9729 stories
·
21 followers

Apple needs to explain that bug that resurfaced deleted photos

1 Share
Hand holding iPhone 15 Pro showing camera preview on screen.
Disclosure is part of a good privacy policy. | Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

Earlier today, Apple issued a fix in iOS and iPadOS 17.5.1. Patching buggy software is a good, normal thing. But that’s not the issue here. The issue is that the fix “addresses a rare issue where photos that experienced database corruption could reappear in the Photos library even if they were deleted” — and that’s all Apple has to say about it.

On iOS, deleted photos technically spend 30 days in the Recently Deleted folder before disappearing for good, but the intent to send a photo to digital oblivion is still there. A reasonable person would expect a deleted file to stay that way. That’s why it’s understandable that people freaked out last week when photos deleted years ago had suddenly reappeared in their iPhone photo library.

...

Continue reading…

Read the whole story
freeAgent
6 hours ago
reply
Los Angeles, CA
Share this story
Delete

Scarlett Johansson told OpenAI not to use her voice — and she’s not happy they might have anyway

1 Comment
TODAY - Season 72
Photo by Nathan Congleton / NBC via Getty Images

Scarlett Johansson says that OpenAI asked her to be the voice behind ChatGPT — but that when she declined, the company went ahead and created a voice that sounded just like her. In a statement shared to NPR, Johansson says that she has now been “forced to hire legal counsel” and has sent two letters to OpenAI inquiring how the soundalike ChatGPT voice, known as Sky, was made.

“Last September, I received an offer from Sam Altman, who wanted to hire me to voice the current ChatGPT 4.0 system,” Johansson writes. She says that Altman contacted her agent as recently as two days before the company first demoed the ChatGPT voice asking for her to reconsider.

Continue reading…

Read the whole story
freeAgent
6 hours ago
reply
The plot thickens...
Los Angeles, CA
Share this story
Delete

San Diego Is Cracking Down on Groups Exercising Outside Without a Permit

1 Comment
A park ranger gives a ticket to a yoga instructor in San Diego | YouTube

They come in packs. They're often crunchy. They're chameleons: a downward-facing dog one moment, a cobra or child the next. (What versatility!) They do handstands and breathe peacefully. And we can't have any of that. 

At least, not on public land. By "they," I'm referring to the world of yogis. And by "we," I mean the city of San Diego, which revised its municipal code in March to prevent groups of four or more people engaged in commercial recreational activities—yoga, fitness classes, dog training, etc.—from convening in public spaces without a permit.

Law enforcement officers are zeroing in on rogue gatherings, breaking up beachside classes before they begin and issuing tickets to the teachers. And despite the city's emphasis on "commercial" activities, park rangers are also busting those groups who meet with no cost of admission. "It's really tragic that the city would take away the opportunity to come to a class for free, to be outside in a public park, and to enjoy nature," Amy Baack, a yoga instructor, told San Diego's KGTV station. And despite what might be the gut reaction here—"Just get a permit!"—it appears the city isn't making that easy: "We are perfectly willing and ready to get a permit," Baack added, "if the city would allow it."

The law was originally tailored to target permitless food vendors. Reasonable people can and should debate the necessity or utility of preventing people from buying hot dogs from someone without a stamp of approval from government bureaucrats. But it would seem even more questionable to apply that concept to people who voluntarily meet by the water to do some stretching. Conjuring safety concerns there requires an active imagination.

Indeed, San Diego says the core issue at stake is safety. Officials expanded the code, which went into effect March 29, "to ensure these public spaces remain safe and accessible," a city spokesperson said in a statement. What danger these groups pose while transitioning from, say, bridge pose to wheel pose remains unclear.

The idea that the code provision ensures accessibility, meanwhile, is richly ironic, as it explicitly excludes from access those taxpaying San Diegans who have the audacity to work out with other people sans a permit. That they have gathered together as opposed to separately, or to do a specific activity as opposed to something nebulous, should not suddenly necessitate approval from the government.

Whether or not the rule will survive is up in the air: An attorney for a group of yoga instructors on Friday served a cease-and-desist letter to city officials. Whatever the case, it's an example of the government implementing a solution in search of a problem, which didn't actually exist until city leaders created it.

The post San Diego Is Cracking Down on Groups Exercising Outside Without a Permit appeared first on Reason.com.

Read the whole story
freeAgent
7 hours ago
reply
I can understand not wanting people to be using public land for commercial activity without a permit, but what is the excuse for breaking up groups where no payment is involved? These people should start calling their 5+ person yoga sessions protests against the law that bans them, and then they will benefit from 1st Amendment protection.
Los Angeles, CA
Share this story
Delete

Recall is Microsoft’s key to unlocking the future of PCs

1 Comment and 2 Shares
Vector collage of the Microsoft Copilot logo.
Image: The Verge

Microsoft’s launching Recall for Windows 11, a new tool that keeps track of everything you see and do on your computer and, in return, gives you the ability to search and retrieve anything you’ve done on the device.

The scope of Recall, which Microsoft has internally called AI Explorer, is incredibly vast — it includes logging things you do in apps, tracking communications in live meetings, remembering all websites you’ve visited for research, and more. All you need to do is perform a “Recall” action, which is like an AI-powered search, and it’ll present a snapshot of that period of time that gives you context of the memory.

As a matter of fact, everything you do on the PC appears on an explorable timeline you can scroll through. You can...

Continue reading…

Read the whole story
freeAgent
13 hours ago
reply
It's not creepy, we promise.
Los Angeles, CA
Share this story
Delete

Early Wittgenstein Becomes Late Wittgenstein

1 Share
PERSON:
Read the whole story
freeAgent
13 hours ago
reply
Los Angeles, CA
Share this story
Delete

OpenAI pulls its Scarlett Johansson-like voice for ChatGPT

1 Comment
Her promotional still
OpenAI says “AI voices should not deliberately mimic a celebrity’s distinctive voice.” | Photo: Warner Bros.

OpenAI is pulling the ChatGPT voice that sounds remarkably similar to Scarlett Johansson after numerous headlines (and even Saturday Night Live) noted the similarity. The voice, known as Sky, is now being put on “pause,” the company says.

“We believe that AI voices should not deliberately mimic a celebrity’s distinctive voice— Sky’s voice is not an imitation of Scarlett Johansson but belongs to a different professional actress using her own natural speaking voice,” OpenAI wrote this morning.

OpenAI CTO Mira Murati denied that the imitation of Johansson was intentional in an interview with The Verge last week. Even if Johansson’s voice wasn’t directly referenced, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was seemingly already aware of the similarities,...

Continue reading…

Read the whole story
freeAgent
13 hours ago
reply
They want us to believe that *only* Sam Altman was aware that OpenAI made their AI voice sound creepily like Scarlett Johansson in "Her" (and potentially that even he only figured it out during their public demo)? That was literally my first thought when I heard the voice, and that was before the reporting on its obvious similarity.
Los Angeles, CA
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories