X, formerly Twitter, plans to collect user biometric, job, school data

X, formerly Twitter, plans to collect user biometric, job, school data



X, the social network that used to be known as Twitter, updated its privacy policy to include a new kind of user data it plans to collect: biometric.


“Based on your consent, we may collect and use your biometric information for safety, security, and identification purposes,” the company said in its new policy. X doesn’t define what it considers biometric, though other companies have used the term to describe data gleaned from a person’s face, eyes and fingerprints.


A representative of San Francisco-based X didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.


Social media companies have long drawn criticism from users and regulators around the world for the information they gather and how they use that data, including the sale of advertising tailored to a person’s interests and search histories. It’s unclear how X will collect the biometric data or how it may be used. Elon Musk, who bought Twitter last year, has said one of his priorities is to rid the site of inauthentic accounts, and push more users toward using a service that applies a blue check mark, indicating the user has paid $8 a month and is more likely to be human.


X said it also intends to gather information about users’ jobs and education histories. “We may collect and use your personal information (such as your employment history, educational history, employment preferences, skills and abilities, job search activity and engagement, and so on) to recommend potential jobs for you, to share with potential employers when you apply for a job, to enable employers to find potential candidates, and to show you more relevant advertising,” according to the updated privacy policy.


The previous policy, in place until Sept. 29, didn’t include references to biometric data or job and employment history.


A proposed class action suit earlier this year alleged that X wrongfully captured, stored and used Illinois residents’ biometric data without consent. X “has not adequately informed individuals who have interacted (knowingly or not) with Twitter, that it collects and/or stores their biometric identifiers in every photograph containing a face that is uploaded to Twitter,” according to the suit, which was filed July 11.



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Amazon’s Alexa, Google’s Assistant will share same JBL smart speaker

Amazon’s Alexa, Google’s Assistant will share same JBL smart speaker



By Matt Day




Alexa and Google Assistant will soon occupy the same line of high-end JBL speakers — a novel arrangement in the world of voice-connected devices.




Users will be able to sign into one or both assistants from JBL’s smartphone app. From there, the speaker will respond to commands intended for either assistant, like “Hey Google, check my calendar,” or “Alexa, reorder the dog food.”


Other smart speaker makers let users choose from multiple assistants during setup, but Amazon.com Inc. and Google parent Alphabet Inc. say these are the first products that will let people use two assistants at once.


Three models of the JBL Authentics-branded smart speakers will debut in the US on Sept. 17 and sell for $330 to $700. 


Neither company is committing to including the other’s software on their own devices, making the tie-up a trial rather than a project destined for the masses. 


“We’re really focused on this one integration and seeing how this goes,” said Marissa Chacko, a director of product management at Google. 


Harman, which owns JBL and is a unit of Samsung Electronics Co., previously used the Authentics brand for a pair of smartphone docks. The company believes the new JBL speakers will appeal to audiophiles. “People are willing to spend more for something that sounds good,” said Soraya Kukucka, a manager of home audio product marketing at Harman.


A set of universal device commands engineered by Amazon enables each assistant to silence music or alarms being played by the other. The companies say they won’t share voice recordings, so commands sent to Alexa won’t sit on Google’s servers, and vice versa. 


“It’s frankly a little bit hard to imagine all the ways that people want to interact with one or both of these assistants,” said Aaron Rubenson, a vice president on Amazon’s Alexa team. “This is a little bit of looking at not only where we are today but where we see customer sentiment going in the future.”


Amazon popularized voice software with Alexa, a personal assistant it hoped to make as conversant as the talking computer on Star Trek. But almost a decade after Alexa’s launch, people primarily use voice assistants for utilitarian tasks like setting timers, playing music or checking bits of trivia.


Their shortcomings have been thrown into sharp relief by the advent of chatbots powered by generative artificial intelligence. Though error-prone and still under development, text-based chatbots like ChatGPT answer complicated requests with human-like fluency and can even hold conversations — tasks that often stump Alexa, Assistant and Apple Inc.’s Siri. Amazon and Google both say they’re rushing to incorporate generative AI into their assistants.  


Amazon’s Echo is the best-selling smart speaker. But more people use Google Assistant and Siri because they’re standard features of smartphone operating systems. Insider Intelligence and eMarketer estimated last year that there were about 82 million users of Assistant in the US, 78 million Siri users and 72 million Alexa users. 


Amazon, which tried and failed to build its own smartphone, launched an initiative in 2019 to promote interoperability among voice software, arguing that customers would benefit from being able to summon multiple agents on the same device. Dozens of technology companies, including Harman, have signed on. Google and Apple haven’t. 



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Apple tests using 3D printers to make devices in major manufacturing shift

Apple tests using 3D printers to make devices in major manufacturing shift



By Mark Gurman


Apple Inc. is testing the use of 3D printers to produce the steel chassis used by some of its upcoming smartwatches, according to people with knowledge of the matter, heralding a major change to how the company manufactures products.


The technique would obviate the need to cut large slabs of metal into the product’s shape. That would reduce the time it takes to build devices while also helping the environment by using less material, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the plan is private.


The new approach has the potential to streamline Apple’s supply chain and kick off a broader shift. If the work with Apple Watches goes to plan, the tech giant will look to expand the process to more products over the next several years, the people said. A spokeswoman for the Cupertino, California-based company declined to comment.


To date, Apple has used a more conventional manufacturing approach for its stainless-steel watches, which account for about 10% of the product line’s total units. A process called forging is used to form bricks of material into a smaller block of metal close to the size of the device. A CNC, or computer numerical control, machine is then used to cut into the metal and create the exact design and button holes.


The new technique uses a type of 3D printing called binder jetting to create the device’s general outline at close to its actual size, or what is known in manufacturing as the “near net shape.” The print is made with a powdered substance, which afterward goes through a process called sintering. That uses heat and pressure to squeeze the material into what feels like traditional steel. The exact design and cutouts are then milled like in the previous process.


Apple and its suppliers have been quietly developing the technique for at least three years. Over the past several months, they’ve been testing the process with steel cases destined for the Apple Watch Series 9, which is set to be unveiled on Sept. 12. The smartwatch will get a performance increase and new case colors, though its look will largely stay the same, Bloomberg has reported.


There’s no guarantee the first consumer shipments of the new steel Apple Watches will be built with the revamped manufacturing technique, but the test run suggests the company is serious about the approach. Apple also plans to apply the process to its titanium Ultra watch, but such a shift isn’t planned until 2024. 


The approach benefits the environment because it only uses the approximate amount of metal necessary to create the device enclosures. In another move toward sustainability, Apple is planning to use new materials to replace leather in some of its new iPhone cases and other accessories, other people with knowledge of the matter said.


The 3D printing work is being led by Apple’s manufacturing design team, which is overseen by Rob York, a company vice president, and reports up to operations head Sabih Khan. The move to 3D-printed watch cases has been an expensive endeavor for Apple and its suppliers, but it should prove to simplify production and potentially lower costs over time. For now, the cost per watch case with the new process is in line with that of the prior method.


The work is still nascent and, for the time being, will be reserved for lower-volume products. Most Apple Watch casings are aluminum, not stainless steel. The company hasn’t made headway on mass-producing 3D-printed enclosures with that material, which is also used for Macs and iPads, as well as lower-end iPhones. But the company is discussing bringing materials that can be 3D-printed, like steel and titanium, to more devices.


The initiative is one of the first cases of using binder jetting to mass-produce a high-volume metal part. Making the Apple Watch a test case for new technology is part of a pattern for the company. For instance, Apple added steel frames to the iPhone two years after they appeared on the original Apple Watch. And this year’s high-end iPhones will use titanium a year after the material debuted on the Apple Watch Ultra.



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India plans to host first edition of ‘Global IndiaAI 2023 ‘ in Oct

India plans to host first edition of ‘Global IndiaAI 2023 ‘ in Oct



The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology is planning to host the first edition of Global IndiaAI 2023 in October this year, an official statement said on Wednesday.


There will be participation from leading AI players, researchers, startups, and investors in India and worldwide, the statement said.


“The Global IndiaAI 2023 conference is tentatively planned for October 14 and 15 and it will bring together the best and brightest in AI from India and around the world,” Minister of State for Electronics and IT, Rajeev Chandrasekhar said.


He said that the summit is expected to evolve and become a must-attend event on the annual calendar of the Global AI industry, startups, practitioners, researchers and students.


What makes India so attractive for AI is the diversity of it. Our diversity will be an addition to the quality of data sets for any large language model or any AI learning model. What we want is that AI should be responsible so that user harm is curbed and innovation is encouraged,” Chandrasekhar said.


The minister said that the success of the past two editions of the Semicon India conference by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has firmly put India on the global semicon map and enabled India to become a catalyst for investments and growth within the sector.


“The Global IndiaAI summit will also catalyze India’s AI landscape and innovation ecosystem,” the minister said.


The US and China have been investing heavily in computing infrastructure to build AI technology.


According to experts, while India has the talent to develop and implement AI technology, the country needs to invest heavily in computing infrastructure.


The Global IndiaAI 2023 conference is poised to cover a wide spectrum of topics, including Next Generation Learning and Foundational AI models, AI’s applications in healthcare, governance, and next-gen electric vehicles, future AI research trends, AI computing systems, investment opportunities, and nurturing AI talent.


Chandrasekhar chairs the conference’s steering committee which is entrusted with the task of shaping the contours of the Global IndiaAI 2023. It draws members from MeitY’s Digital Economy Advisory group and other prominent leaders in the field of AI, the statement said.


Chandrasekhar said that the plan for conference is outcome of ground work done by working groups that collaborated closely with industry, startups and academia partners.


The groups have presented a framework for the IndiaAI initiative, which revolves around pillars such as AI in Governance, AI Computing and Systems, Data for AI, AI IP and Innovation and Skilling in AI, according to the statement.

(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.)



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Dell, HP among 32 firms that applied to make laptops locally: Vaishnaw

Dell, HP among 32 firms that applied to make laptops locally: Vaishnaw


Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw

At least 32 international electronics companies have applied to India’s incentive programme to make laptops, tablets and servers in the country, a top minister said on Wednesday, weeks after the government announced restrictions on laptop imports.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government is pushing to boost domestic manufacturing capacity under its “Make in India” initiative, with several global companies either setting up their own units or entering joint ventures with Indian firms.
The applications by the electronics companies were made under the country’s $2 billion production-linked incentive (PLI) programme for information technology hardware, announced in May, Information Technology Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said.
Earlier this month, India said it would impose a licensing requirement for imports of laptops, tablets and personal computers, which was widely seen as a move to boost local production.
The companies that have applied to make laptops and other products in India include Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co, Dell Technologies, Asus, Acer and Lenovo, said Vaishnaw, according to a video feed from ANI news agency, in which Reuters has a minority stake.
The PLI scheme for IT hardware is expected to bring 24.3 billion rupees ($294.24 million) of incremental investment and is likely to generate 75,000 direct jobs, the minister said.

First Published: Aug 30 2023 | 8:10 PM IST



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India tech industry decentralising to 26 cities from 7 major hubs: Report

India tech industry decentralising to 26 cities from 7 major hubs: Report



India’s technology industry is decentralising from seven major hubs to 26 cities like Chandigarh, Nagpur and Kanpur as about 11-15 per cent of tech talent is based in tier-2 and tier-3 cities, says a report.


The majority of the 5.4 million people employed in the technology industry in India have clustered around seven major cities of Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Pune, the report by Deloitte and Nasscom stated.


India’s tech industry is decentralising from the seven major hubs, including metropolitan hubs, to 26 cities, with representation from tier-2 and tier-3 towns as well, the 220-page report titled “Emerging technology hubs of India” stated.


About 60 per cent of graduates come from smaller cities in key fields, 30 per cent of whom relocate to tier-1 cities for employment after graduation.


The next wave of technology hubs will emerge from cities like Chandigarh, Kanpur, Ahmedabad, Mangaluru and Nagpur, with incentives like reduced cost of operations, better access to talent pool and lower attrition apart from state government support in terms of infrastructure and policies.


Companies like Infosys, Wipro, HCLTech and WNS have operations in one or more cities in these emerging hubs.


Pertaining to the startup universe, the report highlights that as of 2022, more than 7,000 start-ups are operating from emerging hubs and in fields from DeepTech to BPM services. These emerging companies have grown by 50 per cent from 2014 to 2018, and are expected to grow 2.2 by 2025.


Notably, 13 per cent of the funding in 2022 went to start-ups from tier 2 cities in India, indicating that investors are now comfortable looking beyond urban settings for prospective unicorns.

Deloitte India Partner Sumeet Salwan said, “While big cities were the focus in the past, the post-pandemic era witnesses a remarkable decentralisation of work across the nation.”

Nasscom Head GCC and BPM Sukanya Roy said that as companies worldwide continue to actively revisit ways of working with an eye on optimising outcomes, costs, and talent, the opportunity and possibility to develop alternative tech hubs are now becoming extremely essential.


“India is expected to have a skilled talent surplus by 2030. These hubs offer companies a compelling blend of advantages: access to a fresh, skilled talent pool, cost-effective operations, and robust infrastructure,” Roy said.

(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.)



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