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Daily Authority: š Europe to force iMessage changes
š Good morning! Itās Friday!! And before we hop into todayās tech news and views, weād like to thank OPPO for sponsoring this newsletter!
The OPPO Find X5 Pro brings a new sense of futuristic design by sporting stylish ceramic curves that break from the glass-and-metal tradition. The MariSilicon X Imaging NPU drastically increases both of its videographic and photographic abilities ā especially in low-light situations ā and itās all powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chipset.
Head over to OPPO to learn more about the Find X5 Pro and get this slick new flagship in your pocket.
Actual rules against Big Tech are here
Here are some headlines after the EU agreed to create very significant rules to ālimit the market power of big online platformsā:
- EU ushers in brave new world of Big Tech regulation (Politico)
- New EU rules regulating US tech giants likely to set global standard (Reuters).
- New EU rules could force Apple to open iMessage (Macworld)
Whatās going on? In short:
- Sweeping new antitrust legislation (europa.eu), covering elements like interoperability, meaning iMessage, Whatsapp, Facebook Messenger āwill have to open up and interoperate with smaller messaging platforms, if they so request.ā
- There are also limits to targeted advertising, and āto include a requirement to allow users to freely choose their browser, virtual assistants, or search engines.ā
- The legislation hasnāt passed yet, but itās set to come by October.
How it applies:
- The scope is that itāll apply to āgatekeepersā: companies worth ā¬75 billion ($82 billion), with 45 million monthly users or more; and a āplatformā e.g. social network.
- Think: Apple, Meta, Google, but also Booking.com, and possibly Airbnb. But not, as far as I can tell, the likes of Spotify, and Uber, which only meet some conditions? Itās unclear, but itās very clear that the biggest players are implicated.
- A massive component of this is that the EU isnāt threatening the usual meagre fines.
- Fines for not complying will be āup to 10% of total worldwide turnover in the preceding financial year, and 20% in case of repeated infringements.ā
- For Apple, that would start at a $36.5B fine, for example. Yikes.
Does this matter?
- Itās important because the EU is big enough to force global changes by itself ā in theory.
- But, if youāre not accustomed to the EUās complexity, it is hard to understand. These things are first discussed for years, then announced, then the announcement says nothing will change until it actually becomes law, then it could be watered down, or legal challenges apply, and so on.
- Itās also consistently difficult to parse: Like any government or large organization, itās shrouded by an impenetrable sequence of acronyms, odd words (ā8-hour long triloguesā, DMA, FRAND rules, COREPER meetings, EU ECā¦) and people shouting that wait, this will lead to worse outcomes because of unintended consequences.
- For example, already some are saying this means a decrease in privacy, as encryptions likely need to be broken to allow interoperability. Others are saying maybe a secure message interchange could exist.
- Thereās a German word that may apply: Verschlimmbessern. This is literally making something worse with the intention of making it better (A German friend joked, āyou only start using it when you are over 50 years oldā).
- And one thought is that Big Tech will avoid complications by simply exiting the EU for their messenger apps. Thatās one way to comply without being fined. But that would be harder for the likes of Apple, with iMessage so critical.
- So, by 2023, will you be able to use WhatsApp to message someone via iMessage? Thatās the intention, but itās unclear if itāll work out.
Roundup
š Here are all the brands reportedly readying Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 Plus phones: OnePlus (OP10 Pro Ultra?), Xiaomi (Xiaomi 12 Ultra?), and Lenovo/Motorola, at least (Android Authority).
ā There could be a long wait between the Pixel 6a launch and availability: May launch, July availability? (Android Authority).
š Your next phone might have a color-changing leather back (Android Authority).
š Next-gen Google Nest Hub may reportedly feature a detachable display (Android Authority).
š Apple is working on a hardware subscription service for iPhones for 2023, tied to Apple One and AppleCare. Thereās already the iPhone upgrade program, but maybe this is more bundled? (Android Authority).
š½ Unfortunately, Samsungās neat little Freestyle projector doesnāt live up to its $900 price (The Verge). This is a good review on YouTube too. Maybe the V2?
š» Dellās XPS 15 and XPS 17 get Intelās 12th-gen chips, and thatās about the only difference from the 2021 models. I want to upgrade my XPS but Iām ā¦not super convinced by this? Definitely waiting for reviews (The Verge).
š Uber will soon offer NYC yellow cabs via the app (Engadget).
šØ USPS is almost doubling its initial order of EV mail delivery trucks (Reuters).
š VWās Electrify America unveils new āhuman-centeredā EV charging stations: solar panels, lounge-waiting area (The Verge).
š¤ āWhy do all storms dissipate eventually?ā (r/askscience).
Friday Fun
Itās been 35 years of Rickrolling ā sort of!
Rick Astley is celebrating his 1987 debut album with reissue (AP). It was very successful, donāt get me wrong. But in this era, 35 years later, Astley is the face of the classic meme.
- Rick has always been in on the joke about Never Gonna Give You Up, which emerged as a meme in 2007.
- And accordingly, heās very likable, and is even on a ā57-date āMixtape 2022ā US arena tourā with a bunch of artists.
- As he says about being a star, twice: āThe overwhelming thing is just gratitude. If Iām honest, itās simply that. Iāve had a really nice, comfortable existence because I got to make a pop record in 1987.ā
- Happily, Rick hasnāt sold anything as an NFT either, yet, at least.
- Unlike this guy, which is your excruciating bonus fun, and proves NFTs have gone too far (Observatorial).
Cheers,
Tristan Rayner, Senior Editor.