WhatsApp introduces 'view once' feature for voice notes to boost privacy

WhatsApp introduces 'view once' feature for voice notes to boost privacy



WhatsApp is testing a “View Once” feature for voice notes. This feature is currently being tested for Android and iOS users who are using the beta version of the app.


WhatsApp introduced “View Once” for photos and videos in 2021 to add another layer of privacy to your messages.


Today, WhatsApp announced that the user can now send a voice message that will disappear once listened to.


The feature allows users to designate voice notes as “View Once.” This enhances privacy by preventing the recipient from exporting, forwarding, saving, or recording the voice note. The “View Once” audio will disappear once the recipient listens to it.


For reading out credit card details to a friend or when planning a surprise, now users can also share sensitive information over voice message with added peace of mind.


For consistency with View Once photos and videos, “View Once” voice messages are clearly marked with the “one-time” icon and can only be played one time.


As with all your personal messages, WhatsApp protects your voice messages with end-to-end encryption by default, and View Once is just another example of our continued privacy innovation.


“View Once” voice messages are rolling out globally over the coming days.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)



Source link

Google withdraws appeal against HC order in user choice billing system case

Google withdraws appeal against HC order in user choice billing system case



Google on Thursday withdrew its appeal against the single judge order of the Delhi High Court, which asked the Competition Commission of India (CCI) to hear applications moved by a group of digital start-ups against Google’s user choice billing system.


The tech giant informed the court that the order was passed when the CCI did not have the quorum to hear the petition. Now that the market regulator has the quorum, Google expressed its wish to withdraw the appeal.


The CCI stated it has no objection to the withdrawal.


A single-judge bench of the Delhi High Court had in April asked the CCI to decide the plea by the Alliance of Digital India Foundation (ADIF) against Google’s billing policy. Google filed an appeal against this order.


The ADIF, representing a group of digital start-ups, filed a petition to suspend Google’s new in-app billing fee system, called the User Choice Billing (UCB), until the CCI investigates the tech giant for alleged non-compliance with its directives. The ADIF had alleged that despite the regulator’s directive asking the tech giant to allow the use of third-party billing services for in-app payments, the UCB system charges a high service fee.


The group of start-ups said their grievance was that the anti-trust regulator had failed to act on its plea about the new policy owing to a lack of quorum to consider the issue.


The court had ruled that any vacancy or defect in the constitution of the CCI would not invalidate any proceedings as far as its adjudicatory powers are concerned. “Any interpretation, other than the aforesaid, would render the provisions of Section 15 (Vacancy not to invalidate proceedings of Commission) otiose and which could not possibly be the intention of the Legislature either,” the court said.


The CCI, in October 2022, imposed a penalty of Rs 936 crore on Google and asked it to allow and not restrict app developers from using any third-party billing services and to not impose any discriminatory condition. The appeal by Google against this decision is pending in the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal.

First Published: Dec 07 2023 | 6:06 PM IST



Source link

Google withdraws appeal against HC order in user choice billing system case

Billing system case: Google withdraws appeal against Delhi HC order



Google on Thursday withdrew its appeal against a single-judge order of the Delhi High Court directing the Competition Commission of India (CCI) to take up the applications moved by a group of Indian digital startups against the tech giant’s new in-app user choice billing system.


The company withdrew its appeal on the grounds that the order was passed when the CCI did not have the quorum to hear the petition. The CCI now has the quorum and has been hearing the plea by filed by the Alliance of Digital India Foundation (ADIF), it said.


The CCI said it has no objection to the withdrawal.


The single-judge bench of the Delhi High Court in April had asked the CCI to decide on the ADIF plea against Google’s billing policy, prompting the tech giant to filed an appeal against this order.


The ADIF, which represents a group of digital start-ups, filed the petition seeking suspension of Google’s new in-app billing fee system, called the User Choice Billing (UCB), until the CCI completes investigation into Google’s alleged non-compliance with its directives.


The ADIF had alleged that despite the regulator’s directive asking the California-based company to allow the use of third-party billing services for in-app payments, the UCB system charged a high service fee.


The CCI, in October 2022, imposed a penalty of ~936 crore on Google and asked it to allow and not restrict app developers from using any third-party billing services and to not impose any discriminatory condition. The appeal by Google against this decision is pending in the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal.

First Published: Dec 07 2023 | 6:06 PM IST



Source link

Google adds more AI-based features to Pixel 8 Pro with Gemini Nano model

Google adds more AI-based features to Pixel 8 Pro with Gemini Nano model


Google has announced new AI-based features for the Pixel 8 Pro smartphone based on Gemini Nano, a specialised AI model based on Gemini 1.0. The Gemini Nano model, along with Tensor G3 chip on the Pixel 8 Pro, brings two expanded features: Summarise in Recorder and Smart Reply in Gboard. 


Google said that Gemini Nano running on Pixel 8 Pro offers several advantages by design, helping prevent sensitive data from leaving the phone and offering the ability to use features without a network connection. 


In addition to Gemini Nano now running on-device, the broader family of Gemini models will bring new features and capabilities for the Assistant with Bard early next year on Pixel.


Summarise in Recorder


Gemini Nano now powers Summarise in the Recorder app on Pixel 8 Pro. The feature generates a summary of recorded conversations, interviews, presentations and more without an active network connection.


Smart Reply in Gboard


Smart reply, powered by Gemini Nano, generates suggestions for responses in Gboard by analysing the conversation that is going on. The feature is now available to try with WhatsApp and will be available on more platforms starting next year.

ALSO READ: Alphabet launches Gemini, an AI- based model it hopes will take down GPT-4


AI-powered photos and videos features


Video Boost feature is now available on Google Pixel 8 Pro smartphone. The feature  uploads videos to the cloud where Google’s computational photography models adjust color, lighting, stabilization and graininess.


Video Boost also enables Night Sight video on Pixel 8 Pro, which uses AI to apply noise reduction to videos recorded at night or in low-light conditions.


With improved Portrait light in Google Photos, the new AI model enables balance light to remove shadows and enhance portrait photos. Additionally, the new model also upgrades the Photo Unblur feature on Pixel 8 Pro. 


A new Clean feature has also been added that helps remove smudges, stains and creases from scanned documents.


Security features


Google Password Manager can now identify accounts that support passkeys and help users create one easily. A new Repair Mode has also been added to protect personal data when a device is out for repair or servicing.



Source link

Meta brings end-to-end encryption on Messenger, adds more functionality

Meta brings end-to-end encryption on Messenger, adds more functionality


Meta is rolling out default end-to-end encryption for personal messages and calls on Messenger and Facebook. End-to-end encrypted conversations will offer additional functionality, including the ability to edit messages, higher media quality and disappearing messages, said Meta in a blogpost.


Mark Zuckerberg, on his broadcast channel on Instagram, congratulated the team behind bringing the default privacy feature to Meta’s messaging platform. “After years of work rebuilding Messenger, we’ve updated the app with default end-to-end encryption for all personal calls and messages. Huge congrats to the team on making this happen”, said Zuckerberg.


The company stated that with the updated Messenger app, nobody, including Meta, can see what has been sent or received unless the user chooses to report a message.


Along with an extra layer of security, Meta is adding a suite of new features that are now available on the application.


Option to edit a message


Users can now edit or change a message, for up to 15 minutes after it has been sent. However, If a message is reported for abuse, Meta will still be able to view the previous versions of the edited message.


Disappearing Messages


Disappearing messages on the Messenger app will last for 24 hours after being sent. The app update also improves the interface to make it easier to tell when disappearing messages are turned on. 


Meta will notify the sender if the receiver takes a screenshot of a disappearing message.


Read receipts control


The updated Messenger app allows the user to disable read receipts, giving them the option to decide if they want others to see when they have read their messages.


High-quality media sharing


Meta has added a new layout for sharing media on Messenger, along with an option to reply or react to any photo or video in a collection.


The company is currently testing HD media and file-sharing improvements with a small group of users and plans to scale them in the coming months.


Voice messaging


Meta is adding more options for voice messages. Users can now play voice notes at 1.5x or 2x speeds and continue listening to a message when they navigate away from the chat or the application.



Source link

Minuscule AI startup raises  million to tap growth in Indian market

Minuscule AI startup raises $41 million to tap growth in Indian market



By Saritha Rai


A generative artificial intelligence startup targeting the Indian market raised $41 million in fresh funding, the largest such round by an early-stage AI contender in the country.

 


Sarvam AI is building large language models targeted at unique uses in Indian languages, aimed at making apps available at price points that the country’s 1.4 billion people can afford. The Series A funding round was led by Lightspeed Venture Partners, and participants included Silicon Valley billionaire Vinod Khosla’s Khosla Ventures and Peak XV Partners, formerly Sequoia Capital India & Southeast Asia, Sarvam said Thursday.


The Bangalore-based startup, until recently in stealth mode, was co-founded by Vivek Raghavan and Pratyush Kumar. It has ambitious plans to build open source foundational AI systems as well as tools for creating apps for the meager compute infrastructure available to developers in India. The startup has a total of 18 employees and is just opening an office in the city.


“What we are showing is that you can build large language models with limited resources,” Raghavan said in a phone interview. “We are building at a smaller scale and demonstrating that these can be extremely cost and energy efficient so they can be accessed by everyone.”


Large language models, like OpenAI’s GPT-4 and Meta Platforms Inc.’s Llama, are powerful AI systems that understand by learning from vast amounts of diverse data from the internet and elsewhere to summarize, translate, and create text, audio and video for a wide range of applications. The rivalry to develop ever-more sophisticated models is heating up in Silicon Valley and such efforts have attracted billions of dollars in investments.


Sarvam’s first open source model will work in the top 10 Indian languages and be released in the coming weeks, and it’ll be available for trials by developers, startups, enterprises and government-owned entities. Compared with the trillions of parameters that largest models have been trained on, Sarvam’s systems will be “much smaller” and in the “billions,” Raghavan said.


The name Sarvam is derived from the ancient Sanskrit word meaning “all” to denote its inclusive mission, he said. Raghavan is a computer engineering PhD from Carnegie Mellon University, while Kumar is an alum of the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay and computer engineering PhD from ETH Zurich.


Khosla, a Silicon Valley investment pioneer and an early backer of OpenAI, said several countries are driving sovereign efforts to build generative AI models given their strategic importance. “We need companies like Sarvam AI to develop deep expertise for building AI in and for India,” he said in a statement.



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp