| | | Welcome to the Mozilla News Beat, a glance at the best and worst internet news of the week. Enjoy! |
| Stick To It. Sometimes, you just want to assume a blob position. Watch as this frog makes its way up a glass wall and then just blobs out. Who knew frogs could scale great heights and also be suction cups? | via Reddit | | Big Regulation. Traditionally, weâve seen Europe be harder on giant tech companies than the U.S., but perhaps thatâs changing. The U.S. Judiciary Committee voted this week to advance five bills that would address the dominance of companies like Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook. Democrats and Republicans donât agree on much in the U.S. these days, but many seem to agree on this. | via New York Times | | Stale Cookie Policy. Google confirmed this week that its Privacy Sandbox feature would be delayed until 2023. The feature would allow Chrome users to block third-party tracking cookies. TechCrunch notes that this gives the ad-tech industry additional time to adjust to a post-cookie world. In the meantime, though, if youâre in the market for a new browser, weâve got one in mind. | via TechCrunch | | Prime Day. This week, the world celebrated Amazonâs birthday by, you guessed it, buying a bunch of stuff off Amazon. In honor of the Amazonâs Prime Day sales event, we spoke with Kaili Lambe, senior campaigner here at Mozilla about why you should think twice about buying Amazon devices, even if they are discounted. | via Mozilla Foundation | | The Cost Of Savings. Amazon made $25.2 billion off subscriptions last year â thatâs 3x the earnings of the NBA. Which makes sense. For many of us, Prime is too affordable to pass up, but Ellen Cushing over at The Atlantic lays out the true cost of the service. Cushing compares Prime to climate change: ubiquitous, problematic and born out of our addiction to convenience. Both are fueled by big companies that obscure the huge toll of these conveniences, the author writes, but make no mistake â there is a toll. | via The Atlantic | | No Shoes, No Vax, No Service. Bars and restaurants that require its patrons be vaccinated are being spammed by anti-vax groups online. MIT Tech Review points out how a barâs position in the Yelp rankings can be tanked by a wave of bad reviews. Even though Yelp has tools to detect fraudulent reviews, it doesnât spot them all. Ultimately that can affect a barâs business. | via MIT Tech Review | | Ads That Watch You. Ads everywhere and computers tracking our facial expressions. Is this the world we want to live in? Uber and Lyft seem to think so. A group named Alfi struck a deal with the ride-share companies to put 10,000 tablets + cameras in the back of cabs. The company will track ridersâ reactions to the ads. Luckily cab drivers are getting a cut of the profits, but that doesnât make this any less creepy. | via Viceâs Motherboard | | Symbolism In Symbols. If youâve ever searched for the term âAfricaâ in Appleâs emoji picker, you may have noticed only four results: the globe, a couple flags and the emoji symbol for hut. Search âEuropeâ and youâll see currency and a soccer ball and even a Disney logo-looking castle. Some are noting that the results reinforce stereotypes. As OâPlérou Grebet noted in their interview with Rest Of World, âI wouldnât say the feature is racist, but incomplete.â | via Rest Of World |
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The News Beat Written By Xavier Harding Edited By Ashley Boyd, Audrey Hingle, Will Easton, Xavier Harding Art Direction Nancy Tran Email Production Will Easton |
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