Archive for Google

Google Rolls Out Find My Device Network

Posted in Commentary with tags on April 9, 2024 by itnerd

Google has introduced the Find My Device network for Android. Which as the name suggests is just like the Find My network that Apple rolled out a while ago. This network will allow you to do five things:

  • Keep track of your Android devices as well as find them.
  • Keep track of everyday items such as keys using Bluetooth trackers. Google specifically calls out Chipolo and Pebblebee. But also says that support for eufy, Jio, Motorola and other trackers are coming. One has to wonder if the O.G. of Bluetooth trackers which is Tile will be included? In any case, you can also find “unwanted” trackers which apparently includes AirTags.
  • You can leverage Nest devices to find items in your home and share items with your family.

This is live in the US and Canada and works on phones running Android 9 or higher. The one that that I think is a win here is that this will further discourage the use of AirTags and other Bluetooth trackers by criminals as any of these trackers are now more likely to be found by “Joe Average.”

Several Canadian women-led startups join Google’s Women Founders Cohort

Posted in Commentary with tags on March 7, 2024 by itnerd

Hi there, International Women’s Day is tomorrow and this year’s theme is #InspireInclusion. Around the world, underrepresented founders face a disproportionate lack of access to capital and support networks. Here in Canada, women entrepreneurs, in particular, make up only 17% of small and medium-sized business owners.  

Google launched the Google for Startups Accelerators: Women Founders cohort in 2020, to help level the playing field for women founders across North America, and inspire inclusion in the startup ecosystem. Over the past four years, they’ve worked with 47 women-led startups, who have collectively raised $93.22M USD since graduating from their cohorts. 

Today, ahead of International Women’s Day, Google is excited to welcome 15 new women-led businesses to the Google for Startups Accelerator community including MedReddieNimble Science, and SkyAcres, three Canadian startups that are driving transformation in agriculture and healthcare spaces. Learn more about the program here.

BREAKING: Google, WhatsApp And Twitter Are Down Too

Posted in Commentary with tags , , on March 5, 2024 by itnerd

Things seem to be getting worse. On top of this outage and this outage that I just reported on, it seems that Down Detector are now reporting that WhatsApp and Twitter are also down:

I just tested Twitter, Google and WhatsApp and found no issues. But others aren’t so lucky apparently. I’ll be keeping a close eye on Down Detector to see what else breaks today.

BREAKING: Google Play And YouTube Have Issues

Posted in Commentary with tags on March 5, 2024 by itnerd

It appears that Meta services are not the only services that have issues today. Joining Facebook, Instagram and Messenger on Down Detector’s list of services that are down are YouTube and Google Play:

Now I just tested YouTube and this is what I get:

I don’t have an Android phone on me as I am currently offsite. Like the Meta outages, there’s no ETA for resolution at this time.

Google Makes Announcements Related To Search

Posted in Commentary with tags on January 17, 2024 by itnerd

A couple of announcements related to search were made by Google today:

  • Circle to Search is a new way to search anything on your Android phone without switching apps. Now, with a simple gesture, you can select what you’re curious about in whatever way comes naturally to you — like circling, highlighting, scribbling or tapping — and get more information right where you are.
  • Related to this is this announcement. When you point your camera on your Android phone (or upload a photo or screenshot) and ask a question using the Google app, the new multisearch experience will show results with AI-powered insights that go beyond just visual matches. This gives you the ability to ask more complex or nuanced questions about what you see, and quickly find and understand key information.

This is launching on January 31 on select premium Android smartphones. Specifically the Pixel 8, Pixel 8 Pro and the new Samsung Galaxy S24 series.

Google And TELUS Have Teamed Up To Collect The Eyelid Shape & Skin Tone Of Children Via Parent Submitted Videos…. WTF?

Posted in Commentary with tags , on January 5, 2024 by itnerd

Well this seems a bit suspect. Google is collecting the eyelid shape and skin tone of children via parent submitted videos. And apparently, Canadian telco TELUS TELUS International is involved in this. Here’s the details:

Google is collecting the eyelid shape and skin tone of children via parent submitted videos, according to a project description online reviewed by 404 Media. Canadian tech conglomerate TELUS, which says it is working on Google’s behalf, is offering parents $50 to film their children wearing various props such as hats or sunglasses as part of the project, the description adds.

The project shows the methods some companies are using to build machine learning, artificial intelligence, or facial recognition datasets and products. Rather than scraping already existing images or analyzing previously collected material, TELUS, and by extension Google, is asking the public to contribute directly and get paid in return. Google told 404 Media the collection was part of the company’s efforts to verify users’ age.

“Eyelid shape. Skin tone. Video recording (without voice),” a section of the project terms and conditions listing the data collected reads. Another section says that TELUS’ customer—that is, Google—will collect “facial geometry.”

Let’s see what TELUS TELUS International and Google have to say about this:

TELUS writes that the purpose is to “capture a broad cross-section of participants targeting various combinations of demographics, with the goal of ensuring that our customer’s services, and derived products, are equally representative of a diverse set of end-users.” The description adds that the use case is to “help improve the authentication methods, thus offering more secure tools for the end users.”

Google told 404 Media in an email that TELUS was enlisted to find people to participate in the study, but TELUS itself did not receive any of the videos submitted. Rather, TELUS worked to identify eligible participants for Google.

A Google spokesperson said in a statement that “As part of our commitment to delivering age-appropriate experiences and to comply with laws and regulations around the world, we’re exploring ways to help our users verify their age. Last year, Telus helped us find volunteers for a project exploring whether this could be done via selfies. From there, Google collected videos and images of faces, clearly explaining how the content will be used and, as with all research involving minors, we required parental consent for participants under the age of 18. We’ve also put strict privacy protections in place, including limiting the amount of time the data will be retained and providing all participants the option to delete their data at any time.”

Google said improving user experience in this area also helps adults verify their age, and can assist with services that might be age-gated to children and teenagers. The company also said using outside vendors can help collect a diverse dataset and ultimately build more inclusive products.

Like I said, this seems a bit suspect. The fact that Google and TELUS TELUS International have teamed up to do this really rubs me the wrong way. Google’s involvement in this doesn’t surprise me in the least. But the fact that TELUS TELUS International is involved in this does as I always believed that TELUS TELUS International would never be involved in something like this. Add to that the fact that this whole project was aimed at kids who could not consent for themselves and it’s not a good look for either company.

UPDATE: In this story I wrote TELUS when it should have been TELUS International. TELUS is TELUS International’s parent company and they operate separately. That’s why the original mentions of TELUS have a strike through font like this. The story from 404 Media has not been corrected as that is the responsibility of 404 Media.

Is It Just Me Or Is Chrome Releasing An “Emergency” Update Every Few Weeks?

Posted in Commentary with tags on December 23, 2023 by itnerd

Yesterday I got the latest Chrome emergency update hitting my test PCs and my test Macs. By my count that’s the eighth one of the year which is insane. This one which is tracked as CVE-2023-7024 was the eighth Chrome zero-day patched by Google this year. The flaw was described as a heap buffer overflow in WebRTC. An advisory from Google has more details.

To make sure you’re protected against this flaw, here’s what you should be running when it comes to Chrome:

Google said the Stable channel has been updated for desktops to

  • 120.0.6099.129 for Macs and Linux machines
  • 120.0.6099.129/130 for Windows machines.

On top of that, you should update any other Chromium based browser like Opera or Microsoft Edge as well to make sure you’re safe.

Now, on one hand it’s good that Google is patching these flaws. But at the same time it’s bad that they have so many. Thus you might want to pick another option for your browsing needs. Just a thought.

YouTube Canada releases the Top Ads of 2023

Posted in Commentary with tags on December 20, 2023 by itnerd

Today, YouTube published its annual end of year ads leaderboard today, featuring the top 10 most popular video ads in Canada in 2023. See below for the full list as well as insights and trends that bubbled up from this year’s list to help guide advertisers on what it takes to stand out in the industry today. 

Canadian Top Ads

  1. Oppenheimer | New Trailer (Universal Pictures Canada)
  2. To summer in Quebec is to summer all out (Bonjour Québec)
  3. lululemon | Mens 2023 (lululemon)
  4. What I Wouldn’t Do (North Star Calling) – Artists for Feel Out Loud supporting Kids Help Phone (Kids Help Phone)
  5. Hyundai | We make WAH | Hyundai Canada (Hyundai Canada)
  6. RONA Black Friday (RONA Inc)
  7. Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes | Teaser Trailer (20th Century Studios Canada)
  8. Celebrating 30 years of wonder in Las Vegas | Cirque du Soleil (Cirque du Soleil)
  9. Élémentaire | Bande-annonce officielle (Walt Disney Studios Canada)
  10. Soba Noodle Masterclass at Blue Goose Farm | Packed Up (MATTY MATHESON, in partnership with YETI)

Notable Themes:

  1. Start with the story. Best practices matter, but it’s the creative—the insights, the story and how it’s told—that counts. It doesn’t hurt to make people laugh and lean into emotions. The best ads we’ve seen reflect the human experience and inspire. For example, set against a cover from local duo Mayfly, Bonjour Québec’s creative style is more an invite than an ad, bringing the magic of the province to life, and welcoming viewers to join in the experience.  
  2. Connect with your audience like a creator. People connect with brands that behave like creators, crafting work that’s unique to the platform it runs on, and reflects trends and styles, embraces fandom, and invites conversation and commentary. YETI’s work with Matty Matheson shows that partnering with creators can be the best way to tell your brand’s story in an authentic way to new audiences. 
  3. Create for YouTube, not TV. Storytelling formats and production styles have changed and brands are taking great advantage of YouTube’s unique canvas, blending non-traditional lengths and production styles with orientations like vertical Shorts for the greatest creative variety and results. This year, Kids Help Phone shows us a great example of taking time to tell the story by delivering an almost five minute, emotionally charged ad. And finally, we have RONA’s hilarious Black Friday ad, that resonated with Canadian consumers on a level no other Black Friday ad did.
  4. Canadians still love to be entertained. Every year we publish this list, movie trailers bubble to the top. Canadians go to YouTube to be entertained and to learn, and movies satisfy both of these desires. And movies also present an opportunity for adjacent storytelling and creativity. Canadians love movie trailers but we also love the dissection of a topic. We crave information about upcoming films to know more about the plot, behind the scenes, interviews, or easter eggs, and YouTube satisfies all our curiosities around a topic.

Gemini Pro API & More New AI Tools For Developers & Enterprises Announced

Posted in Commentary with tags on December 14, 2023 by itnerd

Last week Google introduced Gemini, their latest and most capable AI model, and explained their vision, revealed technical details and shared a roadmap of what’s to come. They also previewed what developers will be able to build with its state-of-the-art multimodal capabilities.  

Google is now making Gemini Pro available to developers and organizations, as well as a range of other AI tools, models and infrastructure. 

Here’s what They’re announcing:  

  • The Gemini Pro API is available to developers in Google AI Studio.
  • It’s also available to enterprises through Google Cloud’s Vertex AI platform.
  • They’re also introducing other models in Vertex AI to help developers and enterprises flexibly build and ship applications:
  • An upgraded Imagen 2 text-to-image diffusion tool.
  • A family of foundation models fine-tuned for the healthcare industry, MedLM available (via allowlist) to Google Cloud customers in the U.S.
  • And they announced general availability of Duet AI for Developers and Duet AI in Security Operations.

Summary:

Go deeper

Governments Spy On Users Using Push Notifications

Posted in Commentary with tags , , on December 7, 2023 by itnerd

From the “I didn’t see this one coming” department comes the revelation that governments have been using push notifications to spy on people for some time. This came to light when Oregon Senator Ron Wyden wrote in a letter to the Department of Justice on December 6 asking the Justice Department to lift restrictions in terms of informing the public of this practise:

Because Apple and Google deliver push notification data, they can be secretly compelled by governments to hand over this information

So why should you care? A government could force Apple or Google to hand over data related to push notifications to show how you interact with your phone and the apps on it, as well as give them access to a notification’s complete text and disclose some unencrypted content. All of which is bad of course.

Apple said in a statement published by Reuters the following:

Now that this method has become public, we are updating our transparency reporting to detail these kinds of requests.

True to their word, Apple has now updated its Legal Process Guidelines document to reflect this new reality. Google for its part said this:

Google said that it shared Wyden’s “commitment to keeping users informed about these requests.”

But beyond that, I haven’t seen Google update anything. And the thing is that beyond the US who clearly has been using push notifications to spy on people, it isn’t clear who else is doing it. And it is likely that we won’t get a straight answer on that. Thus it might be wise for Apple and Google to rework how push notifications work so that this sort of spying isn’t a possibility.