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Influenewsers - DTNS 4898

2024/11/18
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Daily Tech News Show

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Roger Chang
参与讨论和分析Amazon的无人机交付和Prime Video的AI工具,以及Perplexity CEO关于使用AI替代纽约时报罢工工人的建议。
T
Tom Merritt
知名科技播客主播和制作人,长期从事在线内容创作。
T
Trisha Hershberger
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Tom Merritt 指出,Pew 研究中心的数据显示,约 20% 的美国受访者通过社交媒体影响者获取新闻,这一比例在年轻人中更高,达到 37%。人们常用的平台包括 X、Instagram、TikTok 等。不同平台上的新闻影响者在政治倾向和性别方面存在差异。Trisha Hershberger 认为,许多新闻影响者缺乏新闻背景,其内容更偏向娱乐。她建议人们多方获取信息,以避免个人偏见的影响。Roger Chang 表示,他会关注一些有资深背景的 YouTube 新闻影响者,例如资深记者、政治分析家等,将其作为对传统新闻的补充。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The Pew Research Center found that 20% of Americans get news from social media influencers, rising to 37% among those under 30. The discussion explores the credibility and impact of influencer news.
  • 20% of Americans get news from influencers.
  • 37% of people under 30 get news from influencers.
  • 65% of those who get news from influencers find it helpful.

Shownotes Transcript

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Daily technology is made possible by you. listen. And right now, thanks to all of you, including kirk, Stephen, maranda, gene, that charly dude and brand nee patrons, Andrew, and just and on this episode of D D S, P says almost half of Young people get news from social media influencers.

We will talk about what we think of that decentralized identity managements come into belgium. And trish harshbarger is here, just got back from india. She's going to tell us about the tech SHE learned about there. This is the daily technos for monday, november eighteenth, twenty twenty four in los Angeles antia.

I'm the shows producer Roger chain .

and joining us TV host and streaming ter harsh burger walk, go back.

Thank you so much for having me. It's always lovely being here, a shot attack with i'm i'm excited to be here .

and always excited to have you to trish, I can't wait to talk about what you learned in india um both tech and food yes, all of IT, all of IT. Let's start with the crickets. Robo x has begun to adding child safety features to address several concerns.

Users Younger than thirteen won't be able to dm players outside of games or experiences. They'll also no longer have access to particular experiences, social hangouts or any experience with free form writing and drawing. And you'll need parental permission to do dms at all, though that parts rolling out between now and q one, parents and caregivers can now have their own accounts to manage things like screen time and permissions instead of haven't logged into the child's account to do IT.

And finally, content labels will replace age ratings on labels. Those labels will have some age ratings themselves. For example, users Younger than nine will only be able to access minimal or mild content.

Mac rumors contributor iron paris noticed that apple lightning to three point five millimeter headphone jack adapter isn't available in almost any apple store around the world. Apple started making the adapter when I removed the headphone jack from the iphone in seven. However, only three models that apple cells have the lightning port.

So apple is expected to discontinue those next year. Looks like maybe they already discontinue the adapt the competition commission of india has ordered WhatsApp to stop sharing user data with other parts of metas business for the purposes of advertising. That prohibitions going to last five years and comes with a fine.

What's that must also now provide an opt out and more transparency about what information might be shared. What's up stopped giving an opt outs option with its twenty twenty one privacy policy, and the commission found that was an abuse of its dominant market position. President trump has nominated fcc commissioner Brandon carr to take over as chair of the agency when the new administration takes over cars.

Already a commissioner, he'll just take over his chair. He is a proponent of limiting the scope of section two thirty safe harbor provisions, supports a band of tiktok in the us, and is against net neutrality rules being changed. Current chair jsc rose versus term ends with the end of the current congress on january third.

Net neutrality rules that her commission put in place last year were blocked by a cotton August and would likely be suspended by car. He'll just roll that back should he be confirmed as commissioner, which is expected to happen. Finally, wifi eight won't come out for many years, probably like twenty twenty eight.

But media attack pillock c wireless st division has released some details on what you can expect when that next protocol finally get finalized. In some ways it'll be the same as wifi seven, same frequency bands, same peak theoretical speed, which is twenty three gigg of bits per second. But wifi eight is going to work on improving reliability. IT will let access points coordinate and steer devices that are close to each other, so they don't inner fear with each other's transmissions. A lot of the methods for doing this are still being tested and determined, but the ideas to put in protocols that improve the way things connect, so you get effectively a faster connection more often and definitely get a more reliable connection without having to increase the capacity of wifi.

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Pew research center found that about twenty percent of people surveyed in the us get news from influencers on social media. These are defined as people that have at least one hundred thousand followers on the major platforms. Could be from unestablished, could could be from anywhere.

Um that rose to thirty seven percent for people Younger than thirty. Thirty seven percent of people Younger than survey, Younger than thirty surveyed got news from influence on social media, pew said. Of the folks who do get their news that way, sixty five percent said they found information they ve got from news influences, helps them understand the world.

So they're same. I believe what I hear from these folks, x is the most popular source. Eighty five percent followed by instagram, youtube threads, facebook and tiktok.

In that order, more of the influences that were qualifying under this definition identified as conservative and mail overall. And on most platforms, except for tiktok, on tiktok, more of the news influencer s that people were following, identified as liberal and attended to be women. Trish, you kindly get your start do with this, right?

It's true. I mean we want to stream award for best news channel only a couple years in but yeah I got my start on the internet talking about the new um and kind of the wild thing about IT, tom, is that you know we were just comedians and actors and you know none of us had journalists and backgrounds um and we were really studying out to make something that was informed and we were trying to make something that was funny, but also informed you about things going on in the world and we would hear things all the way back then so i'm talking like twenty twelve, twenty thirteen that people were saying you're the only news I watch.

You're the only news I like and at the time we were like, oh no, please don't do that you know like we're just making the funny like we're not we don't have a background in this. But I think now in an era where even the news people watch on television is entertainment news for a lot of people, I don't see a vast difference between entertainment news media and what influencers are putting out on on these various different platforms. Now if you want to talk about traditional news media, that is, fact check to end that like an actual news giving you the fact source as opposed to entertainment news.

I do think there's differences there that would be helpful for people. I mean, whether you're getting entertainment news or you're getting influence or news, IT comes with a particular bias just by the fact that it's coming in person's voice. And in general, it's great to be well rounded. But I think we know a lot of people prefer to hear what they want to hear, not necessarily a well rounded fact, opinion less version.

Yeah, I think that one of the main things that that happens with with this kind of news, as people say, well, I like IT because it's independent. I feel like i'm getting the story that I wouldn't get from mainstream media, which covers things up. Roger, what's your behavior with this?

I I mean, it's it's because the ones, the ones I do follow are on youtube, but I typically follow people I already know about. In other words, they are people who are either journals and they write in a traditional news print, are like a newspaper magazine, or they have submitted or they have written about a topic long enough, not just like a couple of years but like twenty plus years and uh a film or former or other uh uh former politicians or or or uh uh uh political insiders who ve who've worked at long enough. Um one person I follow for examples, uh Molly mentioned in what Peter za hand and he's a geopolitical strategist.

I don't it's not like I trust uh all of this analysis but what he offers is sort of a contextual element to a news. For example, if A A new breakthrough in semiconductor technology, what that could mean broader um what that could mean broadly for the economy because they could do A, B and c for different segments of a production of supply chain. And so IT offers a little more context, but I will say that it's supplements what I Normally read as news rather than a replacement.

We're talking about current events and civic issues here too, like I so people of the chat or like, you know what about you you guys news influence and in a certain way we are, a certain way we are. But we're talking about tech. You specifically, this is more often in the pew research study said this is mostly political things that that people are following in these places in the past because newspapers and television had have been around long enough, and mostly because television was so expensive to do, there were fewer sources, and you knew you had a back of the envelope way to calculate, you know, who who to trust and who you could rely on.

Now, what are the signals? How do you know if you're following an influence or that is just fun like you do and and you like, but is not telling things that that are are true and and misleading you or or h that you're actually getting the inside scope and getting insight that you wouldn't get elsewhere, which is also happening like I I don't know that you are not saying we need a bureau's put a stamp on people, but but I don't know that we've we've developed a way as a society to tell that easily. Yeah I mean.

I would say the biggest thing as someone having worked in digital news that meaning like political and world event kind of digital news is that there's probably arrange, right? So there's a range of people who are just starting out. Maybe a team of one don't have the resource is necessarily to be boots on the ground journalism, don't have the resources to have like a fact checking department or anything like that do in the best they can.

If those for the type of people you're listening to, I would say you're probably Better off into a couple different sources and instead of just that one source. Now that being said, at this point, there's digital news influences, if you want to call them that, that are probably just as robust as networks you would watch on television. To your points that Roger and tom, that you've been saying of how long have you have been doing IT, right? Like these are all things that increased credibility. And I think whether IT airs on digital or a more traditional format, I think both should be held to the same standards. If yeah.

I think when it's a traditional format, you've got easier cues to know like h this an opinion show? Okay, I know to have machine eds up a little more. These are personalities that we know have been doing this for a long time.

I want to look into them, their familiar faces. So it's just it's easier. The standards are exactly the same. Now I think that's a really good point. It's just a little more difficult to figure out how to evaluate if you don't know that. Now if you're seeing people you know and have followed for a long time, you know, then I think that makes a difference. And what kind of information they provide you, if they're just telling you things and not providing a lot of sources or attribution or giving you links to, you know, what I love about gene binya congressional dishes is I don't believe anything I say on this podcast. I have links to you all of the congressional sources if you want to go dig him up and and find out yourself and that those kinds of attitudes, I think.

are important as well.

Alright, let's talk about a managing your identity. I've solved IT. We we no longer have to worry about personal identity hacks or anything else.

I actually didn't do anything um but I have been a supporter for a while of tiburon er's lease solid. I have been overate getting a little pessimistic that anyone would use solid. But the belgian region of fenders is using timber's lease input ruptured start up to offer data wallets.

Based on the solid protocol, all seven million citizens will have access to the service, and five belgian hospitals have agreed to integrate and store patient information in the wallets or pods. Now tries. I'm curious if you you even heard of solid or if you have what you know about IT.

This is my first time hearing about IT. And I mean, my neda responses. Wait, there could be a centralized location for all of my dad that I could just easily share with different practitioners. This sounds amazing, but not so. What is the security on that.

right? And the idea is to keep the information under your control. So it's it's decentralized in the sense that IT is not held in one place, but IT centralized for you in the fact that all of your information is in one pod.

And then the theory is you control who has access to what information in your pod. And over time, if you change your like, I don't want facebook to have that anymore, you change IT in your pod and they no longer have IT, so you don't have to rely on them safeguarding your information. You want to rely on them and saying, oh no, we deleted IT wink wink ah it's all under your control.

Now to your second question, the importance is in the protocol how the protocol works. And i'm not going to go into a deep dive on that, but tibert Sally has has developed a protocol that is going to be secure when properly implemented so that only you have access to IT and only you can give access to other people and it's easily revocable. You can run IT yourself if you're like, I don't trust anybody else.

You can have your own server just like you do with the website um and you can run your own pod and IT would work in the system like anyone else is. However, just like with banks, most of us don't keep our money in our house. We find trusted third parties to store our money securely for us and guarded for us.

Timerous ly imagined that startups that follow the proper protocol could be developed that are audited and provide a third party service to host these for you, and they have no interest in doing anything but safeguarding them because you would stop being a, you know, being their client. Otherwise, interrupt is the first example of that. He so timberless started interrupt as a team. Let to say, let me show you what that kind of company would look like. And this is the first widespread test of of the interrupt to being able to provide .

a service at all. Now, with all of that information being said, tom, is this something you in its current state, are like, yes.

I want in on this. Oh, absolutely. yeah. I I would if I were belgian, if I lived in fenders and I was a customer of one of these hospitals, which you know the pie keeps getting a little narrowly every time I I category.

I would absolutely do this. The protocol itself is is, as you might say, solid. I think it's it's very well done. I think interrupt is probably trustworthy in so much that IT is also being set up by timber's lee.

So IT is has a vested interest in doing everything, right? Ah so I would prefer that eventually would be competition if this were to take on. But and yeah, I think this solve so many issues where we don't trust sharing data because we just don't know and sharing data would be beneficial for us.

But because we've lost trusting companies, we don't share data if we had control. And we're like you can revoke the data anytime you want. You will keep the data they don't have. The data is in your pod, not theirs. I think that would make a lot of things more productive and an easier to deal with.

Yeah and feel Better about at your security to your point of like right now, I feel like any platform you sign up for once of your data, once access to your google account, your meta account, your whatever and all of the information that comes with that IT would be really nice instead of having to like make a rain, your information all the time for access. If you had one specific place that you had control of that data, I think we'll be awesome and especially when IT comes to health information.

Um I don't know how IT works in belgium, but at least here in the us, with the insurance situation being the way is, a lot of us have to switch providers fairly frequently and it's a big pain in the bud to try to get all data over the years and all your history over the years to a new provider if it's even possible at all. I feel if I can get like the last five years of my history to a new provider, i'm doing a really great job. So this could help longer term with that, then that could have long term health benefits for everyone as well.

Not just yes, because it's way easier to be hip a when the data is all under your control because the whole point of hip er regulations in the us. Are well, the patient must give authorization. And so that's what tie you up is. Like, well, do they have authorization? Like, well, let's make sure.

And then you know, the three parties aren't talking to each other and they don't want to do anything wrong because they don't want to get soon and fall filing, get fine or as if you had something like IT would be very clear like, yes, i've given the authorization. That's all you need to know and I can be shared and even for less serious things than health, if i'm like, you know that I really want google to customize video recommendations, but I don't want them to use IT for third party advertising. You can specify that with with solid.

You could say, like you are allowed to have my viewing history for this purpose only you may. No third party domain can access IT. And also the term says I am giving a term that says you can't use IT for advertising targeting.

I love that funds up all the convenience with none of the privacy infringement.

It's probably a little more management of your personal data that we're all used. Two, since we have virtually no management of our personal data. So I can see that being a hang up where people just go for default settings, you know or don't manage IT closely, that would be its downfall or or one of the downsides.

But but overall, I wanted to do well. So i'm very happy that they're finally getting a wide scale test. Folks, what do you want to hear us to talk about on the show? One way to let us know is our sub reit. You can submit stories and vote on them. Have redit dot com slash r slash daily tech news show.

Hey, i'm ri rinda. Recently, I asm mobiles legal team. If big wireless companies are allowed to raise Prices due to inflation, they said yes. And then when I asked if raising Prices technical violates those owners to your contracts, they said, what the are you talking about you in saying hollywood? So to recap, we're cutting the Price of men unlimited from thirty dollars a month to just fifteen .

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Media attack showcased its dimension ninety four hundred chips set at this chip changes everything event alongside oppose upcoming find X A pro and find X A smartphones. Trishna, you were there in india. How was IT?

I was there. I was there in india. IT was awesome. I learned a ton about the tech landscape in india that I didn't know before. And that really helped inform at least my opinion and my experience of what media attack is like in a very tangible way.

Because while we see media attack in a lot of smart devices here in the states, it's not you know, media tech tested ninety four hundred would not traditionally be in the state like what we think of when we think flagship phones, flagship ships, right? yeah. yeah. And so as much as we hear like all, but it's really big globally, IT was awesome to be there in person and see how influential IT is globally.

Um what what was the biggest surprise you had of the things that you learned there?

Well, I had never been to india before so that was very different and overwhelming. Um but really just seeing the transformation of the tech landscape in india over the last five to ten years. So just to give you an example, um IT currently media attack is powering more than fifty percent of the phones in india is like fifty one percent of the five g market yeah which is a huge market with a very discerning tech population.

So to put IT in perspective again, I know you've got global listeners here bit for the folks in the states. India has a population of one point four three billion and a mobile density of about eighty three percent versus the U. S.

Population, which is only three hundred and thirty five million. So when you compare that, just the sheer amount of smart phones and smart phones market, this in india is incredible. And what they're done in the last five to ten years, but thanks to kind of this smartphone and phone revolution that's happening there is it's able to help reduce damage and save lives in the event of natural disasters.

It's able to help democratize education there. Um they have a payment electronic payment service that they use their called U P I which is I mean it's universal payment. That's what the useful or but IT IT really is quite widespread.

Pretty much everybody knows how to use IT and uses IT every single day. So boosting digital literacy in india like that, that was a lot of what I learned while I was there, plus of course, expanding that it's not just mobile. There is tons of smart devices that we know in love. The amazon echo devices or media attack powered a lot of smart tb, a lot of scooters, some auto interfaces um and really just very, very widespread. But the big thing that I learned in india, being that IT was my first time in india, was essentially the transformation of the intact .

landscape in the past. A E so so cent and eighty three percent of the populist has a sport phone.

has a phone. So I believe it's .

eighty three .

percent lightly smaller version than that, that smart phone .

and the medium range phones there are. How capable are they? Because IT IT feels like they're more capable than than the old you know nokia Candy bar we had back in the nineties.

So i'm glad that you asked that I I I was like the perfect segway um but one of the phones that made in india, uh I was given a little sample of to check out at the lava agi three phone and it's got the demented ity uh seventy three hundred x processor in IT, which is a more mid range to your point, wifi midd range. As we know IT here is different than midbrain or budget there.

So technically the lava agony three phone, I guess would be considered IT will be considered a budget phone here in the U. S. But some of the features that IT has are pretty out of this world.

So we can do for K H. HDR. Video OK. Let me see if I remember how to turn on. It's got a dule anode screen. So we've got a little screen here in the back to let me see if I can turn him on for us because there's like a little guy that hangs out there as well are but you can use that book screen to check notifications to, uh, check your calls. You can use IT to take pictures using the .

right by the camera. I say.

cool. Yeah yeah. Like there's a lot of these features that we would typically see here on the higher end devices that are in a phone that's essentially like curve AOE display. Curve at is an easy key, but and a lot of stuff that we would see on what we would consider a mid range phone here in the states, probably one five hundred and seven hundred dollars yeah ah what this retails for there was around twenty five thousand rupees, which is about two hundred seventy five to three .

hundred dollars okay yeah that definitely the low end, you know right?

And that's for all these extra features that you can get. Here's here's the little guys trying to show you for anyone that's watching this, you have a little .

puppy on your notification screen that's .

yeah he's a little dude and you can like your notification and you use your camera and all sorts of other really fun stuff that again, here you're going to see on the higher end phones. But there, they're really making IT more affordable because you have such a discerning tech consumer base in india. So they have to be more competitive .

with eighty three percent um penetration too. I I think sometimes folks here, I get the sense that they assume, well, most of the world doesn't have tech ah and I know we're just talking about india. We're not talking about the entire world, but uh, india is a big chunk of the world he just said, uh, you know it's a one point one point four billion people so you know that's a sixth of the world uh and IT seems like everyone's using tech to some extent.

yes. Yeah I mean, that's like I said U P, I I mean, they were kind of joking that like even people who aren't able to read know how to pay for things using u pi on their yeah like do tap to pay because it's now become that univerSally adopted.

have the right icon and tap done.

I feel like getting five g connectivity, getting blue to four point o wifi sixty like these are all things we listen. A more premium phone available for roughly the equivalent of two hundred and seventy five us. Dollars in india. Pretty cool.

That's an interesting question to what is the mobile service like there? The da.

it's hard to say because I wasn't using a local .

send while I was there.

but they do have five g towers everywhere, and they very like to point them out. You.

yeah, yeah, i'm sure. Uh, well, well terce, thank you. Uh for for for share your experience with us. So appreciate that.

Yeah IT was really fun. And um I mean the diversity ninety four hundred ship, which is in the new chip that media attack was starting out. This chip changes everything will be on a global launch phone that folks in the states can trial to hear themselves for the um OPPO find x eight series, which I believe is globally launching in just .

a few days on the first test and presumably will be you know in that affordable Price. And even here in the us.

well, the demented ity ninety four hundred is their flagship. So that is going to be considered more of a premium. Yeah.

but probably not galaxy s twenty .

five level. Well.

I can still find out. Let's check out the male bag. Ian wanted to share this about our friday discussion on good day internet about game pass ultimate.

Uh, ian says game pass ultimate has solved the annual question of what do you want for Christmas from my daughter? I am old like tom, and my daughter is in her thirties. I never have an answer for her, as I don't know, I need anything.

So starting a couple of years ago, my daughter got me the sixty dollar canadian three months game pass subscription card and gets one for each gift giving event, Christmas, birthday and father's day. So I only have to get one card to get a year of game PaaS ultimates plus by buying them from costco, the only fifty five box. Uh, there you go.

So we were mentioned in game pass as being A A good gift. Uh, on friday is the perfect gift. Fern IT is the .

perfect gift for everyone. I say this every holiday season since game pass has been a thing. If you're buying a gift for someone who plays games and either you don't know what games they have, you don't know what games they like, you're looking for something, all the concert, a carder of stocking game, pass down, done easy yeah and .

you're not just buying them a gift card like while you decide what to get you, you're buying them unlimited games yeah hundreds.

if not thousands of games that you have access to for whatever time period you buy for.

That's amazing. Well, twitch your burger. Thank you so much for join to me today. If folks want to keep up on what you've been doing and where you're stream and all the things you do, where should they go?

Uh, you can find me on witched T T B slash treasure harsh burger. Youtube is also treasure hurseton gr. But everywhere else, whether that be instagram, tiktok, any of the different text apps right now, i'm pretty much everywhere at that girl, trish, with no eye in the girl. So just that grl trish and I cover an a male main of tech video games, tp top games and toys and collectable.

So come on, you want disappointed, go checked out. Is that girl trash with no eye in the girl? Leave the eye the trip.

Don't forget that. yes. Uh, tomorrow we're doing another experiment. We did this back in october and we are going to do daily technology and gdi separately. So as supersize gdi daily technology will have me and I think went to a double on IT and an interview with under heaven good day internet will be alive one P M to two P M pacific.

Um so if you're not a patron, you're going to want to check IT out live or catch IT on demand on twitch or youtube if you want to get that stuff. We have an expanded discussion on some interesting stories were finding on the day we're going to touch on the news of the day and we're going to talk to right rounds civil from yes, more and company about putting holiday shopping on easy mode. So check IT out its me backgrounds of a saline rob dunwood Roger chain right here on youtube docomo lh daily technician or twitch 到 TV slash good day internet patrons stick around for the extended show。

Good day internet. We're going to talk to more to trish about her trip to india. We've got some new stuff in the daily technology store to show you. You can also catch the show live money through friday four pm ter and two thousand one hundred UTC find out more daily tech do showed I can't slash life back with super side .

D I and D T S after then the D T S family of protests helping each other understand .

club hopes you have enjoy this gram.

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