público enorme al que Apple puede llegar a través de esta aplicación. Este escenario revela la importancia de expandir la disponibilidad de un servicio de streaming que incluye series premiadas, transmisiones deportivas y un enfoque original que intenta diferenciarse de otras plataformas. Apple TV llega a Android para abrir nuevas ventanas de entretenimiento y reforzar el universo de la compañía en el competitivo mundo del streaming. ¿Vale la pena intentarlo? Te invitamos a probarlo y compartir tu opinión. Vamos a seguir de cerca los próximos pasos de Apple en esta aventura multiplataforma. No te pierdas más análisis y noticias en nuestro pódcast Flash Diario: https://open.spotify.com/show/3hZpVtjGWqgqATmVom54uK?si=2HttGDsxQW6PjeaXKSwI3wBibliografía (enlaces activos)TechRadar: Apple TV is finally available on Android devicesCNBC: Apple brings its TV streaming service to rival Android platformApple Newsroom: The Apple TV app is now available on AndroidBloomberg: Apple Brings TV+ to Android Phones in Bid to Boost SubscribersConviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/flash-diario-de-el-siglo-21-es-hoy--5835407/support.
Sat, 18 Jan 2025 12:55:02 +0000 https://podcast552923.podigee.io/342-new-episode ea655cf224a5a60547b249d27c161e9c Die Meldung, dass der weltweite Marktanteil von Google unter 90 Prozent gesunken ist, sollte nicht überbewertet werden. Nach aktuellen Zahlen von Statcounter lag der Marktanteil von Google weltweit in den letzten drei Monaten des Jahres 2024 jeweils unter 90 Prozent - allerdings nur minimal. Außerdem stellt sich die Frage, ob alle Suchanfragen in den Zahlen repräsentiert sind. Reddit und Quora haben Mitte Januar einiges ihrer Sichtbarkeit in Google eingebüßt. Und obwohl sich die Sichtbarkeit von Reddit zuletzt wieder etwas erholt hat, stellt sich die Frage, ob Google ein Update ausgerollt hat, das sich generell auf Foren und User Generated Content bezieht. Viele Websites, die vom Helpful Content Update betroffen sind, haben es immer noch schwer in Google - selbst mit Originalinhalten. Perplexity bringt jetzt auch Liveergebnisse aus dem Sport - zunächst nur für die NBA und die NFL. Der Name: Perplexity Sports. Weitere Sportarten sollen folgen. ChatGPT Tasks ermöglicht die Vorausplanung von verschiedenen Aufgaben wie zum Beispiel von Erinnerungen. full Die Meldung, dass der weltweite Marktanteil von Google unter 90 Prozent gesunken ist, sollte nicht überbewertet werden. no Christian
video: https://youtu.be/jqzkplxlr9Q Comment on the TWIL Forum (https://thisweekinlinux.com/forum) This year in Linux was a huge year. So many things happened. So many updates, releases, changes, improvements. Linux Marketshare, in fact, got much better too. So many things. So we're going to be covering everything in the super detail that we normally would on this week in Linux because there's just so many things to talk about. If you would like to learn more about each individual thing, you can check out the episode show notes. There will be links to every single time every single episode in the show notes so go check those out. Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/2389be04-5c79-485e-b1ca-3a5b2cebb006/15c61f5d-8ade-4b47-96c3-f11e3b43e8df.mp3) Support the Show Become a Patron = tuxdigital.com/membership (https://tuxdigital.com/membership) Store = tuxdigital.com/store (https://tuxdigital.com/store) Chapters: 00:00 Intro 00:40 CVEs & CNAs for Linux Kernel 01:31 Rust added to the Linux Kernel in Linux 6.8 01:42 Linux 6.12 Merging Extensible Scheduler “sched_ext” 02:46 4.55% Marketshare for Linux on StatCounter! 03:57 Security Topics 04:18 Locally Exploitable glibc Vulnerability 05:44 Needrestart Security Vulnerabilities Found 06:29 RegreSSHion: Remote Code Execution Vulnerability In OpenSSH Server 07:44 XZ backdoor found in widespread Linux utility 10:34 CrowdStrike causes Global Outage for Microsoft Windows 13:23 Desktop Environments 15:26 Distro Releases 18:08 Red Hat Summit 2024 18:32 Destination Linux 400 18:53 Destination Linux Interviews 20:23 Explicit Sync Will Finally Solve the NVIDIA/Wayland Issues 21:34 Hardware News 21:52 Gaming News: Anti Cheat Woes 23:34 Gaming News: Valve does good for Linux 25:26 umu launcher 25:49 Application News 27:55 Support the show Links: https://thisweekinlinux.com/262 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/262) https://thisweekinlinux.com/263 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/263) https://thisweekinlinux.com/264 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/264) https://thisweekinlinux.com/265 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/265) https://thisweekinlinux.com/267 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/267) https://thisweekinlinux.com/268 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/268) https://thisweekinlinux.com/269 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/269) https://thisweekinlinux.com/270 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/270) https://thisweekinlinux.com/272 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/272) https://thisweekinlinux.com/273 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/273) https://thisweekinlinux.com/274 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/274) https://thisweekinlinux.com/276 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/276) https://thisweekinlinux.com/278 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/278) https://thisweekinlinux.com/279 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/279) https://thisweekinlinux.com/280 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/280) https://thisweekinlinux.com/282 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/282) https://thisweekinlinux.com/284 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/284) https://thisweekinlinux.com/286 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/286) https://thisweekinlinux.com/288 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/288) https://thisweekinlinux.com/289 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/289) https://thisweekinlinux.com/290 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/290) https://thisweekinlinux.com/291 (https://thisweekinlinux.com/291)
C'est un séisme dans le monde des technologies. Après des années d'enquête, la justice américaine a statué cet été : Google exerce un monopole sur la recherche en ligne. Pour y remédier, un démantèlement est envisagé, avec des conséquences majeures pour l'entreprise. Parmi les options sur la table, la revente d'Android et de Chrome, des piliers du géant numérique, pourrait redistribuer les cartes. Android détient plus de 71 % des parts de marché mondial des systèmes d'exploitation mobiles, tandis que Chrome en représente près de 67 % pour les navigateurs, selon *Statcounter*. Leur séparation pourrait rapporter gros : Mandeep Singh, analyste chez Bloomberg Intelligence, estime la valeur de Chrome entre 15 et 20 milliards de dollars, grâce à ses 3 milliards d'utilisateurs. À titre de comparaison, en 2016, Opera – avec 350 millions d'utilisateurs – avait été cédé pour 600 millions de dollars. Cependant, tout ne se limite pas à la valeur brute. Bob O'Donnell, de TECHanalysis Research, rappelle que le futur repreneur devra déterminer comment monétiser Chrome, aujourd'hui une porte d'entrée vers Google Search, au cœur du procès antitrust. Cette relation entre Chrome et Google illustre pourquoi Alphabet est accusé d'étouffer la concurrence. Pour Google, la séparation serait un désastre. Lee-Anne Mulholland, vice-présidente des affaires réglementaires, prévient : "Peu d'entreprises pourraient maintenir ces technologies open source ou investir à notre niveau." Selon elle, un démantèlement augmenterait les coûts pour les consommateurs et affaiblirait Android et Google Play face à l'iPhone et l'App Store. Alors, Chrome et Android, bientôt indépendants ? La décision finale pourrait redéfinir l'écosystème numérique mondial. Un dossier brûlant à suivre. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Az áttörést jelentő fénygyűjtő hónapokig képes tárolni a napenergiát ITBusiness 2024-11-03 09:33:54 Infotech Németország egyetem Energia A Johannes Gutenberg Egyetem Mainz (JGU) és a Siegeni Egyetem kutatói áttörést értek el a napenergia hatékony tárolásában speciális molekulák, úgynevezett fotoswitch-ek segítségével. Ezek a molekulák képesek elnyelni a napenergiát és kémiai kötések formájában tárolni azt, lehetővé téve, hogy a hő energiaveszteség nélkül akár hetekig vagy hónapokig Egymást üldözi a két galaxis és a kötelékük végzetes lesz Rakéta 2024-11-03 07:39:02 Tudomány James Webb A James Webb és a Hubble Űrteleszkóp közössé formált felvételén két, egymással kis híján ütköző galaxis látható úgy, ahogy korábban soha. “L-O”: 55 éve született a világháló őse ICT Global 2024-11-03 04:03:52 Infotech 1969. október 29-én két tudós kapcsolatot létesített egymástól több mint ötszáz kilométerre lévő számítógépek között. Az üzenetküldés majdnem sikerült, de két karakter és egy összeomló rendszer is elég volt ahhoz, hogy megszülessen az internet. Mérgező anyag lehet benne, nem ajánlják a fekete színű konyhai eszközöket Startlap Vásárlás 2024-11-03 07:03:18 Tudomány Egy új tanulmány szerint rákot okozó égésgátló anyagokat tartalmaznak a fekete műanyag konyhai eszközök és ételtároló dobozok. A szakértők azt tanácsolják, hogy aki teheti, váltson inkább üvegedényre. Elpusztult a világ legnagyobb, fogságban tartott krokodilja refresher.hu 2024-11-03 11:30:00 Tudomány Cassius közel 5,5 méteres hosszúságával és közel egy tonnás súlyával 2013-ban lett világrekorder. Figyeli az űrhajósjelöltet a magyar űrorvos 24.hu 2024-11-03 10:53:38 Tudomány Houston Kapu Tibor Cserényi Gyula Nagy Klaudia Vivien a Houstonban felkészülő Kapu Tibor és a tartalékos űrhajós Cserényi Gyula állapotát is figyeli. Rekordmagasságba lőtt a Windows 11 népszerűsége a felhasználók körében PC Fórum 2024-11-03 09:00:00 Infotech Windows Egy évvel a Windows 10 ingyenes támogatásának megszűnése előtt rekordmagasságba növekedett a Windows 11 felhasználók aránya a StatCounter legújabb méréseiben. A statisztikákban korábban soha látott, 2%-pontot is meghaladó ugrással 35,58%-ra növelte részesedését a legújabb redmondi rendszer, miközben előző társa, a Windows 10 szintén évek óta nem lá A Rubik-kockáéhoz hasonló világsikerre tör egy magyar matematikus játéka, a Møbee Qubit 2024-11-03 08:45:09 Tudomány Baranya Pécs Ruff János adjunktus, a Pécsi Tudományegyetem véges geometriával foglalkozó matematikusa egy hallgatójának témát keresve ajánlotta, hogy készítsék el a népszerű kártyajáték, a Dobble olyan általánosítását, ami a Möbius-síkok rendszerét használja. De hogyan született az ötlet, és mi kell egy ilyen játék nemzetközi sikeréhez? A Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 hatalmas siker a Microsoft számára SG.hu 2024-11-03 13:08:37 Gaming Microsoft Franchise Call of Duty A mérföldkőnek számító franchise teljesítette az elvárásokat és megmutatja a játékok jövőjének útját. A dinoszauruszok kihalását okozó aszteroidánál 200-szor nagyobb meteorit csapódott a Földbe 3,3 milliárd éve – ennek köszönhetjük az élet elterjedését Csillagászat 2024-11-03 15:38:14 Tudomány A 66 millió évvel a dinoszauruszok kihalásához vezető aszteroidabecsapódásnál nincs is jobb példa arra, hogy egy kozmikus kődarab becsapódása Földünk felszínébe milyen pusztító hatású lehet. Most azonban a kutatóknak sikerült kimutatniuk azt, hogy ennél jóval korábban, 3,3 milliárd évvel ezelőtt is történhetett egy hatalmas aszteroidabecsapódás, am Személyre szabott onboarding élményt ígér a Mastercard FinTechRadar 2024-11-03 05:34:50 Modern Gazdaság Infotech Mesterséges intelligencia A Mastercard és a Databricks közös fejlesztésében létrehozott, generatív mesterséges intelligencián alapuló digitális asszisztenst mutattak be. 1200 km/h-val az amatőr rakétamodellezés csúcsára Nyíregyháza 2024-11-03 06:22:15 Belföld Interjú Világűr A csapat közösen építi és teszteli saját rakétáit, amelyekkel máris figyelemre méltó sikereket értek el, beleértve a hazai sebességrekordot is. Ezt a rekordkísérletet dr. Ferencz Orsolya űrkutatásért felelős miniszteri biztos és a tudományos élet kiemelkedő szereplői is elismerték. Az alábbi interjúban a magyar amatőr rakétamodellezés úttörői mesél A felhők dönthetik el a klímaváltozást Tudás.hu 2024-11-03 05:55:24 Gazdaság Energia Mesterséges intelligencia Klímaváltozás Melegítenek, hűtenek vagy épp árvizet okoznak. A felhőkben lehet a kulcs ahhoz, hogy megértsük a Föld klímáját és a ránk váró jövőt a következő évtizedekben. Ennek megértésében pedig áttörést hozhat a mesterséges intelligencia bevetése. A felhők a Föld energia-egyensúlyában kettős szerepet játszanak: egyszerre képesek hűteni és melegíteni is a boly A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
Az áttörést jelentő fénygyűjtő hónapokig képes tárolni a napenergiát ITBusiness 2024-11-03 09:33:54 Infotech Németország egyetem Energia A Johannes Gutenberg Egyetem Mainz (JGU) és a Siegeni Egyetem kutatói áttörést értek el a napenergia hatékony tárolásában speciális molekulák, úgynevezett fotoswitch-ek segítségével. Ezek a molekulák képesek elnyelni a napenergiát és kémiai kötések formájában tárolni azt, lehetővé téve, hogy a hő energiaveszteség nélkül akár hetekig vagy hónapokig Egymást üldözi a két galaxis és a kötelékük végzetes lesz Rakéta 2024-11-03 07:39:02 Tudomány James Webb A James Webb és a Hubble Űrteleszkóp közössé formált felvételén két, egymással kis híján ütköző galaxis látható úgy, ahogy korábban soha. “L-O”: 55 éve született a világháló őse ICT Global 2024-11-03 04:03:52 Infotech 1969. október 29-én két tudós kapcsolatot létesített egymástól több mint ötszáz kilométerre lévő számítógépek között. Az üzenetküldés majdnem sikerült, de két karakter és egy összeomló rendszer is elég volt ahhoz, hogy megszülessen az internet. Mérgező anyag lehet benne, nem ajánlják a fekete színű konyhai eszközöket Startlap Vásárlás 2024-11-03 07:03:18 Tudomány Egy új tanulmány szerint rákot okozó égésgátló anyagokat tartalmaznak a fekete műanyag konyhai eszközök és ételtároló dobozok. A szakértők azt tanácsolják, hogy aki teheti, váltson inkább üvegedényre. Elpusztult a világ legnagyobb, fogságban tartott krokodilja refresher.hu 2024-11-03 11:30:00 Tudomány Cassius közel 5,5 méteres hosszúságával és közel egy tonnás súlyával 2013-ban lett világrekorder. Figyeli az űrhajósjelöltet a magyar űrorvos 24.hu 2024-11-03 10:53:38 Tudomány Houston Kapu Tibor Cserényi Gyula Nagy Klaudia Vivien a Houstonban felkészülő Kapu Tibor és a tartalékos űrhajós Cserényi Gyula állapotát is figyeli. Rekordmagasságba lőtt a Windows 11 népszerűsége a felhasználók körében PC Fórum 2024-11-03 09:00:00 Infotech Windows Egy évvel a Windows 10 ingyenes támogatásának megszűnése előtt rekordmagasságba növekedett a Windows 11 felhasználók aránya a StatCounter legújabb méréseiben. A statisztikákban korábban soha látott, 2%-pontot is meghaladó ugrással 35,58%-ra növelte részesedését a legújabb redmondi rendszer, miközben előző társa, a Windows 10 szintén évek óta nem lá A Rubik-kockáéhoz hasonló világsikerre tör egy magyar matematikus játéka, a Møbee Qubit 2024-11-03 08:45:09 Tudomány Baranya Pécs Ruff János adjunktus, a Pécsi Tudományegyetem véges geometriával foglalkozó matematikusa egy hallgatójának témát keresve ajánlotta, hogy készítsék el a népszerű kártyajáték, a Dobble olyan általánosítását, ami a Möbius-síkok rendszerét használja. De hogyan született az ötlet, és mi kell egy ilyen játék nemzetközi sikeréhez? A Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 hatalmas siker a Microsoft számára SG.hu 2024-11-03 13:08:37 Gaming Microsoft Franchise Call of Duty A mérföldkőnek számító franchise teljesítette az elvárásokat és megmutatja a játékok jövőjének útját. A dinoszauruszok kihalását okozó aszteroidánál 200-szor nagyobb meteorit csapódott a Földbe 3,3 milliárd éve – ennek köszönhetjük az élet elterjedését Csillagászat 2024-11-03 15:38:14 Tudomány A 66 millió évvel a dinoszauruszok kihalásához vezető aszteroidabecsapódásnál nincs is jobb példa arra, hogy egy kozmikus kődarab becsapódása Földünk felszínébe milyen pusztító hatású lehet. Most azonban a kutatóknak sikerült kimutatniuk azt, hogy ennél jóval korábban, 3,3 milliárd évvel ezelőtt is történhetett egy hatalmas aszteroidabecsapódás, am Személyre szabott onboarding élményt ígér a Mastercard FinTechRadar 2024-11-03 05:34:50 Modern Gazdaság Infotech Mesterséges intelligencia A Mastercard és a Databricks közös fejlesztésében létrehozott, generatív mesterséges intelligencián alapuló digitális asszisztenst mutattak be. 1200 km/h-val az amatőr rakétamodellezés csúcsára Nyíregyháza 2024-11-03 06:22:15 Belföld Interjú Világűr A csapat közösen építi és teszteli saját rakétáit, amelyekkel máris figyelemre méltó sikereket értek el, beleértve a hazai sebességrekordot is. Ezt a rekordkísérletet dr. Ferencz Orsolya űrkutatásért felelős miniszteri biztos és a tudományos élet kiemelkedő szereplői is elismerték. Az alábbi interjúban a magyar amatőr rakétamodellezés úttörői mesél A felhők dönthetik el a klímaváltozást Tudás.hu 2024-11-03 05:55:24 Gazdaság Energia Mesterséges intelligencia Klímaváltozás Melegítenek, hűtenek vagy épp árvizet okoznak. A felhőkben lehet a kulcs ahhoz, hogy megértsük a Föld klímáját és a ránk váró jövőt a következő évtizedekben. Ennek megértésében pedig áttörést hozhat a mesterséges intelligencia bevetése. A felhők a Föld energia-egyensúlyában kettős szerepet játszanak: egyszerre képesek hűteni és melegíteni is a boly A további adásainkat keresd a podcast.hirstart.hu oldalunkon.
FastLetter - Una fonte buona dalla quale aggiornarsia cura di Giorgio TavernitiN. 47 - 8 Ottobre 2024Di cosa parliamo* Google è in calo?* L'effetto dell'AI* Ma posso ottimizzare per l'AI?* Attenzione all'ispirazionale* Ottimizzare con l'AI invece è un'altra roba* SalutiPremessa Finalmente ci siamo! Il 10 ottobre, tra due giorni, si terrà l'edizione SEO Content & AI de La Settimana della Formazione. Terrò io i due eventi della giornata, alle ore 11:00 e alle ore 15:00. Sono online e gratuiti, eventi eccezionali: quando ci accorgiamo che c'è qualcosa di veramente importante da divulgare, lo facciamo così.Inoltre, per l'Accademia, abbiamo creato un programma speciale per la Peak Season:Sono due Seminari Verticali e Avanzati per l'ADV sull'E-commerce: Il primo dedicato a Google Ads e il secondo al Social ADV. Sono acquistabili anche singolarmente.La formazione dell'Accademia si distingue da tutto il resto perché si rivolge a persone già esperte, viene tenuta da consulenti che fanno questo mestiere da più di 10 anni e il format è molto pratico. Si unisce a tutto questo il vantaggio di essere direttamente con i Mentori, di persona, in presenza, con un numero limitato di partecipanti.E a proposito di eventi in presenza, abbiamo il 30 Ottobre a Milano l'Advanced SEO Tool: guardate il programma, è molto interessante, ci sono 200 anni di seniority. La Community SEO più tecnica d'Italia si riunisce per la Spacca Google Edition!Poi, l'11-12 dicembre a Bologna, il Search Marketing Connect.GOOGLE È IN CALO? È la domanda dell'anno. Google sta calando? La risposta breve è: no.Prendendo i dati Semrush e tornando indietro con Wayback Machine abbiamo la pagina di riferimento (Similarweb non mi dava questa possibilità):* Google.comMarzo 2024: 164,57 miliardiLuglio 2024: 131,19 miliardi* Google.comMarzo 2023: 112,94 miliardiLuglio 2023: 95,54 miliardiIl 2024 è stato un anno in crescita per il dominio Google.com. Ma anche il .it ha seguito questa tendenza:* Google.itAgosto 2024: 232,57 milioniAprile 2023: 150,05 milioniHo provato a prendere altri strumenti, altri dati, altri mesi. In nessuna statistica vedo un calo anno su anno del traffico di Google.com o di Google.it.Allora la domanda potrebbe essere: ma è in calo come share del “motore di ricerca”?Le voci erano nate perché c'era una flessione su StatCounter a fine giugno, ma commentai sui social dicendo di aspettare, che i dati di questi sistemi si aggiornano. E in effetti abbiamo una risposta: non passeremo a Bing.Infatti il sito in questione mostra questi dati:* Worldwide:Settembre 2023: Google 91,58%Settembre 2024: Google 90,00%* Italia:Settembre 2023: Google 94,64%Settembre 2024: Google 93,44%Negli ultimi mesi, Google in Italia è di nuovo in crescita. Se ci fosse un drastico calo lo avremmo visto come una discesa continua, ma non c'è. Possiamo argomentare che anche l'1% è tanto, ma parliamo di share altissimi che salgono e scendono; è sostanzialmente stabile.Anche andando a prendere i dati di Cloudflare e le loro statistiche e ricerche sullo share dei motori di ricerca ballano 2-3 punti percentuali in due anni che però salgono e scendono. E quando scende Google non sale Bing, ma Baidu e, in misura minore, prima Yandex e poi Bing (parliamo di 0.5 punti).Ma di che cosa stiamo parlando? Per ora…del nulla cosmico.La cosa interessante è un'altra. Ancora, INCREDIBILMENTE, l'hanno focalizzata in pochi ed è lì che si giocherà la battaglia. E purtroppo mi dispiace dirla per quanto è banale: GUARDATE IL TRAFFICO MOBILE.Lo share Mobile di Google non ha nemmeno un minimo calo: è stabile al 94% mondiale e 98% italiano.Non c'è un vero dato significativo, prendendo in esame Europa, Mondo, USA e Italia di un calo di Google che mostri una tendenza, c'è un sali e scendi. Così come Bing, quelle variazioni percentuali in salita le sta perdendo.La verità è che un calo importante per Google non avverrà per l'uso dell'AI, ma solo se si interviene a livello politico e gli si impedisce di essere il motore di ricerca di default di Apple su iPhone. Lo share di Android è elevatissimo, così come lo share di Google Chrome.Con una considerazione importante: vi siete occupati del calo di Google, ma quello dell'uso di iOS a livello mondiale ha un punto in più. Non è che l'iPhone non abbia delle crepe, anzi, bisogna vedere se questo iPhone 16 riuscirà a mantenere questi dati.È dura da ammettere: non riusciamo ad essere obiettivi. C'è una fascia di persone che appena può attacca Google. Mi ricordano quasi le tifoserie di calcio.Un dato da aggiungere a tutto questo è quello economico, anche questo in forte aumento (dati completi qui).Ho aggiunto questa e altre informazioni su suggerimento di Marco Quadrella, visto l'argomento molto complesso avevo bisogno di più occhi (ne approfitto per ringraziare anche Alessio Pomaro per le sue considerazioni).Ora c'è un'altra considerazione da fare. Google non è un motore di ricerca da molto tempo, la maggior parte degli “Esperti di AI” ha messo Google vs ChatGPT andando a fare l'assunto di “Motore di ricerca” vs “Assistente”.Quindi, prima di tutto, i motori di ricerca sono morti anni fa e si sono evoluti. Queste persone stanno descrivendo i motori di ricerca del 2011. Lo vedete nei loro video, parlano di keyword, non conoscono le evoluzioni!L'evoluzione ha consentito a Google, infatti, di inserire l'AI nella ricerca e di creare un ibrido. E c'è una grande, anzi enorme, differenza:Gli LLM esprimono il massimo potenziale nell'elaborazione di un contesto controllato, i Motori di Ricerca con AI usano il contesto dei contenuti online indicizzati ed estratti dal motore e lo usano per dare delle risposte. È una delle considerazioni che fa sempre Alessio Pomaro e che mi pare urgente da comprendere.Consiglio a chi si occupa di AI di dedicare più tempo all'approfondimento degli altri mondi e di respirare profondamente quando si tratta di creare contenuti social. Purtroppo il settore dell'AI, essendo una rivoluzione epocale al pari dell'elettricità, si trascina tutto quel linguaggio sensazionalistico che molte volte non è necessario. Non è possibile che ogni nuova news sia una rivoluzione di quella precedente perché altrimenti non si capisce nemmeno il termine rivoluzione. E non è possibile che gli strumenti attuali vengano spazzati via, anche perché gli strumenti attuali la integrano!Bisogna davvero fare attenzione.Veniamo però ad un altro punto: ma la Ricerca con AI, gli assistenti, le chat pure…che effetto produrranno? Perché è questa la cosa interessante.L'EFFETTO DELL'AIAd oggi stiamo osservando un mondo in cambiamento veloce. Quello che non riusciamo a vedere è l'uso che ne faranno le nuove generazioni. Se è vero che per il momento non c'è un grosso sconvolgimento nel mondo della Ricerca nonostante siano passati quasi 2 anni dal lancio di ChatGPT, c'è da dire che non è più possibile immaginare un mondo senza AI.Così come non è possibile togliere a una persona molto giovane YouTube, i racconti delle persone che hanno figli sono gli stessi: non gli si toglie un sistema di AI.Gli effetti di tutto questo sono per me imprevedibili.Come sapete, rifletto su questi argomenti da sempre, seguendo da 20 anni il mondo della ricerca, e ho proposto un framework che ha circa un anno di vita.Lascio ancora un attimo decantare questo framework perché sto riflettendo molto sui termini da usare, ma sono in scia del Google Liquido, dell'Internet Liquida e dell'Audience. Di parole come Search inteso come Ricerca Umana. Questo framework descrive correttamente l'Internet di oggi che per me è un'Internet Liquida, proprio dal nome dell'ultimo capitolo del libro. Martino Mosna nei commenti mi ha dato vari spunti sui quali riflettere.Sto riflettendo molto con colleghi e colleghe in questi mesi, anche offline, e proprio qualche giorno fa ne ho riparlato con Ivano Di Biasi, che ho incontrato all'Ecommerce Hub. In pratica, abbiamo fatto dei ragionamenti simili su quello che sta accadendo e sull'uso dell'AI, con due presentazioni simili nella sostanza. Saremmo potuti intervenire uno dopo l'altro tranquillamente.Concetti che troverete il 10 ottobre a La Settimana della Formazione e sui quali sto preparando dei video sul canale YouTube, abbastanza lunghi, dedicati proprio all'e-commerce, alla SEO e all'AI.Con Ivano, dopo il video che ho fatto sul canale, abbiamo mantenuto un dialogo aperto, tanto che il libro che ha scritto SEO for AI l'ho letto proprio come se stessimo chiacchierando. E secondo me è così che va letto: un libro valido, scritto di getto in poche ore. Un flusso di coscienza che cristallizza il suo pensiero in quel momento.Infatti
We take a victory lap for Linux, Cover the SSH vulnerability in great detail, and discuss Fedora's proposal to include opt-in telemetry. KDE ships an update, Nexus Mods is coming to Linux, and Meta has a clever link time optimization approach for the kernel. For tips, we have inxi for better system info, rolldice for all your command line dice rolling needs, dvtm and abduco for simple terminal splitting and detaching, and ollama for running LLMs locally. You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/3VWzJ7X Back next week! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Jeff Massie, Rob Campbell, and David Ruggles Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.
Diesmal haben Olaf Kopp und Markus Hövener ganze fünf Themen im Gepäck. Was bietet die neue Version 20 vom Screaming Frog SEO Spider? Wie sinnvoll sind Suchmaschinen wie Perplexity? Was lief da bei Statcounter schief? Hat Google wirklich die organischen Suchergebnisse verschlechtert, um mehr Werbung zu verkaufen? Und vor allem: Was interessiert mich eigentlich mein Geschwätz von gestern? Hier sind die Themen im Überblick: Ab 03:15: https://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider-20/ Ab 06:50: https://www.seroundtable.com/openai-to-launch-search-engine-37319.html Ab 23:54: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/whats-wrong-search-engine-market-share-data-natalia-witczyk-lijcf/ Ab 33:06: https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-men-who-killed-google/ Ab 42:44: Was interessiert mich mein Geschwätz von gestern? Dieser Podcast:http://www.omcafe-podcast.de/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/omcafe/message
Le mercredi 15 juin 2022, le géant de l'informatique américain Microsoft a débranché Internet Explorer, son navigateur historique. A la fin des années 90 et durant les années 2000 il était pourtant LA référence en la matière. Il a même concentré jusqu'à 95% du trafic mondial en 2004 contre moins d'un 1% avant sa fermeture selon le site irlandais StatCounter. L'une des premières explications à la fin d'Internet explorer est juridique. Créé en 1995, il a alors pour principal concurrent Netscape. Pour le devancer, Microsoft l'installe par défaut sur tous ses ordinateurs. Quand son déclin a-t-il commencé ? Comment l'expliquer ? Ses concurrents ont-ils eu raison du navigateur ? Ecoutez la suite de cet épisode de "Maintenant vous savez". Un podcast écrit et réalisé par Jules Hauss. Première diffusion : 17 juin 2022 A écouter aussi : Les ventes privées en ligne sont-elles réellement avantageuses ? Qu'est-ce que la méthode Loverboy, la technique de proxénétisme utilisée par le masculiniste Andrew Tate ? A quelle fréquence devons-nous laver nos draps ? Retrouvez tous les épisodes de "Maintenant vous savez". Suivez Bababam sur Instagram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
https://youtu.be/0cCBn-iMOUY Forum Discussion Thread (https://forum.tuxdigital.com/t/256-linux-desktop-growth-fedora-dropping-xorg-nintendo-vs-yuzu-lawsuit-amp-more-linux-news/6185) We've got a lot of big news for Linux users this week! We've got everything from marketshare growth to the latest updates for your favorite distros. Desktop Linux hits 4% market share! That's the highest ever by the way. Linux From Scratch just released a new version for those of you who dream of building your own OS. Fedora is considering dropping XOrg entirely on Fedora 41 Workstation. Arch Linux users are getting a pretty big update to their package manager, Pacman. Plus we are so close to 30,000 subscribers on my YouTube channel, if you enjoy this show and aren't subscribe to my channel then I'd appreciate it if you help me reach that milestone. That would be awesome. Now let's jump into This Week in Linux, Your Source for Linux GNews! Download as MP3 (https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/2389be04-5c79-485e-b1ca-3a5b2cebb006/4edd037a-6771-4d27-b289-6abd39780b1d.mp3) Sponsored by: Kolide - thisweekinlinux.com/kolide (https://thisweekinlinux.com/kolide) Want to Support the Show? Become a Patron = https://tuxdigital.com/membership (https://tuxdigital.com/membership) Store = https://tuxdigital.com/store (https://tuxdigital.com/store) Chapters: 00:00 Intro 01:08 I'm going to SCALE - [link (https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/21x)] 03:31 4% Marketshare for Linux on StatCounter! - [link (https://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/desktop/worldwide)] 06:28 Nintendo says Game Over to Yuzu Emulator with $2.4 Million lawsuit - [link (https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2024/03/yuzu-agrees-to-pay-nintendo-2-4-million-and-will-entirely-shut-down/)] 11:40 Open Collective Foundation is shutting down - [OCF (https://opencollective.foundation/), OSC comment (https://opencollective.com/opensource/updates/regarding-the-announcement-to-dissolve-open-collective-foundation)] 15:04 Sponsored by Kolide - [link (https://thisweekinlinux.com/kolide)] 16:26 Fedora Project Considering Dropping XOrg from Workstation - [link (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Fedora-41-No-GNOME-Xorg-Install)] 20:56 Flock to Fedora Conference - [link (https://fedoramagazine.org/flock-2024-rochester-new-york/)] 23:28 HDMI Forum 'blocks AMD open sourcing its 2.1 drivers' - [link (https://www.phoronix.com/news/HDMI-2.1-OSS-Rejected)] 24:37 Zorin OS 17.1 Released - [link (https://blog.zorin.com/2024/03/07/zorin-os-17.1-is-released/)] 26:37 OpenMediaVault 7.0 Released - [link (https://www.openmediavault.org/?p=3663)] 28:40 Arch Linux's Pacman 6.1 Released - [link (https://gitlab.archlinux.org/pacman/pacman/-/releases/v6.1.0)] 30:10 Linux From Scratch 12.1 Released - [link (https://lists.linuxfromscratch.org/sympa/arc/lfs-announce/2024-03/msg00001.html)] 33:34 Outro
A Nemzetközi Űrállomás leplezte le a világ legnagyobb metánkibocsátóit Rakéta 2022-11-07 06:09:04 Tudomány Világűr NASA Űrállomás Globális felmelegedés A NASA júliusban üzemelt be egy új műszert az űrállomáson, amellyel a sivatagi por összetételét vizsgálják, de mint kiderült, az EMIT arra is tökéletesen alkalmas, hogy pontos képet fessen arról, honnan kerül az atmoszférába a globális felmelegedés egyik fő okozója. Megvan, melyik a világ legjobb kamerás okostelefonja Player 2022-11-07 06:57:02 Mobiltech Telefon Apple Okostelefon Google Samsung Spoiler Spoiler: nem a Samsung, de nem is az Apple, sőt, nem is a Google készülékében található. Elon Musk elkezdte kidobni a Twitterről azokat, akik viccből Elon Musknak adják ki magukat 444.hu 2022-11-07 07:46:37 Infotech Twitter Elon Musk Pont azért tiltakoznak, mert ha megvalósulnak Musk tervei, bárki kiadhatja majd magát bárkinek. Méregdrága eszközök helyett a telefonod mondja meg, melyik híd szakad le legközelebb PCWorld 2022-11-07 08:21:01 Mobiltech Telefon Luxus Okostelefon Újabb nagyon hasznos feladat elvégzésében segíthetnek a zsebünkben figyelő okostelefonok. Kevesebb mint 6 PC-ből 1-en fut csak a Windows 11 IT Business 2022-11-07 06:21:56 Infotech Microsoft Windows A Windows-világ nagy része még mindig nem fogadta el a Microsoft legújabb PC-operációs rendszerét több mint egy évvel a megjelenése után – derül ki a Statcounter által összeállított októberi adatokból. A Statcounter adatai azokról a webhelyekről származnak, amelyek telepítették a cég több (sok) adatot gyűjtő, mérő bővítményét. Ezek az adatok nem Feltörték a Kréta rendszerét 24.hu 2022-11-07 11:17:45 Infotech Az intézmény adatai mellett a tanárok és a diákok érzékeny információi is kiszivároghattak. Nem tud elég iPhone-t gyártani az Apple Bitport 2022-11-07 11:42:04 Mobiltech Kína Apple Okostelefon iPhone A Foxconn kínai üzemét is érintő újabb egészségügyi korlátozások miatt megnyúlik a várakozási idő Cupertino új csúcsmobiljaira. S-Pen nyílással jöhet az új Samsung Galaxy Z Fold? GSMring 2022-11-07 06:04:09 Mobiltech Telefon Okostelefon Samsung Dél-Korea A dél-koreai vállalat hamarosan piacra dobhatja az első olyan hajlítható kijelzős okostelefonját, ahol az S-Pen a készülékben van elhelyezve. Mutatjuk, hogy mit tudunk eddig az új Samsung Galaxy Z szériáról. A Samsung hatalmas sikert fut be a hajlítható kijelzős okostelefonok piacán, ugyanis magasan vezeti a piacot, emellett szinte nincs olyan márk KiberPajzsot kovácsolnak a pénzügyi fogyasztók védelmére Digital Hungary 2022-11-07 15:20:00 Infotech Oktatás MNB NMHH Magyar Bankszövetség KiberPajzs néven közös oktatási és kommunikációs együttműködésről döntött az MNB, a Magyar Bankszövetség, az NMHH, az NBSZ-NKI, illetve az ORFK. A digitális pénzügyi bűnözők ma elsősorban a fogyasztók érzelmi manipulálásával, illetve megtévesztésével támadnak. Így a KiberPajzs szervezői a lakossági ügyfelek pénzügyi tudatosságának erősítése, a kib 80 éve van ott a tenger mélyén, aminek nagyon nem kellene ott lennie hvg.hu 2022-11-07 07:02:00 Infotech Hajóbaleset Egy frissen megjelent tanulmányban arra világítanak rá tengerkutatók, hogy az elsüllyedt hajók is komoly károkat képesek okozni a vízi élővilág számára. Balatonalmádi asztrofotós képén, ahogy az Io árnyékot vet a Jupiteren Balaton.hu 2022-11-07 07:10:00 Utazás Belföld Balaton Világűr Balatonalmádi Mintegy hatvan éve nem észlelhettük ilyen fényesen a Naprendszer óriásbolygóját, ami remek feltételeket biztosított a fényképezéséhez is. Fényes Lóránd fotója Balatonalmádiban, otthoni csillagdájában készült 2022. október 19-én. A közel ötméteres fókuszú csillagászati távcső végén kifejezetten a bolygók és a Hold megörökítésére készített csillagász Egy hét teljes káosz 444.hu 2022-11-07 15:09:43 Infotech Twitter Elon Musk Tömeges kirúgások, majd visszahívott alkalmazottak, kinyomtatott, majd ledarált kódok, megijedt hirdetők és alkudozás Stephen Kinggel: Elon Musk megérkezett a Twitter élére. „Mosolygó” Napot kaptak lencsevégre a tudósok hirado.hu 2022-11-07 09:49:09 Tudomány Világűr NASA A NASA kutatóinak sikerült olyan képet készíteniük a Napról, amelyen az égitest látszólag mosolyog.
A Nemzetközi Űrállomás leplezte le a világ legnagyobb metánkibocsátóit Rakéta 2022-11-07 06:09:04 Tudomány Világűr NASA Űrállomás Globális felmelegedés A NASA júliusban üzemelt be egy új műszert az űrállomáson, amellyel a sivatagi por összetételét vizsgálják, de mint kiderült, az EMIT arra is tökéletesen alkalmas, hogy pontos képet fessen arról, honnan kerül az atmoszférába a globális felmelegedés egyik fő okozója. Megvan, melyik a világ legjobb kamerás okostelefonja Player 2022-11-07 06:57:02 Mobiltech Telefon Apple Okostelefon Google Samsung Spoiler Spoiler: nem a Samsung, de nem is az Apple, sőt, nem is a Google készülékében található. Elon Musk elkezdte kidobni a Twitterről azokat, akik viccből Elon Musknak adják ki magukat 444.hu 2022-11-07 07:46:37 Infotech Twitter Elon Musk Pont azért tiltakoznak, mert ha megvalósulnak Musk tervei, bárki kiadhatja majd magát bárkinek. Méregdrága eszközök helyett a telefonod mondja meg, melyik híd szakad le legközelebb PCWorld 2022-11-07 08:21:01 Mobiltech Telefon Luxus Okostelefon Újabb nagyon hasznos feladat elvégzésében segíthetnek a zsebünkben figyelő okostelefonok. Kevesebb mint 6 PC-ből 1-en fut csak a Windows 11 IT Business 2022-11-07 06:21:56 Infotech Microsoft Windows A Windows-világ nagy része még mindig nem fogadta el a Microsoft legújabb PC-operációs rendszerét több mint egy évvel a megjelenése után – derül ki a Statcounter által összeállított októberi adatokból. A Statcounter adatai azokról a webhelyekről származnak, amelyek telepítették a cég több (sok) adatot gyűjtő, mérő bővítményét. Ezek az adatok nem Feltörték a Kréta rendszerét 24.hu 2022-11-07 11:17:45 Infotech Az intézmény adatai mellett a tanárok és a diákok érzékeny információi is kiszivároghattak. Nem tud elég iPhone-t gyártani az Apple Bitport 2022-11-07 11:42:04 Mobiltech Kína Apple Okostelefon iPhone A Foxconn kínai üzemét is érintő újabb egészségügyi korlátozások miatt megnyúlik a várakozási idő Cupertino új csúcsmobiljaira. S-Pen nyílással jöhet az új Samsung Galaxy Z Fold? GSMring 2022-11-07 06:04:09 Mobiltech Telefon Okostelefon Samsung Dél-Korea A dél-koreai vállalat hamarosan piacra dobhatja az első olyan hajlítható kijelzős okostelefonját, ahol az S-Pen a készülékben van elhelyezve. Mutatjuk, hogy mit tudunk eddig az új Samsung Galaxy Z szériáról. A Samsung hatalmas sikert fut be a hajlítható kijelzős okostelefonok piacán, ugyanis magasan vezeti a piacot, emellett szinte nincs olyan márk KiberPajzsot kovácsolnak a pénzügyi fogyasztók védelmére Digital Hungary 2022-11-07 15:20:00 Infotech Oktatás MNB NMHH Magyar Bankszövetség KiberPajzs néven közös oktatási és kommunikációs együttműködésről döntött az MNB, a Magyar Bankszövetség, az NMHH, az NBSZ-NKI, illetve az ORFK. A digitális pénzügyi bűnözők ma elsősorban a fogyasztók érzelmi manipulálásával, illetve megtévesztésével támadnak. Így a KiberPajzs szervezői a lakossági ügyfelek pénzügyi tudatosságának erősítése, a kib 80 éve van ott a tenger mélyén, aminek nagyon nem kellene ott lennie hvg.hu 2022-11-07 07:02:00 Infotech Hajóbaleset Egy frissen megjelent tanulmányban arra világítanak rá tengerkutatók, hogy az elsüllyedt hajók is komoly károkat képesek okozni a vízi élővilág számára. Balatonalmádi asztrofotós képén, ahogy az Io árnyékot vet a Jupiteren Balaton.hu 2022-11-07 07:10:00 Utazás Belföld Balaton Világűr Balatonalmádi Mintegy hatvan éve nem észlelhettük ilyen fényesen a Naprendszer óriásbolygóját, ami remek feltételeket biztosított a fényképezéséhez is. Fényes Lóránd fotója Balatonalmádiban, otthoni csillagdájában készült 2022. október 19-én. A közel ötméteres fókuszú csillagászati távcső végén kifejezetten a bolygók és a Hold megörökítésére készített csillagász Egy hét teljes káosz 444.hu 2022-11-07 15:09:43 Infotech Twitter Elon Musk Tömeges kirúgások, majd visszahívott alkalmazottak, kinyomtatott, majd ledarált kódok, megijedt hirdetők és alkudozás Stephen Kinggel: Elon Musk megérkezett a Twitter élére. „Mosolygó” Napot kaptak lencsevégre a tudósok hirado.hu 2022-11-07 09:49:09 Tudomány Világűr NASA A NASA kutatóinak sikerült olyan képet készíteniük a Napról, amelyen az égitest látszólag mosolyog.
This week Dan and Dara chat about some new cookie settings released in Google Analytics 4 and this spins out into conversations on consent management, server-side tracking, 1P vs. 3P cookies, and a whole lot on browsers limitations (i.e. ITP and ETP). All the good stuff! The new cookie settings feature in GA4 is detailed on - https://bit.ly/3Sp3ewr. Dan and Dara mention episode #42 'Consent Mode and behavioral modelling in GA4' which can be found in the podcast feed or on our website - https://bit.ly/3Q38694. A good artilcle going into far more detail on the difference between 1P and 3P cookies - https://bit.ly/3Sq8Fve. The browser share stats that Dan mentions is from StatCounter - https://bit.ly/3Qkxmai. Details on Apple's ITP in Safari - https://bit.ly/3Jxr4lO. Details on Mozilla's ETP in Firefox - https://mzl.la/3SiKOgK. Simo's article on server-side GTM and the new FPID cookie used in GA - https://bit.ly/3vzTw0o. In other news, Dan is drinking science and dara is back into routine! Follow Measurelab on LinkedIn for all the latest podcast episodes, analytics resources and industry news at https://bit.ly/3Ka513y. Intro music composed by the amazing Confidential (Spotify https://spoti.fi/3JnEdg6). If you're liking the show, please show some support and leave a rating on Spotify. If you have some feedback or a suggestion for Dan and Dara, fill in the form https://bit.ly/3MNtPzl to let them know. Alternatively, you can email podcast@measurelab.co.uk to drop them a message. Full show notes and transcript over at https://bit.ly/3brNEiU. The post #48 Cookies and consent in Google Analytics appeared first on Measurelab.
El servicio de soporte finalizó oficialmente el pasado 15 de junio, ya que las correcciones de errores y las actualizaciones dejaron de implementarse en este navegador que llevaba 27 años de vida en nuestros ordenadores.Aunque había muy pocos usuarios que seguían utilizando el navegador Internet Explorer (solo un 0,45% de los usuarios de Internet, según la página web Statcounter), al finalizar el soporte, significa que ya no se implementarán importantes actualizaciones de seguridad y correcciones de errores.Suscríbete a Muy Interesante https://suscripciones.zinetmedia.es/mz/ Guión: Marta González Pérez-IñigoLocución, producción y diseño sonoro: Iván Patxi Gómez GallegoContacto de publicidad en podcast: podcast@zinetmedia.es
How did Internet Explorer go out of fashion? On 15th June 2022, American internet giant Microsoft cut off Internet Explorer, its long standing web browser. At the end of the 1990s and through to the 2000s, it set the standard when it came to browsers. In 2004 it had a usage share of as high as 95%, a figure which was under 1% by the time it closed, according to Irish traffic analysis website StatCounter. How did its decline come around? Why did people start using other browsers? In under 3 minutes, we answer your questions ! To listen to the last episodes, you can click here : What is Face Wine, the latest viral beauty product from Tiktok? What are the signs you might have sleep apnea? Can carbon farming help us reach net zero by 2050? A podcast written and realised by Joseph Chance. In partnership with upday UK. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Comment Internet Explorer est-il devenu ringard ? Le mercredi 15 juin 2022, le géant de l'informatique américain Microsoft a débranché Internet Explorer, son navigateur historique. A la fin des années 90 et durant les années 2000 il était pourtant LA référence en la matière. Il a même concentré jusqu'à 95% du trafic mondial en 2004 contre moins d'un 1% avant sa fermeture selon le site irlandais StatCounter. L'une des premières explications à la fin d'Internet explorer est juridique. Créé en 1995, il a alors pour principal concurrent Netscape. Pour le devancer, Microsoft l'installe par défaut sur tous ses ordinateurs. Quand son déclin a-t-il commencé ? Comment l'expliquer ? Ses concurrents ont-ils eu raison du navigateur ? Ecoutez la suite de cet épisode de "Maintenant vous savez". Un podcast écrit et réalisé par Jules Hauss. A écouter aussi : Qu'est-ce que le Web 3 ? Que sont les nettoyeurs du web ? Qu'est-ce que la cyberguerre ? Si vous souhaitez écouter les épisodes sans interruption, rendez-vous sur la chaîne Bababam+ d'Apple Podcasts : https://apple.co/3NQHV3I Abonnement Maintenant Vous Savez : https://apple.co/3x8liRx Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Twitter presenta círculos, Edge es el 2º explorador más usuado y las salas de cine en Rusia sobreviven gracias al uso de torrentsPuedes apoyar la realización de este programa con una suscripción. Más información por acá-Twitter empezó a hacer pruebas con los Círculo, lo que te permite compartir tuits privados con hasta 150 cuentas.-Samsung dio a conocer las especificaciones de su almacenamiento flash UFS 4.9.-De acuerdo con datos de StatCounter, Microsoft Edge superó a Safari como el segundo navegador de escritorio más popular a nivel mundial.-Las salas de cine en Rusia estrenan películas como The Batman, Don't Look Up o Turning Red gracias al uso de torrents.-PayPal es de las empresas que han apoyado las acusaciones en contra de Apple por parte de la Unión Europea sobre su manejo de pagos digitales. Discusión: Se despenaliza la piratería en Rusia y esto es aprovechado por exhibidores de cine.Apoya este podcast escuchando, suscribiéndote y compartiéndolo. Para el análisis a fondo de las noticias acompáñanos en www.dailytechnewsshow.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/noticias-de-tecnologia-express.
Apple has issued new updates, but hasn't patched two serious vulnerability for Big Sur and Catalina. We also look at a serious MailChimp data breach, and how AirTags are being used more for stalking. Show Notes: Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference returns in its all-online format Apple releases macOS 12.3.1, iOS 15.4.1, watchOS 8.5.1 and more PowerBook 500 (could use two batteries) Police Records Show Women Are Being Stalked With Apple AirTags Across the Country Watch out for phishing emails from genuine mailing lists, following Mailchimp hack Behold, a password phishing site that can trick even savvy users Apple Neglects to Patch Two Zero-Day, Wild Vulnerabilities for macOS Big Sur, Catalina iOS adoption StatCounter Can your Mac run Monterey? Intego Mac Premium Bundle X9 is the ultimate protection and utility suite for your Mac. Download a free trial now at intego.com, and use this link for a special discount when you're ready to buy.
Despedimos 2021 siguiendo al James Webb, las fuertes ventas de Oculus Quest, el ascenso rápido de DuckDuckGo, la incorporación de Toncoin a Telegram, dos vulnerabilidades más en Log4J y el mayor viaje de un camión autónomo Patrocinador: Descubre los nuevos Xiaomi 11T y Xiaomi 11T Pro https://www.mi.com/es/product/xiaomi-11t/, dos móviles de cine que tienen todo lo que necesitas: una pantalla de 120 Hz para el disfrute permanente de tus ojos, y una carga ultra-rápida de 120W que permite recargar tu móvil por completo en tan solo 17 minutos. https://www.mi.com/es/product/xiaomi-11t-pro Despedimos 2021 siguiendo al James Webb, las fuertes ventas de Oculus Quest, el ascenso rápido de DuckDuckGo, la incorporación de Toncoin a Telegram, dos vulnerabilidades más en Log4J y el mayor viaje de un camión autónomo
根據調研機構 StatCounter 分析,截至 2021年 7 月為止,蘋果 iPhone 在台灣的網路流量市佔來到 52.55% 過半的成績,這佔有率大幅領先第二名的三星 19.72%。此外,手機已經過半的蘋果,iPad 系列產品在台灣平板市場也是很強大,65.81%大幅領先三星的 18.81%! 聽說有些人用了蘋果產品之後就很難離開蘋果生態圈,真的是這樣嗎?蘋果用戶快來 Apple Podcasts 留言,告訴我們你喜蘋果的原因吧!
Here's today's Big Hard Fact: According to Statcounter, 39.8% of Nigerian internet users were on Twitter. Do You Support Or Oppose The Twitter Ban? #NigeriaInfoHF | Sandra Ezekwesili
Here's today's Big Hard Fact According to Statcounter, 39.8% of Nigerian internet users were on Twitter. Is The Twitter Ban Legal, And Will It Last? #NigeriainfoHF | @SEzekwesili
Show Outline An introduction to web tracking technologies and their impact on personal privacy Goals of web tracking Improve web site performance Conduct web site analytics Develop information for business operations Feed targeted advertising to visitors (which often supports free services) Types of web tracking technologies Statistical -* browser used, geolocation, pages visited, operating system, device type, etc. Statcounter, Google Analytics, etc. Cookies Invented in 1994 by Lou Montulli It is a small data file stored on your hard drive when you visit certain web sites (almost all of them) Flavors of cookies First-party cookies -* created by a domain (web site) that you have visited Session (‘temporary') cookies -* cookies designed to store information about a user's web site visit while they are on the site; once the visit is over, the cookie is deleted Permanent (‘persistent') cookies -* these remain even after a browser is closed. Typically used to store user ID and password for a particular site so that you don't have to enter them each time Second-party Cookies -* in some limited instances, a domain will share its cookies with a trusted partner; for instance, an airline might share with a hotel chain, which would then send you ads for loding Third-party Cookies -* cookies created by a company or web domain other than the one you are visiting, typically by an advertisement of some kind. Web sites earn ad revenues by allowing the third-party ad network to use their site to place cookies. These are the cookies that can track your movement around the web, so they are responsible for the somewhat creepy appearance of ads for things you just looked at. Pixels (aka ‘pixel tag') Tiny images (1 pixel) that are stored on a server but embedded Criticized by privacy advocates because they can collect extensive information about the user/email recipient without their knowledge They function even if the browser cache and cookies are regularly cleared Fingerprinting (‘a data portrait') A system that identifies you by creating a profile based on largely unchanging information associated with your device screen resolution operating system and model browser version Once enough data is collected, a virtual ‘bar code' can be compiled that uniquely identifies you This process occurs when your browser interacts with a web site; no data is stored on your computer As a result, it is very difficult to block Breaking News In February 2020, Google announced that its Chrome browser will no longer allow third-party cookies This month, Google also announced that it will NOT be developing alternative technology to track individuals and it will not include such technology in its products Security issues Web sites cannot read cookies from other web sites However, advertising networks that deploy third-party cookies can track a lot of your online activity (because the ad networks are so ubiquitous) As our use of the internet expands, online tracking could reveal behavior that might be embarrassing or dangerous to the individual being tracked -* personal behaviors, lifestyle choices, political beliefs, activism, etc. Steps you can take to limit web tracking Minimize what you do online Use a browser that blocks third-party cookies (Mozilla Firefox is particularly good) Keep in mind that automatically blocking third-party cookies may cause some sites to pop up messages asking you to disable the adblocker. Others may simply not work at all. Test what information your browser shares Electronic Frontier Foundation “Cover Your Tracks” https://coveryourtracks.eff.org/ Make your browser and email settings as restrictive as possible, including requiring permission for downloads Regularly clear your browser cache, your cookies, and your internet history (just Google it) Browse anonymously Avoid using log-in services “Private” mode on mainstream browsers Use a VPN that you actually pay for … Use TOR to surf the Web Research and more information: Google won't join efforts to build new online ad trackers - The Washington Post A Brief Explanation of Cookies Cookies, Tracking, and pixels: Where does your Web data come from? | by Julien Kervizic | Hacking Analytics | Medium Cookies, Pixels, and Other Ways Advertisers are Tracking You Online | Webroot Third-Party Tracking: Cookies, beacons, fingerprints and more - Our Data Our Selves Behind the One-Way Mirror: A Deep Dive Into the Technology of Corporate Surveillance | Electronic Frontier Foundation Google claims it will stop tracking individual users for ads | Ars Technica Google says it won't track you directly in the future as it phases out cookies Google will stop selling ads based on tracked individual browsing history - CNET Google says it won't adopt new tracking tech after phasing out cookies | TechCrunch Google to stop tracking users for targeted ads | TheHill How Google's snub of tracking will upend the industry | Ad Age Daring Fireball: The EFF: ‘Google's FLoC Is a Terrible Idea' First-Party & Third-Party Cookies: What's the Difference? - Clearcode Blog The Death of the Third-Party Cookie: What Marketers Need to Know About Google's Looming Privacy Pivots Internet Tracking Has Moved Beyond Cookies | FiveThirtyEight What are Tracking Pixels and How Do They Work? Website Tracking Technologies | Knowledge Base | CookiePro ‘Fingerprinting' to Track Us Online Is on the Rise. Here's What to Do. - The New York Times Google will end behavioral targeting, profile-building in its ad products Mission Partners: Buoyancy Digital is proud to be the inaugural Mission Partner for the Cybertraps Podcast series. A digital advertising consultancy with an ethos, Buoyancy was founded by Scott Rabinowitz, who has been in digital media since 1997 and has overseen $300 million in youth safety compliant ad buys across all digital platforms. For IAB, Google and Bing accredited brand and audience safe advertising sales solutions, media buying and organizational training for media publishers, let's chat. For more information on working with Scott & Buoyancy Digital, visit BuoyancyDigital.com or @scottrmedia on LinkedIn.
Email não pode mais ser pensado para computadores. Precisa ser pensado para celulares. Em março de 2019, a Adestra fez um levantamento que mostrou que a cada dez vezes que um email é aberto, seis vezes isso é feito num celular. Os dispositivos mais usados para a leitura de email são, pela ordem, iPhone, iPad e Android. Segundo o Statcounter, de 2009 para cá, o market share dos computadores caiu 29% no Brasil. E o market share dos celulares subiu 29%. Ou seja, os computadores perdem o mesmo espaço que os celulares conquistam no País. O que nós, profissionais de content marketing, precisamos fazer a respeito? É simples: temos de estar atentos às mudanças e, mais do que isso, nos adaptarmos a elas. Porque os hábitos das pessoas em relação aos emails vêm mudando. O email surgiu em 1971 e a primeira newsletter, em 1978. Tudo mudou de lá para cá — hábitos de leitura, principalmente. Não se pode ficar preso a um comportamento datado de uma época. Seguindo esse raciocínio, a forma como as pessoas liam emails dez anos atrás provavelmente mudou desde então. Pense em sua newsletter, email marketing ou mesmo email pessoal mais como um primo de segundo grau do WhatsApp. Isso vale para tudo: tamanho de texto, disposição de link, layout e outros elementos.
Email não pode mais ser pensado para computadores. Precisa ser pensado para celulares. Em março de 2019, a Adestra fez um levantamento que mostrou que a cada dez vezes que um email é aberto, seis vezes isso é feito num celular. Os dispositivos mais usados para a leitura de email são, pela ordem, iPhone, iPad e Android. Segundo o Statcounter, de 2009 para cá, o market share dos computadores caiu 29% no Brasil. E o market share dos celulares subiu 29%. Ou seja, os computadores perdem o mesmo espaço que os celulares conquistam no País. O que nós, profissionais de content marketing, precisamos fazer a respeito? É simples: temos de estar atentos às mudanças e, mais do que isso, nos adaptarmos a elas. Porque os hábitos das pessoas em relação aos emails vêm mudando. O email surgiu em 1971 e a primeira newsletter, em 1978. Tudo mudou de lá para cá — hábitos de leitura, principalmente. Não se pode ficar preso a um comportamento datado de uma época. Seguindo esse raciocínio, a forma como as pessoas liam emails dez anos atrás provavelmente mudou desde então. Pense em sua newsletter, email marketing ou mesmo email pessoal mais como um primo de segundo grau do WhatsApp. Isso vale para tudo: tamanho de texto, disposição de link, layout e outros elementos.
Welcome! What a busy busy week in the world of technology. We are going to hit several topics today. Business Email Compromise attacks are running rampant through business. Failure to update older technology is putting businesses at risk. Facial recognition technology is being used but the issue is privacy and how to protect it. Will hit Ransomware, Employee Training, Regulatory Compliance, Online job postings and what precipitated the most expensive divorce. It is going to be a busy show -- so stay tuned. For more tech tips, news, and updates visit - CraigPeterson.com I've got some free online privacy training coming up. I have been teaching courses on security for the FBI InfraGard's program. And now I'll share some of the step-by-step tips and tricks that we all can use to keep ourselves and our information safe online. And it won't cost you a dime. --- Related Articles: Most Businesses Attacked By Business Email Compromise Last Year Keeping Legacy Software Safe Concerns About Effectiveness and Privacy and Limiting Facial Recognition Adoption Downtime and Costs Double as Ransomware Attacks Hit Larger Businesses Employee Training Key to Spotting Existing and Emerging Threats Regulatory Compliance: The Perception and The Reality WhatsApp, Hired Journalist With Saudi Enemies: The Reason Behind Jeff Bezos WhatsApp iPhone Hack Searching For A Job Online -- FBI Warns About Rising Number Fake Employers --- Automated Machine Generated Transcript: Hey, hello, everybody, Craig Peterson here. Thanks for joining me, whether you are online listening to me on a streaming service, or listening on the radio on my website, kind of everywhere, we are going to be talking about most businesses now what's happening to them? How are they attacking to new statistics out, we'll be talking about how to keep some of your legacy software safe. If you're using Windows seven, or if you're using an older version of the software, because you haven't been keeping it up to date, which is like what all of us right? We're going to talk about what you can do some effectiveness, concerns about privacy, limited facial recognition, adoption, what's going on there. We talked a bit about that last weekend, downtime and costs. If they have gone up here. ransomware attacks are hitting businesses and individuals even harder than at any point in the past. So what's that all about? What are the simple things you can do to help protect yourself against it? We're going to talk about some employee training you need to do if you are a business person, regulatory compliance, what's the perception? What's the reality, we've seen a lot of businesses that are doing what we've been calling pencil whipping some of these forums that are trying to figure out whether or not they have complied with some of the laws, rules, and regulations. We're going to also talk about the Jeff Bezos phone hack today, and about a warning coming out from the FBI about job searches online. So a lot to talk about today. And we are going to start out with half of the organization's worldwide were successfully finished in 2019. But can't even talk right now. This is something that's very concerning. Now. It isn't as bad as it used to be phishing attacks used to be almost 100% effective. Of course, these are the types of attacks where someone sends an email. And the email is trying to get you to help this Prince in Nigeria, or whatever it might be. Those are phishing attacks, I've gotten a lot more sophisticated to the point where they are today, where we warn people to not even put information about who the employees are even physical access or addresses of the businesses, if they are not, obviously a walk-in type store because that is being used online by the bad guys. They go to your website, they figure out who the CEO is, who the CFO is, whatever information they might need. And then they use that now to go after you and go after you in a very bad way, frankly, because we are falling prey to it. And we're going to be talking more a little bit later on a couple more segments about what is the cost to businesses right now. Some of the phishing attacks, because you remember, they will use phishing for a number of different reasons, not the least of which is to get you to install malware on your computer. You know, unbeknownst to you, right? It's not as though you purposely are selling malware. But we're going to talk about that here in just a few minutes. There is a number of companies out there that do various types of simulated phishing attacks. And the idea behind these is that they will go ahead and send your employees emails that are based upon the latest phishing attacks, right, the type of phishing attacks that have been going on for the most part, and they will record whether or not each employee has clicked on a link that they shouldn't have clicked on. So obviously, when they click on it, it goes through the software that's tracking them and knows what they did. And you know, now they're in trouble, right? Because they did what they shouldn't have done and they will usually have some remedial training for these people to help to build awareness, help them understand what it is really what's going on what they should be doing what they maybe shouldn't be doing. All of that stuff pulled together. Well, one of the companies that does this fishing susceptibility testing along with the security awareness training is called proof point. And they take a look at all of their numbers and try and roll them together. So this report that I'm looking at right now is examining global data from nearly 50 million simulated phishing attacks that were sent by proof point customers over a one year period. And they also did third party survey responses for more than 600 information security professionals in all of the major countries out there, not some of the small ones. And they put this all together. So basically, it's 3500 working adults who are sitting paid for that part. Now, here's what they found. Here are the tips for you. If you are a business person if you're responsible for it within an organization number one here in the Help Desk security article is effective security awareness training, must focus on the issues and behaviors that matter most in organizations' mission. Obviously, that's kind of corporate-speak, right? But he's saying that really what we have to do is look at what our assets are, what our mission is, as a company, and you know, value those what is the value of those, what should we be doing, when it comes to our data, the things that we if we lost, we would go out of business or we might get fined, that might come after us, etc, etc. So he goes on to say we recommend taking a people-centric approach to cybersecurity by blending organizational-wide awareness training initiatives, targeted threat driven education. The goal is to empower users to recognize and report attacks again, oh my gosh, you know, this is the sort of thing that you get from a PR agency, right? I doubt the guy actually said that. But it really is about people. We have various types of automation. If you have the basic stuff like you've got antivirus, and you've been listening to my show for a while, you know, anti-virus is zero percent effective against the latest types of attacks. And it is not effective at all. antivirus software in this day and age is pretty much useless. Now, you should be using it as part of a bigger stack of security software and procedures and things. But bottom line, it's just not that useful. And they're also saying that end-user email reporting is critical. They're showing that the number of reported email messages jumped significantly last year. And that's a really big jump at about 67%. So make sure if anyone in your organization has any questions about an email, they're thinking it might be a fake, it might be, you know, a problem phishing, etc, that they forwarded to you. Now we'll go a step further because of my company mainstream, we go ahead and work with the FBI and state investigators. When there are serious problems. Obviously, we will work with the company to it's not as though we're going to squeal on them. But we haven't covered numerous foreign government and also organized crime hacks into businesses. So if you're not reporting it, nobody's going to know and nothing can be done about it. So here are the key takeaways from this last year. More than half it's 55%. I've surveyed organizations dealt with at least one successful phishing attack in 2019. That's a very big deal. That's a very scary thing, frankly. And info security professionals have reported a high frequency of social engineering attempts across all kinds of different methods. 88% reported spear-phishing attacks, 86 business email compromised attacks, those are the ones that are hurting our businesses most and those are the type of things where they're faking that they're a vendor or they're the owner and they're asking people to wire money around. So be very, very careful. smishing is fairly new, but 84% of the businesses are saying that they had SMS and text phishing attacks that's way up. 83% said fishing which is voice fishing, and 81% reported malicious USB drops isn't That's something 65% of the surveyed infosec professionals said that their organization experienced a ransomware infection in 2019. That is high, high high. Now, you know, the FBI advises to never pay a ransom. But a third of all organizations opted to pay the ransom. And we've seen that even in cities that have been attacked by ransom, or that they did pay ransoms. 32% did not have those who negotiated with attackers 9% were hit with follow up ransom demand, and 22% never got access to their data, even after paying the ransom. So keep that in mind. And the other statistic that I've seen before from the FBI says that even if you pay a ransom, the odds are only 50% that you'll get all of your data back. Remember, these guys aren't writing great software. In fact, most of them aren't even writing this software at all. And what that ultimately means is it buggy? What do they really care as long as they get some payments right? organizations are benefiting from the consequent model. 63% of organizations take corrective action with users who repeatedly make mistakes. So I think that's an important thing. Many working adults fail to follow cybersecurity best practices. 45% admit to password reuse, which is one of the biggest sins, frankly, that you can commit is reusing passwords on multiple sites, more than 50% do not password protect home networks. And 90% said they use employer-issued devices for personal activities. These are all things they shouldn't be doing. In addition, 32% of working adults were unfamiliar with VPN services. One of my pieces of training was about VPNs. You might find it I think it's still up on YouTube. But how VPN services are in some cases worse than not using a VPN at all, you've got to be careful because some of these VPN services that are out there, they're actually having new use their service so they can track you online, sell your information. So the VPN service is only charging a few bucks a month, or heaven forbid, free. You really have to wonder just how good is it. So follow those practices need to understand the common cybersecurity terms. I don't maybe I should do a little training on that one too so that people know what's up. And Millennials are continuing to underperform other age groups in fundamental fishing, and when ransomware awareness, so stick around when we come back, we're going to talk about keeping your legacy software safe. Are you still using Windows seven, eight or maybe something else? It's kind of old. Stick around. We'll be right back. You're listening to Craig Peterson on WGAN. Hey, welcome back, everybody, Craig Peterson here. If you have a computer that's been around for a few years, have you stopped and had a close look to see if it's reached its end of life. Now I'm not talking about the hardware is about to fail or fall apart. You know, that's something I think you can deal with and everybody knows to deal with. And more importantly, if the hardware falls apart and stops working, you have to deal with it. But what about the software that's on your computer? What about the software that is, has been installed and it has been there for who knows how long? When was the last time you actually updated it I walk into customers' new customers all of the time, and they are running really old software? And man, I can't tell you how many times I've walked into a place and they've got a database. It's Microsoft SQL Server, server, and they have just got a development version there. They're in. In fact, they bought the software. And the software vendor gave them a free development version of SQL Server. Even though it's in production, even though they're supposed to be paying for a full license, I see it all the time. And then because they don't have a full license, in fact, they don't even have a legal license to use it in the business environment. The next problem happens, which is they've never updated SQL Server. We used to see this all the time with Windows where people were using a hacked version of Microsoft Windows, versions of Windows that were never licensed, never licensed properly. We don't see that as much anymore. But what we are seeing is software that's passed the end of life including windows As of mid-January January 14, 2020, Windows seven Microsoft is no longer supported for security updates, at least unless you pay Microsoft a small boatload full of money. They are providing it, but they are charging money for it. And now the last subscription I saw for security updates for Windows seven was about $80,000 a year. Now, I don't know about you, but I think that's a little bit pricey. So now you end up with the problem of Okay, so I am running old software, maybe even Windows XP, we see that all the time in the manufacturing business, where they're controlling systems and control systems running XP. So what do you do now? Because if you upgrade your base operating system, that means there is software that you're running that may not work with the new version of Windows. And frankly, that's probably the number one reason we see from people who don't upgrade and don't want to upgrade because it's could end up being a very bad thing for them a lot of pain, right? Well, Windows seven is already past its support window. And we're Windows Server 2008 will officially be ended just this past week. So if you're running Windows Server, which a lot of businesses are, right, you're using Active Directory server as much as I don't like it. Most of our customers use it because there's not really a whole lot of other options for them. But it's really significant here that these older operating systems are no longer going to get routine security updates and patches going forward. Windows seven, believe it or not, is 10 years old now. And it's still in style. It still works. And according to StatCounter, Windows seven is still deployed on one out of every four Windows machines. So That means you are probably like everybody else out there and is still running Windows seven or some of your machines. And part of the reason for that may be because you're concerned about doing the upgrade, right, and update. So we're going to talk a little bit about that some things that you can do. But first of all, I want to give you a couple of warnings, because I think I might have to get you out of that feeling of invulnerability that you might have Windows 720 19, there were more than 1000 vulnerabilities that were found over 1000 in just 2019. ingest windows seven alone. So businesses are facing a very real security risk by using any of these products after their security updates pass. But you know, can you migrate? Yeah, obviously the answers. Yes. Can you do it quickly? Well, Not necessarily quickly, and certainly not immediately for most people. So most businesses are finding they're using the sound supported software for months, years or even decades later. And Kaspersky research, which is a Russian company that does all kinds of stuff when it comes to security, they got some pretty decent security software. But the problem you and I think you might find with their security software is it's from Russia, and the US, the federal government has come out and said, Don't use Kaspersky. So I can see that I can see why they're saying that but they're reporting that 40% of very small businesses, so 40% of businesses under about 10 employees, and about 48% of small and mid-sized businesses. So the bigger businesses that should have the ability to do upgrades are still using unsupported software and software that's approaching the end of support. So you got to be very, very careful, okay. And if you're a manufacturing company, or you have industrial control systems, you might have an H HVAC and an air conditioning system in your building that is hooked up to your network connection, so that the technicians can get in remotely to look for problems, maybe the systems call home, to let them know that, you know, your coolant pressures too low or whatever the problem might be. Those types of systems can be some of the worst to some of those, as I mentioned, before, we're finding we're still running Windows XP. And that is way, way out of date. So you know, have a look at all of those to man, we could go on for a long time about the problems that we've seen, and some of the problems that you need to take care of. But when we're talking about 24 seven operations, so we're moving on to the next level. Business kind of manufacturing or maybe you have a help desk where people call it 24/7. And those systems are up and online the whole time, it becomes even more important becomes even more critical. If a new vulnerability is discovered, I really have to emphasize here you have to take extra precautions. So what do you do in the meantime to protect yourself, here are some tips for those of us that are still running older software? And as I said, we're talking about what 50 60% of us frankly, our and a third of us are running unsupported versions of Windows. Number one you could do is buy extended support. Now, this is probably the least attractive option for companies that don't have a lot of cash lying around but it is the most secure. If you're an enterprise customer, you which means, by the way, you have to use any enterprise versions of Windows, not the stuff you got when you bought your laptop from staples or, or just from regular old Dell, okay? But enterprise customers can pay Microsoft for extended support through January 2023. Now, it's very expensive. Okay, so the price is going up every year. So be very careful with it. We're talking about million dollars worth of expensive, okay, so very, very big deal. If you're still running Windows XP, the cost for extended support for an organization with 10,000 plus machines leveled out at just under $2 million a year. real money. It's crazy money. So that's probably out of the question for most of us. So next up, here's what I've done for a lot of customers and I can help you with this if you need this as well. But there are ways to isolate both older machines from your regular network and I'm not just talking about going ahead and doing some network segmentation. I'm talking about having special internal firewalls to isolate these machines, okay, old decommissioned and non-supported operating systems and software that cannot be patched, have to be isolated. Obviously, you also would need to limit user access to the machines and limit what they are doing on those machines and try and keep them safe. And watch for what is called out of band fixes. Some vendors may still issue critical fixes, but you know, keep an eye on it. It could be dangerous. All right sticking around. We're going to talk about this new facial recognition technology that London is adopting. I talked about it this week, a little bit on my radio and TV appearances. But we're going to get into a little bit more because it is coming here to the US as well. Stick around you're listening to Craig Peterson WGAN Online. Welcome, everybody. Craig Peterson here and online at Craig Peterson dot com. If you haven't already, make sure you sign up for my email comes out every week on Saturday mornings typically is when we get it all done on time so that it's out for the show. But I do go through some of the most important articles for the week, a lot of security stuff including what the number one patch that you need to make to your systems. So that comes out at least monthly, my newsletter and these patches are patches to software that is attacking right then and there in the wild. In other words, it isn't just patched for the sake of patching. It's this is a serious problem. And if you don't deal with this problem right away, you could become a victim. So you've got to really kind of keep an eye on that. That is part of my newsletter that comes out and you can get that by just going to Craig peterson.com slash subscribe. Well, we're going to talk right now about the effectiveness and privacy here live and limiting facial recognition adoption. This is something we talked about a little bit about last week as well. Of course, we talked about this company that's out there doing facial recognition stuff that's really kind of scares me, because they went and they crawled all of the public photos they could find from sites like Twitter and Facebook and some of these photo-sharing sites. They pulled them all together, 3 billion of them, and they put them into a database, the company's called clear view, and they recorded where they got those photos from, and then they've been offering it right now. To the police, obviously they had ideas about offering it to other people is, you know, ultimately, but the police have access to it. And that's been a problem. because nothing's 100% plus at where do we draw? At what point? Do we draw a line saying, hey, my privacy extends even to those things that I posted online? This is a fine line. It's a real problem. And as we've talked about before on my show, ultimately, the law, legs far behind the technology, technology comes up with something new. And then the rules or regulations, follow the laws, which are all coming out well after the fact. Now, sometimes, they try and pass laws beforehand. And that ends up being a problem because we don't know what all the problems are going to be. So it's a catch 20 too, right? You can't, you shouldn't really put the laws in place until we have the real problems. And then you're not going to see the real problems with the laws until they're in place. So we're talking about something like this. That's not a perfect technology. How far can they go? Now we know that if you are arrested, and they can take your picture, and your fingerprints, I've been doing that for a very long time. There have been a number of court cases about whether or not they can take your DNA. And of course, it doesn't have to be blood anymore. They can just do a mouth swab. They can get your DNA even from your hair, and know a few mixed results there. I know, basically, from everything I've read, the courts have come down on the side of if you are arrested and convicted, then they'll grab your DNA, and that's been used to solve some crimes. And in fact, facial recognition has been used to solve some crimes. as well. But should we have the privacy in our papers basically in our documents? And they argue many times police in court, hey, listen, if you're out on a public roadway, you have no expectation of privacy. And, you know, I frankly, I don't disagree with that. I don't think you do have an expectation of privacy. But should it be legal for the police to be tracking you your license plate, taking pictures of you as you go through intersections? Again, where's that line drawn? And when we're talking about the facial recognition databases, these things are often wrong. They've got a success rate of less than 70%. But what is going to happen when their success rate is 99% that they are showing accurately, who you are 99% of the time. Now, the next problem with companies like ClearView AI as far as I'm concerned government agencies is how safe is our data in their hands. When you get to the databases that hold the images, they are going to ultimately have vulnerabilities. So our, you know, our biometric information, our pictures, all the way through our fingerprint, Iris scans, the way we walk our pace, the way we speak. All of that's biometrics. Now, if you lose your password, you can reset your password and have a new one. If you lose the pin for your ATM card, you can go ahead and get a new one, right? It's pretty simple to do. But what happens if the government the state government or federal government has your photo and it's stolen, you cannot change your face. You can not change your biometrics at all. So is there any way for us to be able to trust that our privacy is going to be protected? And the answer is frankly, no. And is there any way we can stop the distribution of our facial data? Some states sell all of the driver's license data. Most states, I think now to whoever will pay for it. So the answer to that question, is there any way we can prevent the distribution of official data? The answer to that is frankly, no. And when we consider the damage that the leak of these types of databases could cause, cause it is freak, it's just, it's overwhelming. It's overwhelming to me. It's overwhelming to you. And I think we've got to be a lot more careful. Now. I mentioned this database company called Clearview AI. That scrubbed the internet found all 3 billion pictures pulled them in, kept track of where it saw the pictures. This is a big problem. But they say hey, listen because they're getting sued right now. It's okay so somebody by the name of great Graham Cluley he went to clear view an eyes website and had a look around and what they found is that you can have your photo removed. Yes, yes indeed. Now, they never asked you for permission to use your photo for their app that they're selling to the FBI homeland security agencies all around the world. No, no, no. All you have to do to have your photo removed from Clearview AI is are you ready? Um, this is straight from like a screenshot from their website. You can send an email to privacy dash requests at clear view.ai. And then you just submit a name a headshot, a photo of a government-issued ID to facilitate the processing of your request. Well, what if you're concerned about this company's clear view to AI, losing your data in the first place? Do you really want to send them a picture of your passport or your driver's license, which now most driver's licenses are federally compliant? Is that really what you want to do? Well, I think it's a real problem. Twitter has sent a cease and desist letter to them. Saying that clear view AI violated the policies over at Twitter, demanding any collected data be deleted. I would expect that Facebook is probably going to do something similar, as will these other websites that are out there where they have been scraped and They obviously the website had to find out about it. And now we're seeing London's Metropolitan Police Service, starting to use live facial recognition technology to scan public areas for suspected criminals. They've been trialing this technology for two years. And they're going to have this up and running by February 2020 going to be linked to a database of suspects. So, again, this is a problem. Facial recognition technology is just not accurate. What can you do? Well, I think we should all be sending letters to our representatives in Congress in our statehouses, and letters complaining to Twitter and Facebook, about companies like ClearView AI, you'll find this articles or articles about it up on my website at Craig Peterson, calm and of course, listening to me on WGAN, stick around with me Get back we're going to talk about the costs of ransomware in q4 2019 and today. Hey, welcome back, everybody, Craig Peters on here and WGAN online course at Craig Peterson dot com. That's Peterson. With n Oh, well, we know what downtime is right? businesses have it. And it can really cause havoc, especially a long amount of downtime. When businesses get hit with a major outage, and it can be caused by a fire flooding the major server crash when they're hit with that sort of thing. It can be devastating. And most frankly, businesses are out of business within six months, with small-medium businesses, basically the larger ones. Well, by law because of Sarbanes Oxley, they have to be able to get back online if they're publicly traded within four hours. Now, a lot of businesses don't do that. Although they shouldn't be doing it and You know, frankly my business we are set up to be able to get back online pretty darn quickly, because you just can't afford the bad PR the bad customer relationship and the lack of sales that come in because you're down, right? Nobody can get it anything. Well, there are new and more sophisticated ransomware attacks that are really hitting businesses today and everything from large companies to little guys from state governments to the federal government. And some of these are considered to be the deep pocket target. Now you and I, we can get hit with ransomware. And to us, a $500 ransom might be real money. What is it half of the American households could not come up with $500 for an emergency expense and two, right. So I'm not saying that it wouldn't be devastating to get ransomware if you are a small office, Home Office, Or if the if it's your basically just your home computers. But ransomware costs now have more than doubled in the fourth quarter of 2019. According to the latest statistics, so the average ransomware payment has doubled. It is now at almost $85,000. That's in one quarter. So in the third quarter of 2019, the average ransom payment was about 41,000. That's the third quarter. So let's see what the third quarter last year September. Let's see November or October, November, December is the fourth quarter. And so it would be September, August in July. So July, August, September, the average payment for ransomware was 41,000. And then, in October, November, December, there we go. It's $4,000 that is absolutely huge. So I did a little bit of digging to try and figure out why did it surge so much? Well, apparently it's because they are using some ransomware software. It's called RealLoc. And I always have a hard time with this one, so doing co key B and they are going after the enterprise space. Now enterprise space typically means a medium or large business, as opposed to a small business. But in this space, criminals can really exhort extort serious money, deep pockets for seven-figure ransom payouts. So here is a quote, researchers some cover were saying q4 ransomware actors also began exfiltrating data from victims and threatening its release if the rain Sim was not paid. So it's not just ransomware getting onto your computer and encrypting your files and saying, Hey, listen, if you want your data back, you're going to have to pay us, which as you already know, you usually don't get your data back, right. But they are saying, we have your data, and we're going to let it go. And there's a big case about this late last year, and the chairman of the company was but this company had had its data stolen, and it there was an extortion angle on it. They're trying to get money from the company, saying, hey, if you don't pay us all of this ransom, we're going to release the data. And the company said, Okay, well do it because we're not going to pay that ransom. And the bad guys did release it. Okay. Now there's third-party claims over the data breaches now that start to come in. But let's break down some of these costs. So if and then I'll get into what you can Due to help prevent some of these problems, but the cost ransomware attacks can vary. Obviously, if you're going to pay a ransom, there's one cost, right? Then the remediation which can be very expensive, if you get hit by ransomware remediation companies can cost you in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, then that's frankly, where you bring us in and we have a couple of people with their fire jumpers certified over at Main stream.net it can easily cost you $100,000 to try and get all of that stuff all your data back, right, get back in business, but all the hardware devices you're gonna have to do upgrade so all of this stuff you've been dragging your feet on you probably gonna have to do so it couldn't be quarter of a million up to two or $3 million for bigger company. Now there are also some other costs, besides the lost revenue from downtime because now you might have a bad reputation out there. Brand damage can occur here if the business interruption severe enough. If your clients are noticing that you can't do business if you are a provider upstream-downstream, it can be very, very bad. Now in addition to the ransomware payments skyrocketing according to threat post calm, the average downtime that a ransomware attack causes for a company also increased from 12.1 days in the third quarter to 16.2 days in the fourth quarter. That is absolutely nuts. Now, we have been doing a lot of remediation really for businesses. And one of the things we do for the bigger businesses if they are a public company or their division of a publicly-traded company is we put in equipment on-site for them. So that if their main servers go down, the new, the other equipment, our equipment that's on-site can take over and it can take over in a matter of minutes. So there's like almost no downtime, the only thing that might be lost is 15 minutes or 30 minutes, whatever it was since the last snapshot was taken and pushed to us. And then we push that data. Sometimes we do it through leased lines sometimes to do it through the public Internet. We push that data to our data center. And then it's encrypted while it is over the customer site and before it gets sent to us. So it's encrypted as it goes over the by the public Internet or some form of a leased line. It's encrypted when we get here so that we can now sneakernet if we have to, right. So the building, let's say it burns down, we can immediately recover. And then we take that data and we say snapshot it. And we keep snapshots for a year or more sometimes depends. public companies need to keep seven years of some of these snapshots like the email of the working files, especially companies that are manufacturing something where you have to keep it in, in some cases indefinitely. Like we did some stuff for saffron, which makes blades for jet turbans. And they have to keep their data for a minimum of I think it's, is it 20 years, you know, whatever the service life is of the engine those blades are put into. So that's what we do for publicly traded companies. Now that's not cheap. But they don't, you know, it just blows my mind how many of these companies that can afford it just aren't doing it? So when you look at these statistics and say that we're talking about 16.2 days of downtime if you get hit with ransomware how much revenue is that to them? Especially those companies that are making hundreds of thousands of dollars a day, they're going to lose that revenue because their manufacturing lines going to be down or their sales are departments going to be offline or their shipping or warehouse or maybe everything which is, which has happened to another division of a public company that we did the work for 25 years. Okay. So very, very, very expensive. And the third Post article goes on to say that this increase from 12 days of downtime to over 16 days of downtime was linked to a higher prevalence of ransomware attacks against these bigger companies, the larger enterprises, which are often left scrambling to try and get their systems back up for weeks. Now, again, that's something we've been doing forever and that's something You need to be doing if you're just a small company, having an offsite backup is critical. Having multiple generations of backup is critical. Because what happens if your systems are corrupted because ransomware has come in, has taken them over. And now your backup and backup backs up the encrypted data. So now you don't even have the data before the ransomware hits. Now you're completely stuck, right? Because your computer is encrypted, your data is encrypted on your computer. And your data is encrypted in your backup because you just backed up or just as bad or maybe even worse is your backing your systems up to a locally attached disk, right. You plug in one of those nice little USB drives. Guess what the ransomware is doing? It is encrypting that backup drive and it's also spreading to your Active Directory server and Your business, and it's spreading to all of the other computers in your business. It does this normally anything it can see any shares any mounts, it's going to encrypt. And that's why it takes so long. And that's why for our clients that need higher availability, because you are required to have a full disaster recovery plan in place if you're a publicly-traded company or division of a publicly-traded company, and you have to be back on in four hours. That's why we have equipment sitting there on-site with multiple generations of backups, in case something like this happens in case it gets through. Okay, so nowadays, we've got some working descriptors that are pretty good for some of the ransoms that happen. So you have about a 2010 to 20% chance that the data that has been encrypted will be you'll be able to decrypt it Cisco Talos per usual is one of the lead investigators, researchers and all of this. Those are the guys that we use Cisco talus guys. They're just absolutely amazing. They're the ones that back us up. RDP Remote Desktop protocol compromises people misusing VPN. It just goes on and on my brain spins when I think about all of this, but the costs have doubled in q4. So make sure you are doing the right thing. You have good backups, you have multiple generations, that at least one generation is stored off-site, if not multiple generations. And if you aren't doing that, or if you're, you know, ISP MSP isn't doing it for you. It's time to change because the costs are going way up. You're listening to Craig Peterson, stick around. We'll be back here after the top of the hour with more about fishing. What's been going on? Hello everybody, Craig Peterson here. Welcome back. I am on WGAN radio and many other stations actually throughout New England but I'm glad you're joining me right now. Also, of course online, your favorite streaming site and Craig Peterson dot com. Well, today we've already talked about most businesses are attacked by business email compromised last year and what that means what are the new types of spear-phishing scams going on? You guys are learning a lot from some of these, just that the terms if you understand the terms you are ahead of almost everybody else out there. We talked about keeping legacy software safe that things like Windows seven, heaven forbid Windows XP or now windows eight is also legacy no longer supported with software patches. We also talk before the top of the hour concerns about effectiveness of some privacy when it comes to facial recognition software. Should we be doing more about that there's a lot of concerns about the adoption and then downtime and costs have doubled in the last quarter? So q3 versus q4 2019. They doubled when it comes to ransomware attacks a very big deal. And it's interesting how they're doing it. I just got a text from my son and my son is as well as a couple of other family members. Somebody who works with me in the business. It's, you know, mainstream is kind of a family business. We've had many people over the years working for us. Now we've got about 60 different people who are working in different parts of the company. But when it comes right down to it, it really is kind of a family business. So he just sent me a message that he saw an app News. And of course, as usual, this is really a link to another, another website because Apple doesn't really publish news themselves. But this is from ZDnet. This just happened on Wednesday this week, a contractor suffered a ransomware infection. Now we have here in New Hampshire, a lot of God contractors, well, actually mostly subcontractors, but we have primary contractors as well. And I know some of you guys are listening here on the show, because I hear from you, right, I know that who you're working for and what you're doing. And I think that's really cool. I love it. But the problem is how do you guys deal with your IT people if they are not competent? How do you as a business person, any business person deal with it? Yeah, how do you even know if they're competent? At least if you're listening to the show, which obviously is right now. But at least you know the terms and you have an understanding of what should be happening. Well, this is a very big sub-cut or a contractor to the Department of Defense. It's called electronic warfare associate ew way. And it's a 40-year-old electronics company, well known US government contractor, and it got nailed by one of these ransomware infections we were talking about in the last segment today. Not a good thing, frankly. And we have seen all kinds of activity right now. You know, I feel sorry for these guys. They obviously did not know what they were doing and that and I can say that unilaterally. If you get ransomware it's your fault. Because in this day and age, there are so many great tools. They're not the ones you get from staples, the not the tools you're going to get from your break-fix computer shop that They have no idea how to protect you. None at all. Frankly, they've been lying to you. And that really bothers me too. Because I hear from my customers saying, well, I spoke with so and so. And this is what they said, well, they may not think it's a lie, okay, maybe calling them a liar is a little too strong, but they don't know what they're talking about. And yet they speak with absolute authority, as though they really know when they this is really the right thing to do. And don't listen to some guy on the radio, you know, or don't listen to that new company that came in and did a cyber health analysis for us, or network security assessment. Now, ignore those people because you know, we've had a relationship for the last 510 2030 years. Well, apparently, I'm guessing something like that must have happened with this company. Go right now. In fact, I've got a screenshot in front of me It looks like they fixed some of this. But the website for this company is ewe tech.com. And if you do a Google search for them, or if you didn't want a little earlier in the week, you found out that something was really weird because all of the Google search results looking for e. w. a tch.com. Come back with a jibberish. And it's jibberish because everything has been encrypted by ransomware. Now, there is a security researcher out there who goes unnamed in this article from ZDnet and it is saying that several of the NWA websites appear to have been impacted, such as sites for the wi government systems IE wi technologies, simplicity key homeland protection Institute and we don't really know at this point how much of the company's internal network was encrypted during the incident. But, man, this is a big deal. And by the way, even though it's obvious that at least these websites of theirs have been encrypted, they have not issued any public statement about the incident. According to this article, this article, as I said is from Wednesday, Thursday this week, apparently, an NWA spokesperson hung up the phone earlier when Zd net reached out for comment about the security breach. This is a well-known supplier of electronic equipment to the US government. Now we have clients who make small things. You know, they make things like parts, they make wiring harnesses, they make power supplies, they make just all kinds of very basic things. And you look at it even screws right fasteners, and you look at ina say, Well, what does that matter? Well, Not a company that's making all these big electronic things for the government. But really what some of these bad guys are trying to do with ransomware is to fold, they still have the old motive of holding your data ransom. And it can be done two ways now, because the ransoming of the data, in this day and age, is also been done by saying, Hey, we grabbed all of your data before we encrypted it, or maybe we just grabbed all of your data, and we are going to release it to the general public. And the less you pay us a ransom. So they're making a ton of money off of this. And it looks like according to this unnamed security researcher, that's the relax dealer update. Now that is exactly one of the things that I was talking about earlier in the show, and we put up an article about that as well on my website, that is two that are being used right now that are not regular ransomware strains. And they're using it to target attacks on bigger companies that have deeper pockets. Very, very interesting. So keep an eye on this, this is, this is a bad thing, obviously. And it's bad because it can hit any of us. And ultimately, it is going to come around and hit you. Because you look at the stats we're talking about that just came out, where more than half of the companies were hit last year. And this is self-reported, okay, half of the companies admitted to it. So they had to first acknowledge or even know that they had been hacked, and most companies don't even know that they've been hacked, the smaller ones, and frankly, even the bigger ones. Look at some of these hacks and major corporations that didn't find out for six months or more. And all the way through. They have to admit that they were hacked when they knew they were hacked. So we had all of this up. And it's a very scary world out there. And if I, you know, if I was somebody who had a fiduciary responsibility, if I was sitting on a board and advisory board or a full board member in some company, and I did not know what security really was, and I did not know exactly what was going on, and I was sitting there looking at Oh, well, we have a chief information security officer CISO or our Chief Technology officers, officers taking care of that or my budget for this is huge. I'm sure I'm fine or even worse, a plain ostrich and sticking the head in the sand and just hoping nothing happens. And I gotta tell you from surveys I've seen here's another thing that I think you want to know if you have any responsibility for your business owner. If if you're the regular old office manager who's been signed security for the company making sure the antivirus is updated. You already know that that's not good enough, right? The antivirus just doesn't work against any of the modern threat, none of them. Okay. And you're sitting there thinking that everything's taken care of and you have not brought in a temporary board member advisory board members, someone to have a serious look at your security. Man, you've got some serious problems, very serious problems, because this is absolutely huge. And, you know, when it comes to the FBI and some of the other training I do for the infragard and for businesses in general, you know, I'm seeing this everyday people who have the titles, who have the certificates who have completed these programs I'm seeing all the time, and I've seen hundreds and hundreds of these people who are heavily relied on the Yet don't really know what they're doing. That's a real problem. Now it's one thing if you tell the boss Hey, listen, I don't really know what I'm doing. But I'm learning this and I think we are making the right progress that that's one thing, but to say, yeah, we are all set. And then as he as a pistol-whipping the forums, right, just check, checking pencil whipping all the way down, checking off everything. Yeah, that's good. That's kind of the outcome. And a man. I've seen so many businesses doing that, too. So if you are a business owner, if you are sea level, if you are on board, even if you're on like me, Board of volunteer organizations, you have a responsibility, and you got to take care of that. No, well, anyways, out of time for now. We'll be right back and I'm going to talk about training employees to spot yet another emerging threat, something that's really going to nail us. You're listening to Craig Peterson on WGAN. Hey, what a fast-moving day today I'll be having a great day, whatever it may be listening to me on Saturday or any day during the week, a lot of people tend to listen when they're driving around other people when they are at the gym. And, you know, I just totally appreciate everybody being with us. And that's why we try and keep you up to date. We've got some amazing pieces of training coming up. So I want to make sure that you are aware of them. I've been posting and doing a few Facebook Lives, like when I appear on the radio, some of my segments are showing up now over on Facebook and also on YouTube, both of those live channels, so you can listen in and comment. And when I run them live, what I'm doing is I'm actually, Of course, recording them when I'm on the air and then later on in the day. I will run them as live and I will be live there. So I'll usually post articles in there that I'm referring to, as I'm on the air. And I'm answering questions from people who might have questions as that air lives. So it airs, live airs, there we go. And the idea is that, frankly, it's even better in some ways and listening to me on the radio, because now you have the opportunity to interact and get some behind the scenes stuff that I just can't share when I'm on the radio. So the best way to find those Well, I have links on my newsletter, right at the bottom to my social media channels. And of course, you'll find those easily by just going to Craig peterson.com slash subscribe, and you'll see them all right there. So let's get into our next article of the week, and that is a new emerging threat. I've talked on the show before about some of the problems that we're starting to see with deep fakes. I don't know if you saw the newest star latest Star Wars movie I suspect a lot of you guys did. Because frankly, you know, we're all kind of sci-fi geeks. I think on this side of, if you're a tech geek here, you got to be some sort of a sci-fi geek. And as a sci-fi geek, I went, and I saw it and I liked it right. And, man, I remember standing in line when the first Star Wars movie came out. I remember the first Star Trek movie coming out to standing in line all by myself, because No, none of my friends wanted to see it. Or actually, I think one of my friends came with me. And we saw the original Star Wars movie. It was really, really cool. So this was the end of what a 30 year. Man hasn't been that long. When did that come out? So it would have been around 1980 I think so man, a 40 year long the story arc, which I really enjoyed. I enjoyed it a lot, but in That movie, Carrie Fisher played a fairly major role. You might remember her from the original movies. This was Princess Leia and Princess Leia, ie in this case, Carrie Fisher was still alive, an older woman and she died before they even started filming this thing. And so you look at a new think Well, okay, so maybe what they did is they took some stuff off the cutting room floor from the other movies. Well, wait a minute. Now this she's older, right? She's an older Carrie Fisher. And so these movies that they had on the cutting room floor, most of them she was pretty darn young, so those wouldn't work. And then I realized, wait a minute now because I saw a couple of little errors and it really, I said wait a minute. This is obviously a deep fake. And what they had done is completely computer-generated The character, and it looked like Carrie Fisher, and they computer generated the voice as well it so it sounded like Carrie Fisher Well, it was computer augmented and any rate, this is a huge breakthrough. We've talked about it what's going to happen when they have our president on. On TV, they're showing a video of him saying that the missiles are flying in five minutes, kind of like Ronald Reagan did right during that microphone test back in the day. What's going to happen? How are you going to know if it's legitimate or not? And with more and more money being spent, look at what's happening right now with Bloomberg who's looking to spend a billion dollars on TV ads, and where he's been running ads, he's actually been rather successful. So what's gonna happen if he starts I'm like, I'm not saying that Bloomberg is going to do this, but if some candidate who has plenty of money to spend starts just Generating fake videos. Now we already know about a lot of fake stuff, right? Do you remember Paul Ryan pushing old people off of the cliff in their wheelchairs? Right. And that was, obviously satire. Some people actually didn't think it was they thought he would really do that. But you know, frankly, it's satire. So it is what it is. But what's going to happen when this is now deep fake, and it's the norm and we don't know what's what? Well, let's move this to the next level because we've never talked about this before. And I thought that this was an interesting idea. And this is by Ian Croxton, and he's over at dark reading. But cybercriminals are now starting to use deep fakes. You know what a business email compromise I hope because we've certainly talked about it enough on the show before and usually what happens is a bad guy goes ahead and does research on a business. Find out who this CEO is where the CFO is, right? We, you know, the scoop. And then they find out maybe when they're out of town, who their suppliers are, who their customers are, and then they start sending these emails directed at employees to get them to do something they should never do. Obviously a problem, right? You don't, you just don't want that to happen, but it does happen. Now what they're doing with some of the phishing scams, where they're using voice mail and even phone calls, is they're using computer-generated voices, but not just voices, but the voices of the boss. Take me for example, I have thousands of hours of video and audio recordings that are available publicly on the internet. So it's easy to get a fix on me in my face. It's easy to get a fix on my voice. And to computer-generated stuff, right? That does not make sense to you. It's very, very easy to do all of that stuff in this day and age. So the concern now is that deep fake fraud is going to be hitting us in a bigger way. And it's going to be devastating for businesses. We talked about this next, this next one here last year, but a top executive at an energy company was revealed to have been conned into paying 200,000 pounds by scammers using artificial intelligence to replicate his boss's voice. So this guy answered a telephone call. He believed it to be from the German parent company. The request was for him to transfer funds which he dutifully sent to what he presumed was this parent company. In the end, the funds were actually being stolen by sophisticated criminals at the forefront of what I said last year was going to be a frightening New Age of deep fake fraud. And that's what Ian is bringing up here again. And I'm glad he is he's only what about how far behind us as eight months behind us, but this is going to be a very, very big deal. There's an example of a journalist and you can find these things out on YouTube, who paid 550 bucks to develop his own deep fake and he took the face of Lieutenant Commander Data from Star Trek next generation and put it over Zuckerberg Facebook two weeks to develop the video. You can find it online very easily. Just search for Lieutenant Commander data Mark Zuckerberg deep think, and you'll find it. So deep fakes are going to thrive in the modern workplace. There's no request, employees want to do what they're supposed to do they want to please their bosses. So we need a new era of employee security training. Frankly, a deep fake detection challenge was announced by Facebook here recently. There's work going on which is a lot of work going on. But I want to make sure you guys all tell your co-workers to keep an eye out for deep fakes. Because you might think the calls coming from the boss and it isn't just going to be the boss's phone numbers showing up on the caller ID now, it's going to be the boss's phone number and it's going to sound like the boss. And that's where it gets to be a real problem. All right, stick around. When we come back, we're going to talk about how you as a business and a consumer are going to have to weather this storm. That hasn't happened because of GDPR CCPA, or PDPA and more stick around. We'll be right back. Hello, everybody, welcome back. Craig Peters on here on WGAN online as well, of course, at Craig Peterson calm. You know, consumers are always looking for protection and we have various consumer protection agencies out there. And Congress is trying to do something to protect our privacy. The big questions to me are, where are the lines? Is Congress really going to help us or hurt us? Right? All of the normal things you would expect me to question Congress and these laws, rules, and regulations. GDPR came out a couple of years ago over in the European Union, and it was designed to help protect not just the data but the identity of citizens of the European Union. GDPR, By the way, stands for the general data protection regulation. It gave them a bunch of rights, including the right to know what data the company was keeping about them keeping on them. It also gave them the right to be forgotten that if you saw something you didn't like on Google results or some other website, you could request that data be taken down, and they had to take it down. Now I kind of like this, because of some of the warnings have given my kids I can see it happening. But I like it when you've got people in their teens and 20s posting stupid stuff online, right, the silly things that kids do in college and before, and it's online, and it lives forever. And now you are looking for a job. The first thing that employers going to do is do a Google search for you. And once they've done that Google search, guess what comes up those videos those photos of you doing things and, and also, you know, some of this stuff that you had posted some of the stuff you had written some of the tweets that you put out. So how does that all work? How are you going to get rid of it if you don't have the right to be forgotten? And there are obviously multiple sides to that one, but I kind of like that. Well, if you are a business person, your business has a responsibility now to comply with these laws. And what a lot of businesses in the US did is they said, oh, we're not gonna be able to comply with all the GDPR rules and regulations. So we are just going to block access to anyone coming from the European Union. And they did that and some of them It took months to get their systems rewritten and designed so that they could handle those new rules and regulations from the European Union. Well, that's all well and good. But now you can't just do that kind of blocking anymore. Because those types of rules and regulations are nowhere in the United States. As of January 1, 2020, our friends in California have a new log in live should say in place. It's called the California Consumer Privacy Act. That's the CCP a. And that act is basically doing the same thing that is being done in the European Union. And if you think you're compliant, or you're not going to have to comply with this, I'm going to go through some stats I think might really surprise you. California also has something called the PD pa which is the personal data protection act is not California, I mean, Singapore, okay. So there is a growing set of rights Relations. There are regulations in most states to some degree. states like New York and Massachusetts, and obviously California has laws that are much more restrictive about personal information. And there are more and more than coming online. So it frankly, is a very big deal. But here's what people are starting to realize. There was a there's a company out there called Capgemini. And there was some research published last fall by Capgemini. And they found that only 28% of firms that must comply with the European regulations, were actually in compliance. So about a quarter of the firms as of last year in the United States that were required to be compliant with the European Union were actually compliant. So that means 75% percent of businesses here in the United States that have customers or even people visiting their websites from the European Union. 75% of those businesses are not compliant. And yet, at the same time, there was the research that was done of companies asking them, are you compliant with the European rule rules? And 78% said, Yes, we're confident that we are compliant, even though an actual audit showed the exact opposite that 75 almost 75% it was actually what 72% were actually compliant. So more than 18 months into the California regulation, how many of our companies that have people visiting our websites from California or the have customers who are based in California, how many of us are compliant? It's not as though this came out of nowhere this rule, this regulation has been in place now, for over a year. It's just that as of January 2020, this regulation has some serious teeth to it. Now, we got a call from another company, who is based in New York, and has some of their work workers out in California, and definitely has customers in California. So they absolutely have a legal Nexus to California. And they said, Hey, we want to make sure that we're compliant with this new California consumer data or Privacy Act. So we put together a proposal for them. And just to examine everything now they have some of their own systems, some of their own software, that they're keeping customer data. And everything else. And it's basically it's going to cost them 30 to $50,000. Just to have us do a deep dive for them. Now, this is a bigger company, they have some of the money to do it. Well, frankly, they have all of the money to do it, and they should be doing it. At this point, I don't know if they're going to do it or not. But that 30 to $50,000 is just to look at their existing systems, and tell them what they need to do. So this growing set of regulations in California, and regulations that are growing nationwide because the federal government is looking to take those California regulations and put them in place. So this growing set of regulations. Well, I think crucial to consumers, and something that businesses should have been doing a couple of years ago because of GDPR. The European regulations Something businesses should have been doing anyway is not going to be cheap. It is just not cheap. And then if companies are found to be out of compliance, Wow, now it's really not cheap. Because if you are out of compliance penalties upwards of 4% of annual global revenue. So the 12 major fines that are been handed down since this European regulation went into effect in May 2018 are almost $400 million spent on fines alone. So the cost of compliance is very big, but the cost of non-compliance is even bigger. So the truth is that privacy is almost dead. So we've thrown our hands up. We know our private information is out there. And this is the government's response. Try and get control of it. And if you are a business, make sure you do at least two of these three steps and I can send them to you. Just email me at Craig Peterson calm. I'll be glad to do this for you. One, identify your sensitive data to know who has access to it and who has access to it, and implement controls over the access and make sure you keep them updated. So there you go. You'll find a little more about this online at Craig Peterson. Calm on all always more than glad to send you guys more information. You know, I don't charge for any of that stuff. Right? And you just email me at Craig Peterson calm. I'll be glad to get back to you. All right, Take care, everybody. We got oh man, only one more segment we're going to talk about the Jeff Bezos hack and online employment scams. talking fast next time, stick around Hello, welcome back. Craig Peterson here listening to me on WGAN or online, your favorite streaming app, whatever that might be. I'm kind of everywhere. I've been doing this for a long time. Hey, we're going to talk right now about our friend Jeff Bezos says his stock has been kind of interesting this week. Well with the whole coronavirus and everything going on. Plus, it turns out I don't know if you heard Amazon was able to secure some warehouse space down there in New York. So is obvious that ao sees district is not going to benefit from those jobs bec
Two magicians talk magic news, performance advice, industry struggles and everything magical. A podcast for students and fans of the art of magic. In this first episode of Magicians Talking Magic, full-time magicians Ryan Joyce and Graeme Reed talk about the recent tragedy of an Indian magician who was killed performing a dangerous magic stunt *PG-13 | Language | Magic Enthusiasts. Career Magicians, Business Topics Table of Contents 1:00 | What do you think of "Ta Da" the word 1:30 | Danger Magic (News) Indian magician killed doing a stunt 6:30 | What audiences want to see and the future of illusions 9:30 | Hans Klok gets a new show in Las Vegas 11:00 | America's Got Talent (Nick Wallace, Michael Paul) 12:51 | Michael Paul 13:00 | Wonder Town 14:30 | Magic Festival OWOW 17:20 | Nate Bergatze Netflix special 19:00 | First Magic Experiences (Worlds Greatest magic 2) 22:00 | /r/magic Reddit: Souvenirs in magic 25:00 | Do magicians need a logo 29:30 | What free digital tools do you use for your magicians website? (StatCounter, Google Analytics, Google Search Console) 32:00 | Magician personality --Do magicians have similar character traits 33:30 | Branding for Magicians 35:45 | Where to get inspiration designing your magicians logo 38:00 | What should you focus on if you are a beginner in magic 40:30 | Magician Business Card Essentials 43:00 |Magician's Digital ToolKit - Essentials of the magician business 47:30 | Difference between magicians logo and magician brand
Bing is often overlooked here in Australia, with a low market share of only 3% (according to Statcounter.com) is it really worth the effort? In this podcast with Fabrice Canel from Bing, I discover some interesting features of Bing, and some amazing tools to help you with your whole DIY SEO approach. Tune to hear why you need to give Bing a second look. Tune in to learn: What is Bing’s Market Share in Australia? Is doing SEO for Bing the same as doing SEO for Google? What role does Schema play with Bing? Does Bing use Meta descriptions to rank sites? Does Bing use speed as a ranking factor? Does Bing care about secure sites? What can Bing Webmaster tools help us with? More about Bing’s SEO analyzer Tips on setting up Bing Places Profile What’s the best way to check rankings on Bing? Where is Bing focusing resources in the next year? What Fabrice recommend as your first three steps with Bing?
A strange thing happened on the Flat Chat Statcounter a few weeks ago. Statcounter is the software that tells us how many people are reading the website … (more than 4000 a week, if you must know, and still growing) Anyway, there was a whole bunch of searches from the NSW Department of Energy and the Environment, which sounds as Orwellianly conflicted as a Department of Peace and Arms Sales, to me. But what do I know? I definitely don’t know why the Department of E and E would even be remotely interested in Flat Chat … certainly to the extent of reading page after page on the website. I mean, we are as into the environment as anyone, and apartment blocks do use energy (quite a lot, if truth be told). But we wouldn’t be anyone’s first call for advice about either of the Es. A couple of days later, all was revealed. Former strata minister Matt Kean had been promoted to Minister for Es and, presumably, someone in his new department had been Googling his name to find out what he was like (as any sane person would). I’m afraid to say Minister Kean featured in these columns a little more often than he’d have liked, given the content of the pieces, so his new staff may have ended up with a non-impartial view of their incoming boss. Anyway, he's strata history and we have put a call into his successor, Kevin Anderson, for an introductory chat, albeit to no avail. We assume he is too busy juggling the various poisoned chalices that he has inherited as Innovation and Better Regulation Minister. One of those contentious issues is the Code of Conduct for short-term holiday lets – or Airbnb Rules, as they will soon be known - which is the bit of the new legislation that has been holding up the implementation of the rest of the law. Last week we predicted it would be the end of the year before we saw the new laws. Then we heard they were already on the photocopy machines of Macquarie St, ready for a spellcheck and final release. The rules themselves are likely to be anodyne, worthy and dull. It’s the dogfight that will follow, as the online holiday letting businesses try to stave off the spread of anti-holiday let by-laws, that will be really interesting. You can hear more about this on the latest Flat Chat Wrap podcast. https://episodes.castos.com/flatchatpod/Flat-Chat-Wrap-23-Code-of-conduct.mp3
Den beste Android-telefonenJeg har testet et par Android-telefoner i løpet av de siste årene. Og det har blitt noen iPhone-telefoner også på meg, siden jeg kjøpte meg iPhone 3G i 2008. Hvilken Android-telefon er best i 2019? Det amerikanske nettstedet Wired har laget en toppliste «blottet» for kinesere – av åpenbare grunner kanskje. Statcounter viser klart og tydelig hvilke leverandører som genererer størst mobil-trafikk.Norsk tastatur til iPad Pro 2018?I november 2018 kjøpte jeg meg ny iPad. Valget falt ned på iPad Pro 11-tommer. Det eneste norske tastaturet jeg har kommet over, kommer fra Apple. Selv ikke Logitech – som jeg har kjøpt mange tastaturer fra – har kommet med et norsk tastatur til iPad Pro 2018. Hvorfor?Tastaturet til MacBook Pro bråker!Min siste MacBook kjøpte jeg sen-sommeren 2017. Da gikk jeg fra en 13-tommer MacBook Air til en 13-tommer MacBook Pro. Kun 4 USB C-porter, samt en mini-Jack-inngang. Men en fin-fin formfaktor hvor skjerm og tastatur går nesten helt ut til kanten. Dårligere batterikapasitet enn jeg hadde trodd, og en tregere maskin enn jeg hadde forventet. Men mest frustrerende må sies å være det forferdelige tastaturet. Hvorfor i all verden lagde Apple et tastatur som «alle rundt deg blir gale av å høre på»? Aktuelle lenker:De 12 beste Android-telefonene for 2019 (Wired)Statccounter See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Panel: David Kimura Eric Berry In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk amongst themselves about their favorite software, equipment, and apps. Both Eric and David thoroughly share their preferred picks within these categories, and they explain how and why they use the specified item. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io 1:03 – David: Welcome! Today, Chuck is not feeling well. I am David and today we have Eric Berry on our panel today. It is just the two of us today. I want to talk about our development environment. What is your setup like? Do you have an office space and your hardware? 1:58 – Eric: I Have a room in my basement that has everything that I need. I do work from home. There is my guitar, my geek toys and more. For my hardware I am using 2017 MacBook Pro (16 GB of ram). The 13-inch is convenient, but I upgraded b/c I do a lot of traveling. I do pull the iPad out and use DUET. You no longer have to use a cord. I have a monitor that is 30-inches and it’s gorgeous. That is my hardware setup. I am not a mechanical keyboard guy, and I stick with the Apple super flat keyboard. I do use Bestand – it’s a holster for the keyboard and the track pad. What do you have? 4:35 – David: I have a Frankenstein setup. My needs change, over time, and when that changes my hardware changes. Back in the day I did not have a Mac and I used a Windows machine. I used to be a gamer, but then met my wife and then stopped b/c she didn’t like for me to waste time. My setup is more proper. I have a baseline iMac Pro b/c there was a great deal of $1,000 off. The other option was an iMac. I like the desktop b/c that’s where I do work – at home. It was a $4,000 investment. I am on my computer ALL the time it was worth it to me. I got the wall-mount for me, and I have more monitors wall-mounted, too. 8:00 – David: That is my monitor and computer setup. I have an eco-rhythmic keyboard b/c of childhood injuries. I have a really old Microsoft keyboard from 2005 something. It was cheap but I like the style of it. For my mouse I have a Logitech mouse. I love the feel of this thing. It has a side scroll left and right, and up and down. Especially when I am looking at code. It helps with my video editing, too. My mouse is my favorite to-date. I don’t have too much plugged into the Mac. I have a GoDrive, which has everything on it – my whole life’s work is on there. If there is ever an emergency I know to grab that. Back things up in case of an emergency would be my tips to you all. 11:40 – Eric: I have struggled with backing things up actually. The problem that I have is that I am constantly moving my laptop. I have this guilt and fear of doing it wrong. 12:33 – David: I have this work laptop – I don’t back that up every day. David gives Eric his suggestions in regards to backing files up. David mentions Back Blaze. 14:05 – Eric: That makes sense. I live in the Apple eco-system. I have my phone, watch, 40 iPads, laptop – everything backs up to the Cloud. The date we are recording this is 10/30/18. Apple just announced a new upgrade. I feel like this could compete with an actual laptop computer. Eric asks David a question. 15:35 – David: ...My main problem with that is that you might already have a developmental machine. It’s a stationary computer then it’s not feasible to take on the go. I do have an iPad Pro and I will take that on the go. I can login to my home network. BLINK – I used on my iPad Pro. David continues to talk about his setup. 19:00 – Eric: I kind of agree with you. I have seen it used quite a bit. My brother does everything online for his job. The pros are that if you are training, and his company is configured that way. The pros is that you can code from anywhere on anyone’s computer. I am glad that it DOES exist. It’s not Cloud9 but someone does offer... 20:20 – David: I think going to a solo screen does hurt my productivity – working on the iPad vs. working on the computer. I could get faster and faster but only to a certain degree. If you have the resources – then I don’t think it’s sustainable. However, if you don’t have the resources it’s better than nothing. At least you are coding and that’s important. 22:15 – Eric: I think of the audience we cater to with Ruby Rogues. I wonder if our listeners are strapped for cash or if they do have the resources to get the job done? 22:48 – David: If you don’t have a lot of money, you don’t have to buy a Mac. If Cloud hosting isn’t your thing there are different options. You have DOCKER, and use Windows as your main editor, and the WSL. I wanted to do a test – I bout a laptop for $500-$700 and you can get away with doing what you need to do. Learning how to program and code with what you have is great! 25:00 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! 26:05 – Eric: Let’s talk about the software developer environment. Nate Hopkins isn’t on today, but you can’t change his mind – I am VEM all the way. I think Cuck is EMAX. 26:43 – Eric: What do you do? 26:45 – David: I use VS code. David talks about the benefits of using VS code. 27:37 – Eric: Yes, 100%. I met the lead engineer behind VS code. They just made a new announcement. I have been using VS code for quite a while now. The integrated terminal and other features are awesome. Pulling me out of Sublime Text was a really, really hard thing for me. 29:28 – David: Sublime text, yes, but I got tired of the 40-year long beta, and the lack of expanding it, too. VS code has won my heart over. 30:53 – Eric: My guess is that they are going to leave it alone. I am sure they will connect the 2 teams. Think of how much work has gone into ATOM. That would be a hard pill to swallow. 31:20 – David: At the end of the day, though, it is a company. You don’t need 2 different editors when they do the same thing. 31:40 – Eric: I would have to disagree with you. Maybe they won’t merge the 2 but they just become different between ATOM (React and React Native) and... 32:22 – David: Why would a company cancel something only have 1 season? (Clears throat...Fox!) 32:58 – Eric: I open very large files with Sublime. Sublime handles this very easily. This goes back to: why am I opening up very large files? 33:31 – David: It’s a log file don’t lie. 33:40 – David: What browser do you use? Safari? 34:03 – Eric: Safari is nice for non-developers. Safari is lightweight and very fast. I have been a browser whore. I go from bedroom to bedroom from Opera to Firefox to Chrome. I fall into the Chrome field though. I have a problem with Chrome, though, and that it knows me too well. Google can sell my data and they do. 37:14 – David: With BRAVE, weren’t they doing something with the block chain and bit coin to reward you for browsing? 37:38 – Eric: Yeah I think that’s being run by... 38:03 – David: I still use CHROME b/c I like the extensions. It’s important to know why you are picking a certain browser. When you are talking about development you need to know who your target audience is. What kind of apps do you use? 39:54 – Eric: It’s interesting to see how much traffic the Android Browser gets. You want to switch over to other parts? For my tech software...I use Polymail.io for email. I use THINGS to keep me on-track, I use SLACK, BRAVE BROSWER, iTerm3 and MERT. I use FANTASTICO (calendar), and I use BEAR (for my note taking). What about you? 41:21 – David: I use iTerm3, too. I’m on 3 different Slack channels. I have been using DISCORD. Other tools that I use are SPECTACLE (extension) among others. I try to keep it slim and simple, though. Another one is EasyRez (free download) and you can adjust the screen resolution on your desktop monitors. It’s important to target my audience better. I do like PARALLELS, too. 44:24 – David continues: Screenflow, Apple Motion, and Adobe After Effects CC. 45:04 – Eric: I use 1 PASSWORD and BETA BASE. 46:04 – David: Have you heard of Last Pass? 46:15 – Eric: Oh sure! I have been using though 1 Password and I guess there some loyalty there. 46:54 – David asks Eric a question about 1 Password about pricing. 47:12 – Eric: I want to pay with money than with something else. 47:23 – David: It’s owned by LogMeIn, and they have tons of experience with security. 48:00 – Eric: I am going to put an article here that compares all these different apps so you can see the similarities and differences side-by-side. 48:40 – David: Anything else? Banking passwords? 48:54 – Eric: Nah, I am excited to see where we are. I like Mojave for the desktop but I don’t like it for the constant number of resets that I’ve had to do. I love what I do. 49:34 – David: Yeah, I agree. I haven’t experienced any major setbacks, yet. 49:55 – Picks! 50:03 – Eric: I think this whole episode has been PICKS! 50:15 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! End – Cache Fly! Links: Get a Coder Job Course Ruby Rust Ruby Motion Ruby on Rails Angular React React Native Komodo Bestand Duet Atom.io EasyRez Polymail.io Docker Adobe After Effects CC LogMeIn Brave 1 Password iTerm3 VS CODE iPad Pro Last Pass GoDrive Mojave EMAX Back Blaze Discord Sublime Text AWS Cloud9 StatCounter GitHub: Mert Bear App Process.st Pi-Hole Sponsors: Sentry Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks: Dave ProxMox Pi-Hole Eric Open Source Funders
Panel: David Kimura Eric Berry In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk amongst themselves about their favorite software, equipment, and apps. Both Eric and David thoroughly share their preferred picks within these categories, and they explain how and why they use the specified item. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io 1:03 – David: Welcome! Today, Chuck is not feeling well. I am David and today we have Eric Berry on our panel today. It is just the two of us today. I want to talk about our development environment. What is your setup like? Do you have an office space and your hardware? 1:58 – Eric: I Have a room in my basement that has everything that I need. I do work from home. There is my guitar, my geek toys and more. For my hardware I am using 2017 MacBook Pro (16 GB of ram). The 13-inch is convenient, but I upgraded b/c I do a lot of traveling. I do pull the iPad out and use DUET. You no longer have to use a cord. I have a monitor that is 30-inches and it’s gorgeous. That is my hardware setup. I am not a mechanical keyboard guy, and I stick with the Apple super flat keyboard. I do use Bestand – it’s a holster for the keyboard and the track pad. What do you have? 4:35 – David: I have a Frankenstein setup. My needs change, over time, and when that changes my hardware changes. Back in the day I did not have a Mac and I used a Windows machine. I used to be a gamer, but then met my wife and then stopped b/c she didn’t like for me to waste time. My setup is more proper. I have a baseline iMac Pro b/c there was a great deal of $1,000 off. The other option was an iMac. I like the desktop b/c that’s where I do work – at home. It was a $4,000 investment. I am on my computer ALL the time it was worth it to me. I got the wall-mount for me, and I have more monitors wall-mounted, too. 8:00 – David: That is my monitor and computer setup. I have an eco-rhythmic keyboard b/c of childhood injuries. I have a really old Microsoft keyboard from 2005 something. It was cheap but I like the style of it. For my mouse I have a Logitech mouse. I love the feel of this thing. It has a side scroll left and right, and up and down. Especially when I am looking at code. It helps with my video editing, too. My mouse is my favorite to-date. I don’t have too much plugged into the Mac. I have a GoDrive, which has everything on it – my whole life’s work is on there. If there is ever an emergency I know to grab that. Back things up in case of an emergency would be my tips to you all. 11:40 – Eric: I have struggled with backing things up actually. The problem that I have is that I am constantly moving my laptop. I have this guilt and fear of doing it wrong. 12:33 – David: I have this work laptop – I don’t back that up every day. David gives Eric his suggestions in regards to backing files up. David mentions Back Blaze. 14:05 – Eric: That makes sense. I live in the Apple eco-system. I have my phone, watch, 40 iPads, laptop – everything backs up to the Cloud. The date we are recording this is 10/30/18. Apple just announced a new upgrade. I feel like this could compete with an actual laptop computer. Eric asks David a question. 15:35 – David: ...My main problem with that is that you might already have a developmental machine. It’s a stationary computer then it’s not feasible to take on the go. I do have an iPad Pro and I will take that on the go. I can login to my home network. BLINK – I used on my iPad Pro. David continues to talk about his setup. 19:00 – Eric: I kind of agree with you. I have seen it used quite a bit. My brother does everything online for his job. The pros are that if you are training, and his company is configured that way. The pros is that you can code from anywhere on anyone’s computer. I am glad that it DOES exist. It’s not Cloud9 but someone does offer... 20:20 – David: I think going to a solo screen does hurt my productivity – working on the iPad vs. working on the computer. I could get faster and faster but only to a certain degree. If you have the resources – then I don’t think it’s sustainable. However, if you don’t have the resources it’s better than nothing. At least you are coding and that’s important. 22:15 – Eric: I think of the audience we cater to with Ruby Rogues. I wonder if our listeners are strapped for cash or if they do have the resources to get the job done? 22:48 – David: If you don’t have a lot of money, you don’t have to buy a Mac. If Cloud hosting isn’t your thing there are different options. You have DOCKER, and use Windows as your main editor, and the WSL. I wanted to do a test – I bout a laptop for $500-$700 and you can get away with doing what you need to do. Learning how to program and code with what you have is great! 25:00 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! 26:05 – Eric: Let’s talk about the software developer environment. Nate Hopkins isn’t on today, but you can’t change his mind – I am VEM all the way. I think Cuck is EMAX. 26:43 – Eric: What do you do? 26:45 – David: I use VS code. David talks about the benefits of using VS code. 27:37 – Eric: Yes, 100%. I met the lead engineer behind VS code. They just made a new announcement. I have been using VS code for quite a while now. The integrated terminal and other features are awesome. Pulling me out of Sublime Text was a really, really hard thing for me. 29:28 – David: Sublime text, yes, but I got tired of the 40-year long beta, and the lack of expanding it, too. VS code has won my heart over. 30:53 – Eric: My guess is that they are going to leave it alone. I am sure they will connect the 2 teams. Think of how much work has gone into ATOM. That would be a hard pill to swallow. 31:20 – David: At the end of the day, though, it is a company. You don’t need 2 different editors when they do the same thing. 31:40 – Eric: I would have to disagree with you. Maybe they won’t merge the 2 but they just become different between ATOM (React and React Native) and... 32:22 – David: Why would a company cancel something only have 1 season? (Clears throat...Fox!) 32:58 – Eric: I open very large files with Sublime. Sublime handles this very easily. This goes back to: why am I opening up very large files? 33:31 – David: It’s a log file don’t lie. 33:40 – David: What browser do you use? Safari? 34:03 – Eric: Safari is nice for non-developers. Safari is lightweight and very fast. I have been a browser whore. I go from bedroom to bedroom from Opera to Firefox to Chrome. I fall into the Chrome field though. I have a problem with Chrome, though, and that it knows me too well. Google can sell my data and they do. 37:14 – David: With BRAVE, weren’t they doing something with the block chain and bit coin to reward you for browsing? 37:38 – Eric: Yeah I think that’s being run by... 38:03 – David: I still use CHROME b/c I like the extensions. It’s important to know why you are picking a certain browser. When you are talking about development you need to know who your target audience is. What kind of apps do you use? 39:54 – Eric: It’s interesting to see how much traffic the Android Browser gets. You want to switch over to other parts? For my tech software...I use Polymail.io for email. I use THINGS to keep me on-track, I use SLACK, BRAVE BROSWER, iTerm3 and MERT. I use FANTASTICO (calendar), and I use BEAR (for my note taking). What about you? 41:21 – David: I use iTerm3, too. I’m on 3 different Slack channels. I have been using DISCORD. Other tools that I use are SPECTACLE (extension) among others. I try to keep it slim and simple, though. Another one is EasyRez (free download) and you can adjust the screen resolution on your desktop monitors. It’s important to target my audience better. I do like PARALLELS, too. 44:24 – David continues: Screenflow, Apple Motion, and Adobe After Effects CC. 45:04 – Eric: I use 1 PASSWORD and BETA BASE. 46:04 – David: Have you heard of Last Pass? 46:15 – Eric: Oh sure! I have been using though 1 Password and I guess there some loyalty there. 46:54 – David asks Eric a question about 1 Password about pricing. 47:12 – Eric: I want to pay with money than with something else. 47:23 – David: It’s owned by LogMeIn, and they have tons of experience with security. 48:00 – Eric: I am going to put an article here that compares all these different apps so you can see the similarities and differences side-by-side. 48:40 – David: Anything else? Banking passwords? 48:54 – Eric: Nah, I am excited to see where we are. I like Mojave for the desktop but I don’t like it for the constant number of resets that I’ve had to do. I love what I do. 49:34 – David: Yeah, I agree. I haven’t experienced any major setbacks, yet. 49:55 – Picks! 50:03 – Eric: I think this whole episode has been PICKS! 50:15 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! End – Cache Fly! Links: Get a Coder Job Course Ruby Rust Ruby Motion Ruby on Rails Angular React React Native Komodo Bestand Duet Atom.io EasyRez Polymail.io Docker Adobe After Effects CC LogMeIn Brave 1 Password iTerm3 VS CODE iPad Pro Last Pass GoDrive Mojave EMAX Back Blaze Discord Sublime Text AWS Cloud9 StatCounter GitHub: Mert Bear App Process.st Pi-Hole Sponsors: Sentry Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks: Dave ProxMox Pi-Hole Eric Open Source Funders
Panel: David Kimura Eric Berry In this episode of Ruby Rogues, the panelists talk amongst themselves about their favorite software, equipment, and apps. Both Eric and David thoroughly share their preferred picks within these categories, and they explain how and why they use the specified item. Check out today’s episode to hear more! Show Topics: 0:00 – Advertisement: Sentry.io 1:03 – David: Welcome! Today, Chuck is not feeling well. I am David and today we have Eric Berry on our panel today. It is just the two of us today. I want to talk about our development environment. What is your setup like? Do you have an office space and your hardware? 1:58 – Eric: I Have a room in my basement that has everything that I need. I do work from home. There is my guitar, my geek toys and more. For my hardware I am using 2017 MacBook Pro (16 GB of ram). The 13-inch is convenient, but I upgraded b/c I do a lot of traveling. I do pull the iPad out and use DUET. You no longer have to use a cord. I have a monitor that is 30-inches and it’s gorgeous. That is my hardware setup. I am not a mechanical keyboard guy, and I stick with the Apple super flat keyboard. I do use Bestand – it’s a holster for the keyboard and the track pad. What do you have? 4:35 – David: I have a Frankenstein setup. My needs change, over time, and when that changes my hardware changes. Back in the day I did not have a Mac and I used a Windows machine. I used to be a gamer, but then met my wife and then stopped b/c she didn’t like for me to waste time. My setup is more proper. I have a baseline iMac Pro b/c there was a great deal of $1,000 off. The other option was an iMac. I like the desktop b/c that’s where I do work – at home. It was a $4,000 investment. I am on my computer ALL the time it was worth it to me. I got the wall-mount for me, and I have more monitors wall-mounted, too. 8:00 – David: That is my monitor and computer setup. I have an eco-rhythmic keyboard b/c of childhood injuries. I have a really old Microsoft keyboard from 2005 something. It was cheap but I like the style of it. For my mouse I have a Logitech mouse. I love the feel of this thing. It has a side scroll left and right, and up and down. Especially when I am looking at code. It helps with my video editing, too. My mouse is my favorite to-date. I don’t have too much plugged into the Mac. I have a GoDrive, which has everything on it – my whole life’s work is on there. If there is ever an emergency I know to grab that. Back things up in case of an emergency would be my tips to you all. 11:40 – Eric: I have struggled with backing things up actually. The problem that I have is that I am constantly moving my laptop. I have this guilt and fear of doing it wrong. 12:33 – David: I have this work laptop – I don’t back that up every day. David gives Eric his suggestions in regards to backing files up. David mentions Back Blaze. 14:05 – Eric: That makes sense. I live in the Apple eco-system. I have my phone, watch, 40 iPads, laptop – everything backs up to the Cloud. The date we are recording this is 10/30/18. Apple just announced a new upgrade. I feel like this could compete with an actual laptop computer. Eric asks David a question. 15:35 – David: ...My main problem with that is that you might already have a developmental machine. It’s a stationary computer then it’s not feasible to take on the go. I do have an iPad Pro and I will take that on the go. I can login to my home network. BLINK – I used on my iPad Pro. David continues to talk about his setup. 19:00 – Eric: I kind of agree with you. I have seen it used quite a bit. My brother does everything online for his job. The pros are that if you are training, and his company is configured that way. The pros is that you can code from anywhere on anyone’s computer. I am glad that it DOES exist. It’s not Cloud9 but someone does offer... 20:20 – David: I think going to a solo screen does hurt my productivity – working on the iPad vs. working on the computer. I could get faster and faster but only to a certain degree. If you have the resources – then I don’t think it’s sustainable. However, if you don’t have the resources it’s better than nothing. At least you are coding and that’s important. 22:15 – Eric: I think of the audience we cater to with Ruby Rogues. I wonder if our listeners are strapped for cash or if they do have the resources to get the job done? 22:48 – David: If you don’t have a lot of money, you don’t have to buy a Mac. If Cloud hosting isn’t your thing there are different options. You have DOCKER, and use Windows as your main editor, and the WSL. I wanted to do a test – I bout a laptop for $500-$700 and you can get away with doing what you need to do. Learning how to program and code with what you have is great! 25:00 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! 26:05 – Eric: Let’s talk about the software developer environment. Nate Hopkins isn’t on today, but you can’t change his mind – I am VEM all the way. I think Cuck is EMAX. 26:43 – Eric: What do you do? 26:45 – David: I use VS code. David talks about the benefits of using VS code. 27:37 – Eric: Yes, 100%. I met the lead engineer behind VS code. They just made a new announcement. I have been using VS code for quite a while now. The integrated terminal and other features are awesome. Pulling me out of Sublime Text was a really, really hard thing for me. 29:28 – David: Sublime text, yes, but I got tired of the 40-year long beta, and the lack of expanding it, too. VS code has won my heart over. 30:53 – Eric: My guess is that they are going to leave it alone. I am sure they will connect the 2 teams. Think of how much work has gone into ATOM. That would be a hard pill to swallow. 31:20 – David: At the end of the day, though, it is a company. You don’t need 2 different editors when they do the same thing. 31:40 – Eric: I would have to disagree with you. Maybe they won’t merge the 2 but they just become different between ATOM (React and React Native) and... 32:22 – David: Why would a company cancel something only have 1 season? (Clears throat...Fox!) 32:58 – Eric: I open very large files with Sublime. Sublime handles this very easily. This goes back to: why am I opening up very large files? 33:31 – David: It’s a log file don’t lie. 33:40 – David: What browser do you use? Safari? 34:03 – Eric: Safari is nice for non-developers. Safari is lightweight and very fast. I have been a browser whore. I go from bedroom to bedroom from Opera to Firefox to Chrome. I fall into the Chrome field though. I have a problem with Chrome, though, and that it knows me too well. Google can sell my data and they do. 37:14 – David: With BRAVE, weren’t they doing something with the block chain and bit coin to reward you for browsing? 37:38 – Eric: Yeah I think that’s being run by... 38:03 – David: I still use CHROME b/c I like the extensions. It’s important to know why you are picking a certain browser. When you are talking about development you need to know who your target audience is. What kind of apps do you use? 39:54 – Eric: It’s interesting to see how much traffic the Android Browser gets. You want to switch over to other parts? For my tech software...I use Polymail.io for email. I use THINGS to keep me on-track, I use SLACK, BRAVE BROSWER, iTerm3 and MERT. I use FANTASTICO (calendar), and I use BEAR (for my note taking). What about you? 41:21 – David: I use iTerm3, too. I’m on 3 different Slack channels. I have been using DISCORD. Other tools that I use are SPECTACLE (extension) among others. I try to keep it slim and simple, though. Another one is EasyRez (free download) and you can adjust the screen resolution on your desktop monitors. It’s important to target my audience better. I do like PARALLELS, too. 44:24 – David continues: Screenflow, Apple Motion, and Adobe After Effects CC. 45:04 – Eric: I use 1 PASSWORD and BETA BASE. 46:04 – David: Have you heard of Last Pass? 46:15 – Eric: Oh sure! I have been using though 1 Password and I guess there some loyalty there. 46:54 – David asks Eric a question about 1 Password about pricing. 47:12 – Eric: I want to pay with money than with something else. 47:23 – David: It’s owned by LogMeIn, and they have tons of experience with security. 48:00 – Eric: I am going to put an article here that compares all these different apps so you can see the similarities and differences side-by-side. 48:40 – David: Anything else? Banking passwords? 48:54 – Eric: Nah, I am excited to see where we are. I like Mojave for the desktop but I don’t like it for the constant number of resets that I’ve had to do. I love what I do. 49:34 – David: Yeah, I agree. I haven’t experienced any major setbacks, yet. 49:55 – Picks! 50:03 – Eric: I think this whole episode has been PICKS! 50:15 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job! End – Cache Fly! Links: Get a Coder Job Course Ruby Rust Ruby Motion Ruby on Rails Angular React React Native Komodo Bestand Duet Atom.io EasyRez Polymail.io Docker Adobe After Effects CC LogMeIn Brave 1 Password iTerm3 VS CODE iPad Pro Last Pass GoDrive Mojave EMAX Back Blaze Discord Sublime Text AWS Cloud9 StatCounter GitHub: Mert Bear App Process.st Pi-Hole Sponsors: Sentry Cache Fly Fresh Books Picks: Dave ProxMox Pi-Hole Eric Open Source Funders
HSBC Bank suffered data breach, Wordpress and WooCommerce flaws can expose sites to takeover and StatCounter script compromised to hijack Bitcoin transactions from major cryptocurrency exchange on episode 158 of our daily podcast.
Google Chrome Hoje em dia, o Google Chrome é o navegador mais usado no mundo, com 49,18% dos usuários de Desktop, contra 22,62% do Internet Explorer e 19,25% do Mozilla Firefox, segundo a ferramenta de análise StatCounter. https://www.tecword.com.br/google-chrome/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tecwordcombr/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tecwordcombr/support
Producast - Organização e Produtividade: Porque ninguém tem tempo a perder!
No episódio de hoje, vamos bater um papo com Willian Molinari sobre o seu trabalho remoto na doist.com a empresa por trás do Todoist. Você vai entender como funciona uma empresa 100% remota onde seus colaboradores tem a liberdade de trabalhar a partir de casa e são cobrados por resultados. Willian Molinari, mais conhecido como **PotHix**, trabalha com desenvolvimento de software há mais de 10 anos, sendo pouco mais de 1 ano na doist.com. É um dos fundadores do Guru-SP, ajudando na organização do grupo desde 2008. No seu tempo livre, ele desenvolveu alguns jogos com HTML5 e Javascript, sendo o Skeleton Jigsaw o último deles. Já fez dezenas de palestras, passando por mais de 7 estados brasileiros e foi revisor técnico de dois livros. Mais informações podem ser encontradas no seu blog pessoal: http://pothix.com. Puxe sua cadeira e venha tomar um café conosco e participar do papo. **Links do Episódio:** StatCounter: http://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/mobile/brazil Grupo do Producast no Telegram: https://t.me/producast **Participantes do episódio:** Willian Molinari (PotHix): http://pothix.com Eduardo Begnami: https://www.facebook.com/coacheduardobegnami/ Vander Nascimento: https://vander.com.br **Ajude a fazer o producast** Nosso podcast é aberto para todos vocês que querem tirar alguma dúvida, sugerir um tema para discussão, enviar sua crítica. Você pode enviar um email para contato@producast.com.br ou pela página no Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/producastpodcast]. **Contatos** Site: producast.com.br E-mail - contato@producast.com.br Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/producastpodcast Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/producastpodcast/ iTunes - https://bitly/producast **Os caras por trás do microfone** **Eduardo Fernandes Begnami** Coach e Consultor de Produtividade e Gestão de Tempo. Eu ajudo as pessoas a realizarem coisas! FB - https://www.facebook.com/coacheduardobegnami **Vander Nascimento** Consultor de Marketing Digital https://vander.com.br *Produção e Publicação* Agência DigitalSEO - Desenvolvimento e hospedagem do Site - Consultoria de SEO e Marketing Digital - Otimização contínua do site - Infra estrutura de e-mails - Funil de vendas automatizado - Criação da Arte dos episódios - Publicação dos episódios no SoundCloud - Publicação no Blog do Producast - Publicação nas mídias diversas Se o seu projeto pode se beneficiar do Inbound Marketing, procure a DigitalSEO https://digitalseo.com.br e solicite um Orçamento.
Producast - Organização e Produtividade: Porque ninguém tem tempo a perder!
No episódio de hoje, eu Vander Nascimento e meu parceiro de bancada Eduardo Begnami vamos falar como montar um setup de produtividade no seu dispositivo Android, segundo a http://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/mobile/brazil o marketshare do Android no Brasil em Julho de 2018 era de 85,21% contra apenas 11,76% do IOS. Sem contar que o dispositivo móvel está conosco 100% do tempo em que estamos acordados. Puxe sua cadeira e venha tomar um café conosco e bater um papo. **Links do Episódio:** StatCounter: http://gs.statcounter.com/os-market-share/mobile/brazil Grupo do Producast no Telegram: https://t.me/producast **Participantes do episódio:** Eduardo Begnami - https://www.facebook.com/coacheduardobegnami/ Vander Nascimento - https://vander.com.br **Ajude a fazer o producast** Nosso podcast é aberto para todos vocês que querem tirar alguma dúvida, sugerir um tema para discussão, enviar sua crítica. Você pode enviar um email para contato@producast.com.br ou pela página no Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/producastpodcast]. **Contatos** Site: producast.com.br E-mail - contato@producast.com.br Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/producastpodcast Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/producastpodcast/ iTunes - https://bitly/producast Grupo Telegram - https://t.me/producast **Os caras por trás do microfone** Eduardo Fernandes Begnami Coach e Consultor de Produtividade e Gestão de Tempo. Eu ajudo as pessoas a realizarem coisas! FB - https://www.facebook.com/coacheduardobegnami Vander Nascimento Consultor de Marketing Digital https://vander.com.br *Produção e Publicação* Você só está ouvindo este podcast pois a Agência DigitalSEO, Empresa de Marketing Digital para Pequenas empresas , desenvolveu e mantém no ar o site do projeto, cria as artes de capa para os episódios, mantém atualizado o calendário de publicação e publica os episódios os diversos canais semanalmente. Se o seu projeto pode se beneficiar do Inbound Marketing, procure a DigitalSEO e solicite um Orçamento. https://digitalseo.com.br
This is REC TECH….the only podcast that helps employers and recruiters connect with more candidates through technology inspired conversations. The RecTech podcast is sponsored in part by Hiretual, the recruiters best friend. And Roborecruiter.ai This will be a solo show with just me I put together a list of cool tools employers and recruiters can be using to improve their recruitment marketing efforts. Legend.im - animate 100 characters of text into 6 second video. Free for iOS. Ripl.com - another app, Ripl is a marketing tool in your pocket. Its free for iOS and Android but I pay 10 per month for extra features more templates + add your logo) Turn pictures into video which is great for jobs. Repost for Instagram - repost other people’s content from Instagram. Get it here. HelloBar - use it to highlight a call to action such as a job of the week, news or collect emails. Can be set to appear at top or bottom of your site. After a few secs or even if they try to leave. Download it here. Mailchimp (free for first 2,000 emails) get started with your email marketing. Statcounter - simple web statistics...if you seeking a simple web stats tool statcounter may be of interest to you. It’s a simple tool vs google analytics. Understand where your candidates are coming from. Go to statcounter.com. Kingsumo - Grow your email list through Viral Giveaways...fee tool they make it easy to grow your lists or followers through a giveaway or contest that you run. Bayard Advertising has made an EB Calculator https://bayardad.com/eb-calculator/ Visit RecTechMedia.com for more recruitment marketing solutions and consulting.
Los clics inválidos son una actividad que afecta a muchas cuentas de Google AdWords de manera negativa Es cuando tu competencia comienza a realizar clics sobre tus anuncios con la única intención de agotar el presupuesto En este episodio te cuento como detectar los clics inválidos en Google AdWords y cómo excluirlos para evitar perder dinero en tus campañas. Enlaces y notas - URL del articulo blog: https://albeiroochoa.com/clics-invalidos/ - Video para excluir clics inválidos con StatCounter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bF0EPmHaDf8&t=3s ====Suscribete vía=== - Itunes: https://goo.gl/yyHW8M - Ivoox: https://goo.gl/bMYjqg - Stitcher: https://goo.gl/IsYDfd - Youtube: https://goo.gl/Xh6TPa
Los clics inválidos son una actividad que afecta a muchas cuentas de Google AdWords de manera negativa Es cuando tu competencia comienza a realizar clics sobre tus anuncios con la única intención de agotar el presupuesto En este episodio te cuento como detectar los clics inválidos en Google AdWords y cómo excluirlos para evitar perder dinero en tus campañas. Enlaces y notas - URL del articulo blog: https://albeiroochoa.com/clics-invalidos/ - Video para excluir clics inválidos con StatCounter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bF0EPmHaDf8&t=3s ====Suscribete vía=== - Itunes: https://goo.gl/yyHW8M - Ivoox: https://goo.gl/bMYjqg - Stitcher: https://goo.gl/IsYDfd - Youtube: https://goo.gl/Xh6TPa
你好,这里是《科技最前沿》,喜爱科学的你来啦,我是你的老朋友丘孔语论。这一期我给大家分享《强势突围!继麒麟芯片后,一国产系统再为中国制造打强心针》,这篇文章来自于欧界科技。科技最前沿,丘孔语论带你遨游科技的海洋,天文、物理、互联网、人工智能、数码、编程、大数据、创新创业、化学医学、养生、心理学、灵性等等等统统都可能涉及到;海内外,宇宙中,跟着我,就够了……开始聆听科技的声音吧:欧界报道:最近,网上关于Windows系统和Android系统的消息层出不穷,今天你更新,明天我更新,你来我往,不绝于耳。确实,作为全球两大操作系统巨头,一动一静都被放大研究。尤其是前段时间,StatCounter发布的今年二月份全球上网设备操作系统统计数据显示,Android的市场份额已经高达37.4%,直逼Windows的38.6%,Windows的王位大有被Android取代之势。然后又赶上Win10更新和安卓8.0新出的节骨眼上,这下,操作系统又引起了国内更多的关注。PC时代,微软的Windows毫无疑问是世界第一大操作系统。如果单独统计PC市场的话,Windows系统到目前为止依然是霸主,其市场份额高达84.1%,无人可出其右。以前,很多国家都基于Linux搞了一套自己的pc端操作系统,起名都颇具特色,比如:麒麟、红星、Boss、Nova等,但依然无法与Windows抗衡而日渐消磨匿迹。而到如今,智能手机逐渐取代PC,人们更多的就是关注移动端操作系统。目前的手机系统主流是安卓和IOS两种,而微软的WP已经基本上退出了市场,IOS是苹果iPhone手机专属,安卓则是千千万万的手机厂商必备的系统。国内最畅销的手机品牌华为、小米、OPPO、VIVO都无一例外的选择了谷歌的安卓系统。虽然华为和小米对安卓系统做了一些优化,但终究还是基于安卓的底层技术。根据StatCounter最新统计显示,如果以智能手机市场来划分,Android和iOS瓜分了全部份额,Android占了85%,剩下的全是iOS,Windows移动版、黑莓、三星Tizen基本为零。随着谷歌对安卓系统的越来越限制,开发国产系统的呼声越来越强。其实,在操作系统领域曾有多家实力雄厚的巨头试图进入,其中就包括百度,但最后只有阿里依靠小品牌手机,实现了对谷歌、苹果巨头的突围。我们在天猫上可以看到,使用的YunOS的手机主要有小辣椒、朵唯、天语、康佳、长虹等小品牌。YunOS是阿里巴巴集团研发的智能操作系统,根据赛诺数据显示,其已经成为第三大移动操作系统。融合了阿里巴巴多个领域技术成果的Yunos是基于linux研发的,搭载了自主研发的操作系统功能和组件,增强了云端服务的能力,并提供与Dalvik虚拟机兼容的运行环境。但作为一个新系统最大的挑战就是软件生态,为了不至于没有应用可用,YunOS取巧地保留了安卓的app虚拟机。不过,安卓的核心部分毕竟被换了,所以,YunOS是一个新的独立的系统,不再是安卓。虽然YunOS还不是很完美,无法ROOT,无法搞所谓的底层优化、刷机,无法完全兼容安卓的app,但YunOS在安全性方面也是非常出色,通过了工信部5级安全认证的它可为用户提供全面的手机安全体系。而且,与谷歌Android和苹果iOS不同的是,阿里YunOS并非只能运用于智能手机和平板电脑等产品,而是着眼于万物互联网。我们在智能汽车、路由、净化器、智能手表等产品上也均能见到YunOS的身影。可以说阿里YunOS正在成为万物互联时代的底层操作系统。值得注意的是,在刚过去的MWC2017大会上,消失已久的芬兰Jolla宣布回归中国市场,表示将成立Sailfish中国联盟,致力为中国市场打造本土移动操作系统,可为智能手机、汽车工业、电视、物联网和智能手表等提供Sailfish OS的移动操作系统解决方案。虽然目前YunOS系统并没有什么高端机使用,但相较于镜中月般的Sailfish本土移动操作系统,成为全球第三手机系统的YunOS还是更有期待性。尤其是阿里入股魅族后,魅族开始全面使用阿里的YunOS。小编相信,国产系统崛起道路虽曲折,然而前途却是光明的!好了,所有的内容就是这些了。做一档科普类的节目,我的语速放的很慢,希望我的普通话不至于吓到你。请务必留出点时间关个注、点个赞或者留个言,这样会给我把节目做的更好的动力。交流讨论请关注微信公众号 丘孔语论 ,微信号是qiukong365 ,也可以扫描语音下面的二维码关注。丘孔语论,倒过来念就是 论语孔丘 ,聪明如你,知道这四个字怎么写吗?
David Robinson (@dgrobinson) is a Principal at Upturn, a public interest technology and policy consulting firm. Prior to co-founding UpTurn, David was the Associate Director of Princeton's Center for Information Technology Policy. He also launched The American, a national magazine of business and economics at the American Enterprise Institute, growing The American's website to more than 1.5 million unique visits in its first year. David holds a JD from Yale, was a Rhodes Scholar, and graduated magna cum laude with a degree in Philosophy from Princeton. In this episode we discussed: what predictive policing is. how predictive policing technologies fall short of their marketing claims. how predictive policing enables disparities within the criminal justice system. what policymakers should consider as they incorporate predictive policing technologies into their law enforcement activities. Resources: UpTurn Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey Asana NEWS ROUNDUP Julia Angwin and Terry Parris Jr. at Pro Publica raised a lot of red flags last week when they reported that Facebook allows advertisers to exclude audience segments on the basis of race. Angwin and Parris discovered a chilling echo of race-based redlining in real estate where African Americans and other minority groups were prevented from buying real estate in predominantly white neighborhoods. Angwin and Parris purchased an ad on Facebook targeting Facebook users who are house hunting and allowed them to exclude anyone who was African American, Asian-American or Hispanic. But the Fair Housing Act of 1968 makes it illegal “"to make, print, or publish, or cause to be made, printed, or published any notice, statement, or advertisement, with respect to the sale or rental of a dwelling that indicates any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin.” Facebook says it does what it can to prevent discrimination. ---- Did FBI Director James Comey break the law when he announced 11 days before the election that his agency was re-opening the investigation into Hillary Clinton's emails? Several leading experts say it was. Passed in 1939, the Hatch Act limits federal employees, with a few exceptions, such as the President, from engaging in activities that would impact the outcome of an election. Legal experts such as former Chief White House Ethics attorney Richard Painter, who filed a formal ethics complaint against Comey and the FBI last week, think there was no other reason for Comey to make the disclosure other than to impact the outcome of the election. Comey did, however, announce to members of Congress on Sunday that the agency will not recommend charges against Hillary Clinton based on the emails discovered on former Congressman Anthony Weiner's computer. Lauren Hodges has the story reporting for NPR. You should also read Painter's Op-Ed in The New York Times. ---- 1.4 million people “checked in” to Standing Rock on Facebook, even though they weren't actually there, to support opponents of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Rumors had spread that the police were monitoring Facebook to crack down on protesters. But how exactly do the police use social media data to surveil protests? Jeff Landale has the analysis in Christian Science Monitor. ---- A new University of Washington and Stanford study of 1,500 rides found Uber and Lyft drivers discriminate against black passengers. For example, blacks waited 30% longer for rides--5 minutes and 15 seconds--versus 4 minutes for white passengers, according to the study. The ride cancellation rate was also 6 points higher, or 10.1 %, for black sounding names compared to white sounding names. Elizabeth Weise has the story at USA Today. ---- Mobile browsing as surpassed desktop browsing for the first time. This is according to a new report from StatCounter. Mobile browsing now accounts for over 51% of all online browsing actvitiy. Check Samuel Gibbs' story in the Guardian. ---- Black Lives Matter is opposing the Trans Pacific Partnership arguing the trade deal would further disenfranchise blacks by sending capital to nations with lower wages and poorer working conditions, allowing employers to avoid domestic courts, increase mobility for workers with higher paying jobs but no one else, and prevent the formation of unions. ---- AT&T had a tough legal and regulatory week The Dodgers Channel, owned by Time Warner Cable, offered customers exclusive access to live Dodgers games. Even though Time Warner Cable owned the Dodgers Channel, the company attempted to license it to other cable providers, which would have provided each licensees' customers access to the games. But, as Brian Fung reports in the Washington Post, the Department of Justice is now suing AT&T and its subsidiary, DirectTV, for colluding with their LA competitors, including Cox and Charter, to make sure none of them agreed to license the Dodgers Channel from Time Warner Cable. This way, the three companies could take comfort in knowing they wouldn't lose subscribers. Charter of course has now acquired Time Warner Cable. ---- Finally, the FCC says AT&T incorrectly interpreted FCC rules when it sued the City of Louisville in federal court for granting Google access to utility poles in order to build out its fiber network. AT&T had said the FCC's pole attachment rules pre-emept state rules. However, the FCC submitted a statement of interest to the Department of Justice saying the federal pole attachment rules do not pre-empt state rules at all and, in fact, defer to state regulations where states show they have the situation under control with its own regulations. John Brodkin has the story in Ars Technica.
Quizás a algunos les sorprenda, pero otros ya lo estaban esperando desde hace varios años. Por primera vez en todo el mundo el uso de Internet en tablets y móviles supera al de escritorio.Según StatCounter, una de las compañías independientes de analíticas web más grandes y conocidas, el uso de Internet en todo el mundo durante el mes de octubre está dividido en un 51.3% en móviles y tablets y 48.7% en ordenadores de escritorio.Aquí las referencias: http://bit.ly/2fbyX42 - http://bit.ly/2fy7Y0XEscucha estos podcasts, están geniales!!!Vía Podcast: http://bit.ly/ViaPodcastTe Invito un Café: http://bit.ly/TiuCafeTecnología en Español: http://bit.ly/KeynerChara
Quizás a algunos les sorprenda, pero otros ya lo estaban esperando desde hace varios años. Por primera vez en todo el mundo el uso de Internet en tablets y móviles supera al de escritorio.Según StatCounter, una de las compañías independientes de analíticas web más grandes y conocidas, el uso de Internet en todo el mundo durante el mes de octubre está dividido en un 51.3% en móviles y tablets y 48.7% en ordenadores de escritorio.Aquí las referencias: http://bit.ly/2fbyX42 - http://bit.ly/2fy7Y0XEscucha estos podcasts, están geniales!!!Vía Podcast: http://bit.ly/ViaPodcastTe Invito un Café: http://bit.ly/TiuCafeTecnología en Español: http://bit.ly/KeynerChara
Episode 14 of the BeBizzy Break Podcast. On this episode we talk about: Microsoft Teams - a Slack competitoTeam chat communication and file sharingIntroducting Microsoft Teams - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nKU-FMzZFF0 Microsoft Introduces a trade-in program from Macbook Pros to Surface devices.Program ends November 11, 2016, so hurry up!LastPass - making the mobile app free! You can use Lastpass to manage secure passwords across all of your logins and keep it safe with one secure passwordMobile traffic from StatCounter has finally passsed desktop. 51% of all web traffic is now mobile. - Have you updated your website yet?Get ready for Snapchat Glasses - codename LagunaVideo camera sunglasses going on sale in the coming weeksSynced to smartphone and snapchat accountsVideo files up to 10 secondsHype - Live Video Broadcasting app from the creators of VineCreators were not happy when Twitter announced Vine was being shut down.iOS beta appCompetitors include Periscope, Snapchat, and Facebook Live and the rumored Instagram livestreaming app, GoInst
Download PodcastTonight is our last program of 2013 and we want to thank our listeners and callers for a great year in broadcasting. Of course we want to give a big shout out to the Militant Mind Movement think-tank without the radio program would not exist. We are going to open up the phone lines as we discuss where we've been and where we need to go. Studio line: 704-951-5030 & Listen Only: 1-530-881-1400 ext. #549032.
Download PodcastDuring the late 80 and early 90, conscious Hip Hop was in full swing, as it made a major impact on Black culture. One of the major groups of that era was Arrested Development. Tuesday night at 9pm EST , join Militant Minded radio as we are joined by Speech of Arrested Development as he discuses the impact of the group and its legacy. During the second half of the program, we will discuss the passing of Nelson Mandela, his legacy and the reactions to his death.
Download PodcastThis year marks the 50th anniversary of the 1963 Christmas Boycott that was called in response to the bombing of the 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama that claimed the lives of four little girls. The boycott was initiated by the group, Artists and Writers for Justice, which included Dick Gregory, James Baldwin, Ruby Dee and Louis Lomax. Although many people are familiar with the bombing, the boycott has been erased from history books. Tuesday Night on Militant Minded Radio, join us as we discuss what really happened to the boycott and the strange power that white foundations have over the Civil Rights Black Power Movement. Special guest TRUTH Minista Paul Scott. This news and possibly more tonight on MM Radio...
Download Podcast Tonight we will be talking to Arthur “Silky Slim” Reed about his work to stop violence and senseless killings in our communities. Although many people are visiting family and friends this week, for many there will be an empty place at the table because of senseless violence. Silky Slim is a former gang member who once was about that "thug life" but after several near death experiences, he made a decision to be part of the solution and not part of the problem. You can check his space on the web at http://stopthekillinginc.org. After we talk to Silky Slim, we want to weigh in on rappers speaking out or not speaking out on the issues rooted in racism white supremacy. There were many Black people who took issue with Jay Z not using his position, platform and power to speak out on racial profiling in a meaningful manner after he was pretty much forced to weigh in on Shop & Frisk, then there are those that gave him a pass as a victim of racism and as such should not be expected to say or do anything to confront racism and white supremacy. Now we got a white rapper who goes by Macklemore who used his position and the American Music Awards platform to speak out on the issue of racial profiling and the killing of young black men. Will Black people have a problem with a white rapper speaking out on racial profiling and the killing of young Black men?
Download PodcastJoin us tonight as Militant Minded Radio raises the question "Is Hip Hop in a State of Emergency?" Our special guest tonight will be Hakim Green from the group Channel Live. Green is also an activist who is organizing to stop the violence in our communities. In other news..... ‘GQ' Throws Racial Understatements at @kendricklamar & CampAuthor Terry McMillian puts the Kardashians and Realty TV on blast in a video posted on BossipGeorge Zimmermurderman out on bail after assaulting a female This news and possibly more tonight on MM Radio... Tune in via Black Talk Radio Network online or download the smartphone apps for iPhone, Android or try the apps by Tunein. Studio line: 704-951-5030 & Listen Only: 1-530-881-1400 ext. #549032.
Download PodcastRecently TRUTH Minista Paul Scott created a lot of controversy when he suggested that NWA should not be included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Various Hip Hop writers have gone on the attack. Tuesday night November 12th at 9PM EST on Militant Minded Radio, TRUTH Minista fires back...It's coon huntin' season.... AllHipHop is reporting, "Grandmaster Melle Mel, Grandmaster Caz, Afrika Bambaataa, and Grand Wizard Theodore are working with the Windows of Hip Hop development project to establish a new exhibition hall in the birthplace of Hip Hop – The Bronx." We will also discuss the killing of 19 yr old Renisha McBride who was shot in the face by a white homeowner in Dearborn, Michigan. In Hip Hop and Ratchet Rap related news..... Man Claims Cops Told him to Rap in Order to Avoid Being ArrestedLord Jamar Laments Eminem's MTV EMAs WinHip-Hop Wired's Guide To Rap Struggle: A Step-By-Step Breakdown Find links to these stories on our Facebook Page Militant Minded Radio
Download PodcastHip-hop started as and has always been a youth movement and the youth bought into the messages conveyed through the music. Hip-Hop artist back in the day were teaching the youth about Black empowerment, Black History, White Supremacy, Police Brutality and had them sporting symbols of Africa and X. Tonight, we must ask who is reaching the youth today through their music and more importantly, what are they teaching them besides spending hundreds of dollars on designer belts? Yasin360WiseGuy will sharing his experience as an artivist with a message who understands what the youth are going through and the launch of WarStarrHipHop! In Hip-Hop and ratchet rap news..... Pebbles responds to TLC special ‘CrazySexyCool' on VH1 by suing the estate of deceased member Lisa "Left Eye" LopezRap Rehab publishes tips every artist should knowFreeway Ricky Ross Addresses Recent Drug Dealing Rappers Comments & Jay Z's Barneys Statement
Download Podcast Over the years, there have been rumors about a secret meeting that took place that destroyed Hip Hop. However, tonight on Militant Minded Radio, TRUTH Minista Paul Scott will reveal the truth about a secret meeting that took place decades ago that is still impacting the Black community in 2013. In Hip Hop and Ratchet Rap related news...... An open letter to Al Sharpton by a man who claims to be one of the founders of the National Action Network asks Sharpton to return the blood money he received from Cash Money in a deal to publish his memoirs. He also claims that he has personally heard Rev. Sharpton refer to Black politicians by the “N-Word”. Rihanna who is on a concert tour was blasted on Instagram for some photos she posted of her posing in front of the Sheikh Zayed mosque in Abu Dhabi. Look at the pics here. Tasteful or Tasteless? First Ice T blasts on the current state of hip-hop calling it materialistic and now Sean “Puffy” Combs comes out and says Hip-Hop is too soft. Does either man have a point? After his little twitter beef with Jimmy Kimmel over Kimmel making fun of Kanye's media interview where he was complaining about European designers not liking his idea for leather sweat pants, now Kanye is pushing a confederate t-shirt after bringing White Jesus on stage in Seattle. Is Kanye for real or just trying to keep his name in the media?
(Welcome to Best Of Week. As Tales from the "LiberryCAST" rockets toward its final episode, this is my chance to have a look back at some of my favorite episodes from this podcast adaptation of favorite blog entries from Tales from the "Liberry.") Having last appeared in the Bad Mom's 2 Mother's Day Episode, Ms. Green was not a bad mom, per se, despite assisting her son with his homework projects a bit more than would be educationally healthy for him. She also distinguished herself by being one of our more exasperating patrons despite almost always being incredibly nice to us. The primary reason for the conflict between our personality types stemmed from her refusal to understand simple concepts requiring no explanation without us supplying triple-ply explanation. Well, that and her cell phone ringtone, which sounded like avian rape porn. (And let me just say, I look forward to the Google Keyword search terms that find THAT when I next check Statcounter.)
Having last appeared in the Bad Mom's 2 Mother's Day Episode, Ms. Green was not a bad mom, per se, despite assisting her son with his homework projects a bit more than would be educationally healthy for him. She also distinguished herself by being one of our more exasperating patrons despite almost always being incredibly nice to us. The primary reason for the conflict between our personality types stemmed from her refusal to understand simple concepts requiring no explanation without us supplying triple-ply explanation. Well, that and her cell phone ringtone, which sounded like avian rape porn. (And let me just say, I look forward to the Google Keyword search terms that find THAT when I next check Statcounter.)
What's happening on your site this second? If you don't know, that should change after you view this show. In this episode, Eric and Ben take you through two application designed stat analysis, and show you how to get the most out of each one. This is a great episode to watch in full screen as we are going through the actual applications in a screen-cast. If you have Google Analytics, StatCounter, or are just interested in analysis, pull up a chair and enjoy.
There are so many Web Analytics engines available it’s hard to decide what to use. And once you have Web Analytics installed-what do you do with all of that data? Dave Conlon from MIT's Information Services and Technology discussed some of the various options such as MIT’s Data Warehouse, Google Analytics, Omniture, and StatCounter and discuss what each collects, why you might want to use one (or more!), and how to interpret and use the data you collect. Please visit this podcast at http://webpub.mit.edu/2010/04/webpub-presentation-web-analytics-collecting-and-demystifying-data-now-available/
There are so many Web Analytics engines available it’s hard to decide what to use. And once you have Web Analytics installed-what do you do with all of that data? Dave Conlon from MIT's Information Services and Technology discussed some of the various options such as MIT’s Data Warehouse, Google Analytics, Omniture, and StatCounter and discuss what each collects, why you might want to use one (or more!), and how to interpret and use the data you collect. Please visit this podcast at http://webpub.mit.edu/2010/04/webpub-presentation-web-analytics-collecting-and-demystifying-data-now-available/