Go Here to Read this Fast! YouTube TV laps the competition with 8 million subscribers
Originally appeared here:
YouTube TV laps the competition with 8 million subscribers
Go Here to Read this Fast! YouTube TV laps the competition with 8 million subscribers
Originally appeared here:
YouTube TV laps the competition with 8 million subscribers
Go Here to Read this Fast! Save $3,430 on this Lenovo laptop with an RTX 4090, 96GB of RAM
Originally appeared here:
Save $3,430 on this Lenovo laptop with an RTX 4090, 96GB of RAM
Go Here to Read this Fast! 3 (HBO) Max crime dramas you should watch in February 2024
Originally appeared here:
3 (HBO) Max crime dramas you should watch in February 2024
Go Here to Read this Fast! Leverkusen vs Stuttgart live stream: Can you watch for free?
Originally appeared here:
Leverkusen vs Stuttgart live stream: Can you watch for free?
Go Here to Read this Fast! Mallorca vs Real Sociedad live stream: Can you watch for free?
Originally appeared here:
Mallorca vs Real Sociedad live stream: Can you watch for free?
Bluesky, the open-source Twitter alternative, is getting rid of its waitlist and opening its decentralized platform to everyone. The service, which opened in beta last spring, currently has a little over 3 million users, though that number could rise quickly now that prospective users don’t need an invitation to join.
It’s a significant moment for Bluesky, which began as an internal project at Jack Dorsey’s Twitter (Bluesky ended its association with the entity now known as X after Elon Musk’s takeover, though Dorsey is on Bluesky’s board.) The company is part of a growing movement for decentralized social media, which proponents say could address many of the shortcomings of centrally-controlled platforms like Facebook, X and TikTok.
“We really believe that the future of social is, and should be, open and decentralized,” Bluesky CEO Jay Graber tells Engadget. “This is something that we think is good for the public conversation overall.”
For those who missed Bluesky’s first hype cycle last spring, the service is functionally similar to X and Threads. Its posts — lovingly referred to by some early users as “skeets” — default to a chronological timeline, though users can also follow numerous other algorithmic feeds created by fellow users. Soon, the company will take a similar approach to content moderation, allowing third-parties to create their own “labeling services” for Bluesky content.
The service is still much smaller than most of its counterparts and doesn’t yet have a direct messaging feature. But it has become a haven for a number of once high-profile Twitter users and others looking for more Weird Twitter vibes and less Elon Musk.
Much like how Mastodon and other services in the fediverse are built on the ActivityPub protocol, Bluesky runs on its own open-source standard called AT Protocol.Right now, the only Bluesky is the version of the service created by Bluesky, the company. But that will soon change, as the company plans to start experimenting with federation, which will allow other developers and groups to create their own instances of Bluesky.
“The protocol is like an API that’s permanently open,” Graber says. “And that means that developer creativity can kind of go wild.”
Of course, the world of Twitter alternatives looks considerably different since Bluesky first launched. Meta’s Threads app has grown to 130 million users since last summer. Meta has also started to make some Threads posts available on Mastodon, the first step toward making it compatible with the rest of the fediverse.
But while Threads may be showing some support for open-source protocols, that’s not the same as decentralization, Graber argues. “If they integrate with ActivityPub, you would still be on a Facebook-owned app with this little window into a more open world, and it wouldn’t be as easy to leave. We hope that the AT Protocol universe lets people get in between different apps, different services a lot easier.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/bluesky-is-ditching-its-waitlist-and-opening-to-everyone-140026198.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Bluesky is ditching its waitlist and opening to everyone
Originally appeared here:
Bluesky is ditching its waitlist and opening to everyone
Mozilla is rolling out a tool that can automatically monitor data brokers for your personal information and scrub any of your exposed details from them. Mozilla Monitor Plus expands on the Mozilla Monitor (formerly Firefox Monitor) service, which lets you know when your email address is included in a data breach.
This new paid service, which costs $9 per month or $107.88 per year, aims to proactively make sure your personal information stays off more than 190 data broker sites. Mozilla says that’s double the number of data brokers that its competitors monitor. Subscribers will receive data breach alerts too.
To get a better understanding of how prevalent the issue is, you can get a free one-time scan that can show you if and where your data has been exposed. To do so, you’ll need to sign up for a Mozilla account and provide your name, current city and state, date of birth and your email address. Mozilla says it will encrypt this data, which it notes is the least amount of information needed to obtain the most accurate results. The tool will also highlight information from “high-risk data breaches” — such as social security numbers, credit card details and banking information — along with advice on how to have that data scrubbed.
Mozilla Monitor and Monitor Plus are only available to folks based in the US for now. Google offers a similar tool. If you sign up for Mozilla’s version, you can also get access to features including two-factor authentication, email alias tool Firefox Relay and Mozilla VPN.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/mozilla-monitor-scrubs-your-leaked-personal-information-from-the-web-for-a-fee-140021466.html?src=rss
Originally appeared here:
Mozilla Monitor scrubs your leaked personal information from the web, for a fee
Go Here to Read this Fast! This extendable soundbar changes length to perfectly match your epic TV
Originally appeared here:
This extendable soundbar changes length to perfectly match your epic TV
Go Here to Read this Fast! How bias can undermine insider threat monitoring
Originally appeared here:
How bias can undermine insider threat monitoring
Originally appeared here:
Intel Lunar Lake laptops could have a secret weapon to allow for much better battery life