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š Good morning, and welcome to Tuesdayās Daily Authority. Itās the last day of the month and though January hasnāt been a bad one, today weāve got not one but two top stories for you, including some Facebook controversy.
Facebookās battery controversy
If youāve noticed Facebook being a battery hog, you might be onto something, as a former Facebook employee claims the company can secretly drain your phone battery.
- Data scientist George Hayward told the New York Post that Facebook is participating in ānegative testing.ā
- This is a form of software testing that applies unexpected behaviors and circumstances to an app or software to see how it copes.
- The former employee was fired for refusing to participate in the practice, believing it could be harmful.
- However, we may never know whether Haywardās claim was true, as he only mentioned having seen a document entitled āHow to run thoughtful negative testsā but failed to divulge any examples from the document.
- Negative testing isnāt uncommon or controversial, either, though if Facebook was deliberately draining phone batteries, thatās a definite no-no that could put people in harmās way, for example, if theyāre unable to use their phone in a life-or-death situation.
- Draining the battery in this way also means more frequent charging, contributing to battery degradation.
- If youāre noticing faster than usual battery drain, you might want to grab one of the best battery saver apps.
Samsung expects dip in smartphone demand ahead of Galaxy S23 launch
The fourth quarter of 2022 was a rough one for Samsung, as the company posted numbers that matched its bleak predictions of profit decline from January 2022.
- Itās fair to say business hasnāt been booming for the worldās largest smartphone maker, with uncertain economic times, reduced chip demand, and a reduction in customers buying new gadgets all to blame.
- The company shared weak profit numbers, but the hardest hit was Samsungās chip division, which saw profits plunge over 90% in Q4 2022.
- Samsungās predicting smartphone demand wonāt pick up until the second half of 2023, despite tomorrowās Galaxy S23 launch.
- However, itās not all doom and gloom, as the Galaxy S23 series and an enhanced product portfolio, including new PCs, wearables, and tablets should help sales expand this quarter.
- And it could mean weāll see the Galaxy Watch 6 land earlier than expected this yearā¦
Roundup
ā Official Galaxy S23 images and details get leaked by AT&T ahead of Unpacked (Android Authority).
š A huge leak reveals the full list of One UI 5.1 features (Updated) (Android Authority).
š Coming this year: āMore premiumā Nothing Phone 2 confirmed with US launch ānumber one priorityā (Android Authority).
š OnePlus all but launches the OnePlus 11R ahead of February 7 event (Android Authority).
š± Triple OPPO-rtunity: Another ultra-premium phone could be getting a one-inch camera sensor (Android Authority).
š° An āEverythingā app: Twitter now wants to become a payments platform to compete with Apple Pay and PayPal (9to5Google).
š The latest T-Mobile breach affected Google Fi customers too (Android Authority).
šµ New Google generative AI model MusicLM generates music in various genres at 24 kHz (Ars Technica).
š· Samsung partners with award-winning director Charlie Kaufman to showcase the Galaxyās epic camera experience (Samsung Newsroom).
š® Donāt have a PlayStation 5 yet? PS5 supply has been increased, so it should be āmuch easierā to get one, Sony says (Gamespot).
š§āāļø Finally: Tissues at the ready for The Last of Us Episode 3 ā A supporting character gets a hopeful, and heartbreaking, standalone story (spoiler alert) (Rotten Tomatoes).
Tuesday thing
The beta version of speech AI startup ElevenLabsā Prime Voice AI platform launched just a few days ago, but itās already being used for nefarious purposes (h/t Engadget).
- The company Tweeted itās seeing āan increasing number of voice cloning misuse cases.ā
- Perhaps we shouldnāt be surprised that ādeepfakeā audio clips are simply the new deepfake videos.
- Motherboard revealed several 4chan posts with clips featuring voices generated by speech AI tools that sound like celebrities ā including Emma Watson and Joe Rogan ā saying or reading questionable things, though itās not clear if all the clips used ElevenLabsā technology.
- There will always be people using the latest tech to spread homophobic, racist, transphobic, or violent messages, but that doesnāt mean tools like this canāt be used for good.
- AI voice generators can be used for film and game voiceovers, audiobooks, and more,Ā and it looks like 2023 could be the year we see more of them emerge.
- ElevenLabs is already coming up with ideas on how to prevent abuse of its technology, including requiring payment info or ID from users, additional layers for account verification, or even making users verify they own copyright for the voice they want to clone.
- This is why we canāt have nice things.
Have a great week!
Paula Beaton, Copy Editor.