Facebook seems to have a new favorite word: Transparency

TwitterFacebook

In the midst of Facebook’s biggest public relations crisis ever, the social media behemoth wants everyone to know that it’s going to start taking transparency very, very seriously.

That new commitment, the company explained, starts with changing its notoriously opaque policies and products to better reflect this newfound commitment. In a blog post, Facebook announced an update to its pages that will allow users to see all the ads that page is currently running, along with a detailed history of any name changes that have been made to the page. 

Previously, there were very few ways page owners could be held accountable for the ads they ran. A page could “dark post” hyper-targeted ads into users’ News Feed or Instagram feed and there would be no clear way to tie the ad back to the organization that paid for it. Read more…

More about Tech, Facebook, Advertising, Social Media Companies, and Tech

Amazon wants you—yes, you—to start a package delivery business

TwitterFacebook

Are you an entrepreneur who specializes in selling handcrafted soaps and artisanal candles? Are you an entrepreneur who doesn’t specialize in anything at all? Congratulations, you’re pre-qualified to be America’s next shipping magnate. 

At least, that’s what Amazon wants you to believe.

Amid soaring sales, the Seattle-based e-commerce giant launched the Amazon Delivery Service Partner program this week to convince you— yes, you— to get delivering packages.

The new program goes a huge step beyond the gig economy side-hustle that is Amazon Flex. The Amazon Delivery Service Partner program wants entrepreneurs to start your very own package delivery business — even if those entrepreneurs have no prior experience with shipping logistics..  Read more…

More about Amazon, Amazon Prime, Delivery, Logistics, and Tech

‘Harry Potter and the Cursed Child’ to head to the West Coast

TwitterFacebook

The award-winning two-part Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is heading to California in 2019. The show, which just earned six Tony Awards, will premiere at the Curran Theatre in San Francisco. 

SEE ALSO: The first ‘Harry Potter and the Cursed Child’ reactions are here, and they’re magical

“The Bay Area is where cutting-edge culture meets cutting-edge technology, so this wonderful example of riveting storytelling and first-of-its-kind stage magic has found its ideal home in our great city,” said the Ambassador Theatre Group’s Carole Shorenstein Hays in a press release. 

“My family and I are filled with joy thinking about all the audiences coming to San Francisco to experience Harry Potter and the Cursed Child – particularly first-time and young theatergoers, who have always been a core part of our mission.” Read more…

More about Entertainment, San Francisco, Harry Potter, J.K. Rowling, and Harry Potter And The Cursed Child

Someone left their house in the middle of the street. Seriously.

TwitterFacebook

Sometimes you forget your keys. Sometimes your forget your phone. But someone in Dover, Delaware forgot their whole ass house. 

SEE ALSO: Scientists have finally come up with a solution for the world’s most annoying household sound

The Dover Police Department posted two photos of  an abandoned house in the middle of the street on Tuesday. 

“Sooooo somebody left a house on Long Point Road. Nope this is not a joke,” the police captioned the photos. 

The Dover Police Department said they were “unable to move the house until Wednesday,” and closed the road until then. 

The whole incident reminded a few Dover residents of a certain 1982 hit. Read more…

More about Facebook, Transportation, Culture, and Web Culture

Facebook seeks patent on tech that turns on your smartphone microphone

TwitterFacebook

To hear Facebook tell it, no one at the company is secretly using your phone’s microphone to listen in on your conversations for the purpose of ad targeting. 

But that doesn’t mean they aren’t open to the possibility. 

A patent application filed by the Menlo Park-based  company details a convoluted process to trigger users’ devices to record the ambient audio surrounding them — be that your conversation or the sounds in your bedroom — and then send some form of data based on that recording back to the company.  

And yeah, it’s creepy as hell. 

SEE ALSO: People think Facebook is listening to them. Here’s how they’re fighting back. Read more…

More about Facebook, Privacy, Patents, Tech, and Social Media Companies

Mexico and South Korea: The newest of best friends after a World Cup triumph

TwitterFacebook

Convincingly beaten 3-0 in its match against Sweden, Mexico were set to be the next team sent packing from the World Cup on Wednesday.

Then, the incredible happened.

SEE ALSO: ‘Simpsons’ fans dream of a Mexico and Portugal World Cup final

South Korea’s team, the deus ex machina, scored twice in the final minutes of the game against Germany. Die Mannschaft, as Germany’s team is nicknamed, had won the last World Cup in 2014 and were favourites to win this year.

The result saw Germany eliminated from the tournament, and El Tri, as Mexico’s team is called, progress to the next stage of the World Cup in extraordinary circumstances.  Read more…

More about Sports, Soccer, Mexico, South Korea, and Culture

Apple may offer subscription bundles — and they sound a lot like Amazon Prime

TwitterFacebook

Apple is considering a sole subscription bundle for its TV, music, and online magazine services, if a new  report in the Information is to be believed. 

And if that kind of reminds you of Amazon Prime, well, that’s because it seems pretty similar.

Per the Information, the Cupertino-based tech giant is consolidating its various subscription-based services into one, according to “two people familiar with Apple’s plans.”

SEE ALSO: Google launches YouTube Music and YouTube Premium

What might that subscription bundle actually include? While little is known at present, in early June, media mogul Oprah Winfrey teamed up with Apple to produce a slate of original programming “that embrace her incomparable ability to connect with audiences around the world.”  Read more…

More about Apple, Apple Music, Subscription Services, Texture, and Apple News

After Kennedy’s retirement, are we entering ‘Handmaid’s Tale’ territory?

TwitterFacebook

Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement from the Supreme Court on Wednesday, effective July 31. Given that Donald Trump gets to pick his replacement, and Mitch McConnell controls the Senate confirmation process, it seems all but certain that the next judge on America’s all-important bench will be a hardline conservative. 

Kennedy, appointed by President Reagan, was something of a conservative jurist himself. He has voted with the court’s four other conservatives in every major decision of the Trump era thus far. But he was also the court’s so-called swing vote; his decisions saved Roe v. Wade in 1992 and instituted gay marriage as the law of the land in 2015.  Read more…

More about Supreme Court, Margaret Atwood, Handmaid S Tale, Culture, and Politics

Timelapse of rush hour in Amsterdam shows how much more efficient biking is than driving

TwitterFacebook

Rush hour makes driving hell. 

Unless you’re in Amsterdam, where bikes — not cars — clog the roads. A viral video shows that in the most cyclist-friendly city in the world, it’s bikers lining up at traffic lights. Even with the congestion, the timelapse shows how efficient biking is compared to driving in the city.

“If those bikes were all cars we would never get anywhere,” the video’s description says.

According to a 2013 report in the New York Times, the government estimates that bikes outnumber cars in the city 4:1. The city’s website says there are 881,000 bikes in Amsterdam — the city’s population is only 821,752.  Read more…

More about Bike, Rush Hour, Culture, and Web Culture

‘Game of Thrones’ star teases a tragic but ‘fulfilling’ conclusion for Jaime Lannister

TwitterFacebook

With only six episodes remaining in the upcoming final season of Game of Thrones, no one is safe and anything can happen. But we’re still holding out hope that the character who underwent the most heartfelt redemption arc in the series will find his happy ending.

Let’s be real: Hope for happy endings in Westeros usually means you haven’t been paying attention. And actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau doesn’t sound all too hopeful for his character, either.

In a recent Vanity Fair interview, Coster-Waldau spoke on the huge shift for his character in the final episode of Season 7 when he finally split from Cersei, while also teasing the possibility of a truly depressing conclusion to Jaime’s story in Season 8. Read more…

More about Entertainment, Game Of Thrones, Cersei Lannister, George R.R. Martin, and Jaime Lannister