The top ten must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 Contact tracing apps have flopped in the US
That hasn’t stopped local governments easing restrictions. ( WSJ $)
+ Not just in the US either—although some countries are making them work. ( TR)
+ France’s contact tracing app has only sent 14 notifications. ( TechCrunch)
2 Millions of documents from police departments have been leaked online
Anonymous is back in business. ( Wired $)
+ Google employees are demanding it stops selling tech to the police. ( The Verge)
3 Google is going to fact-check images
This is the first major effort by a tech company to check if photos have been tampered with. ( WP $)
4 AI researchers say scientific publishers help perpetuate racist algorithms
The field is starting to reckon with the role it has played in reinforcing structural racism. ( TR)
5 More women than men seem to be dying of covid-19 in India
This runs counter to trends observed in most other countries. ( BBC)
+ Does your blood type affect how badly you get coronavirus? ( Gizmodo)
6 NASA and Virgin Galactic have launched a program to train private astronauts 👨🚀
We don’t know the price tag yet but it’s going to be a LOT. ( TR)
7 Advertisers are withdrawing from Facebook over hate speech
But will it be enough to make a difference? ( The Guardian)
+ Mark Zuckerberg has forged an uneasy alliance with Donald Trump. ( NYT $)
8 Andrew Yang wants tech companies to pay people for their data
So can I buy mine back? ( The Verge)
9 The Pizzagate conspiracy theory is still going on TikTok
Teens, you’re four years late to this one and it’s still wrong. ( The Daily Beast)
10 The mental health fallout from Fukushima
Nine years on, people are still coming to terms with the nuclear accident there. ( Wired UK)
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