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Apple’s iPhone 14 event kicks off Wednesday

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Apple is holding a launch event at its headquarters in Cupertino, California, on Wednesday where it will unveil its latest hardware products, including the new iPhone 14.

Apple has used prerecorded videos for its launch events since early 2020 thanks partly to Covid restrictions, and this will be the first iPhone launch with an in-person component since 2019.

Apple is streaming the launch event online on its website and YouTube in addition to inviting some media to its campus.

Apple’s hype-filled fall launches are a signature event for Apple. They typically draw millions of simultaneous viewers on YouTube.

They garner attention from around the world and set the stage for a holiday marketing blitz during the last three months of the year, which is when Apple’s sales are the highest.

This year’s event has the tagline “far out,” which could refer to features such as night-sky photography.

Last year, Apple released new iPhones and Apple Watches at an event in September, and then followed it up with an October launch featuring iPads and Macs.

Here’s what Apple is likely to launch Wednesday, based on reports.

iPhone 14: Four new models

Customers look at the iPhone13 smartphone at apple's flagship store in Shanghai, China, on October 12, 2021.
Customers look at the iPhone13 smartphones at apple’s flagship store in Shanghai, China.
Xing Yun | Future Publishing | Getty Images

Apple is expected to release four new iPhone models. If Apple’s current naming convention holds up, they will be called the iPhone 14.

This year Apple will likely discontinue the “mini” model with a 4.7-inch screen, according to reports. Instead, Apple could offer two sizes, one with a 6.1-inch screen and one with a 6.7-inch screen, each coming in a standard model and a pricier “Pro” model.

The Pro models are expected to get more upgrades, according to reports from Bloomberg NewsTFI Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, and other analysts and Apple watchers.

Since 2017, iPhones have included a space at the top of the phone’s display with space for Apple’s FaceID system, which includes several sensors and a camera.

The Pro models could ditch Apple’s “notch” where it houses the FaceID camera for a slimmer, more streamlined “pill” or “cutout” approach with a smaller space that has to remain blank, leaving room for an even larger display.

The Pro models are also expected to get upgraded A16 processors and cameras. The camera bump is expected to get larger.

Apple could release an always-on screen display for showing notifications, like some Android phones have sported for years. Beta iPhone software released over the summer suggested that Apple may be planning a similar feature because of new widgets that show weather and battery life.

One of the biggest questions is how Apple will price its iPhones in a period of inflation around the world and macroeconomic uncertainty in some regions. Other consumer electronics, such as Sony’s Playstation 5, have seen price cuts.

Apple’s least-expensive iPhone 13 model is the $699 iPhone 13 Mini, which is expected to be discontinued. That would make Apple’s mainline device, which is currently the iPhone 13, the least-expensive new model at $829, if its price doesn’t change. Some analysts also expect Apple to increase the price of its Pro models.

Apple usually drops the price of older models when it releases new ones, giving more price-sensitive consumers an option.

Apple Watch

Apple watch wearers
Customers try Apple Watch devices in the Apple Marunouchi store on September 07, 2019 in Tokyo, Japan.
Tomohiro Ohsumi | Getty Images

Apple is likely to show the eighth major new version of its watch on Wednesday. Last year, the Apple Watch Series 7 got a slightly larger screen, but the redesign did not significantly change the look and feel of the device, which has remained mostly the same since 2014.

Expect more evolution this year, too. Apple is considering a body temperature sensor in the new devices, according to the Wall Street Journal, which could help with fertility and sleep tracking. Other sleep tracking features could include the ability to detect advanced sleep patterns or apnea.

But the biggest Apple Watch Series 8 announcement could be a new “Pro” model with a bigger screen and more durable finish.

Apple has previously released Apple Watches with pricey case materials such as gold, ceramic and titanium, and the new “Pro” model described by Bloomberg and Kuo could be one of the first high-end Apple Watches to gain additional features over its less-expensive siblings.

Also likely: A new updated version of the Apple Watch SE, its $329 entry-level Watch model.

iOS 16

How to edit an iMessage in iOS 16
How to edit an iMessage in iOS 16
Todd Haselton | CNBC

IPhone owners who don’t plan to buy any new gear this fall will still get an annual update to the iPhones software, iOS 16, which was announced in June and has been in testing over the summer.

The software has several new features that users will immediately notice. The biggest banner feature is the ability to customize the iPhone’s lock screen with widgets that can display weather forecasts, calendar appointments and other information at a glance.

Users can also change the font for the lock screen clock for the first time, as well.

IOS 16 also lets you unsend or edit iMessage text messages, as long as you catch them within a few minutes of sending.

IOS 16 will also introduce short-term loans from Apple called Apple Pay Later.

The feature will allow users to buy stuff online with Apple Pay but pay for the item in four installments without paying interest.

One cool feature in iOS 16 is if a user has both an iPhone and a Mac laptop or desktop, they can use the iPhone as a very high-definition web camera.

After the event: iPads, Macs

Apple's September event invite.
Apple’s September event invite.
Apple

Apple is unlikely to release new iPads on Wednesday because their software isn’t ready yet. Earlier this month, Apple told TechCrunch that iPadOS, the iPad software, will ship after iOS this fall, suggesting a staggered release.

Apple’s statement was terse, and the company dislikes talking about unannounced products.

But in general, it likes to release new hardware together with new software, so the statement clearly suggested that new iPads would come at a later launch date than iPhones.

IPadOS and iOS are very similar, but this year iPadOS is getting a feature called Stage Manager that could allow users to multitask more efficiently — but also got panned by early testers.

Improved iPads could include more powerful processors that are closers to laptop processors, smoother displays and better integration with accessories.

Apple also uncharacteristically teased a new “Mac Pro” in the spring. The Mac Pro is currently a $5,000 tower of power using an Intel processor.

Apple wants to transition its entire Mac lineup away from Intel to its own M-series processors, but a pricey niche product doesn’t fit as well with Apple’s mass-market iPhones and Apple Watches.

Instead, new Macs could be announced at a separate event later this year, as happened last year.

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Ex-Google ad boss builds free search engine

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An advert- and tracker-free search engine launches in the UK, France and Germany on Thursday.

Neeva has 600,000 users in the US, where it launched last year.

Creator Sridhar Ramaswamy, who worked at Google for 16 years and ran its ad business, told BBC News the technology sector had become “exploitative” of people’s data, something he no longer wanted to be a part of.

Trackers share information about online activity, largely to target adverts.

Neeva has raised $77.5m (£68m) from investors.

It offers free-to-use search, with other features such as password-manager access and virtual-private-network (VPN) service to be made available on a subscription basis.

Users are asked to create an account, to build subscriptions at a later date.

And the UK price was likely to be about £5 per month, Mr Ramaswamy said.

“We felt the traditional search engines had become about advertising and advertisers – and not really about serving users,” he said.

“Google has a dominant position in the marketplace – and the incentive for them to truly innovate, to truly create disruptive experiences, is not really there.

“And then also as a company they feel obligated to show more and more revenue and profit to their shareholders, so they just keep increasing the number of ads.”

Trying out Neeva

Search the word “migraine” on both Google and Neeva, and the first page of the results are fairly similar – links to news articles and factual information.

Neeva creator Sridhar Ramaswamy
Neeva creator Sridhar Ramaswamy

But with a brand, the difference becomes more stark.

When I try “BMW”, both search engines lead with links to the carmaker’s website and Wikipedia entry.

But while Google follows with a map, social-media feeds and links to used-car dealers, Neeva sticks with different BMW official pages.

Google certainly has more variety – but it is also blatantly pushing me towards buying a car.

Neeva’s Chrome browser extension lists the trackers installed on web pages visited.

I tried a few:

  • the Daily Mail had 351 trackers.
  • the BBC four, two of which were internal tools
  • Tesco five
  • Sainsbury’s 10
  • parenting forum Mumsnet 27
  • the front page of Reddit three
  • Amazon three – all its own

And almost all – but not the BBC – had at least one belonging to Google, meaning Google is receiving anonymised information about users visiting those pages.

While I had the extension activated, no ads displayed around the editorial content.

But ultimately, none of Neeva’s other rivals has dented the dominance of Google search.

“To Bing” or “to Duckduckgo” – another privacy-focused service – are not verbs in the way “to google” is.

And asked if Mr Ramaswamy could ever topple his former employer, Steph Liu, an analyst at Forrester specialising in privacy and search, said: “Realistically, no.

“It’s a sort of David and Goliath story. Google has too many users, it has too much revenue.

“The ultimate goal is to offer an alternative for the consumer base who are worried about their privacy, who don’t want Google hoovering up their data and targeting ads based on their search history”.

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Elon M Twitter deal back on in surprise U-turn

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Billionaire Elon Musk has apparently changed his mind about buying Twitter, again, and is now willing to proceed with his takeover of the social media platform.

In a letter to the firm, Mr Musk agreed to pay the price he offered months ago before trying to quit the deal.

The surprise reversal comes just weeks before the two sides were due in court.

Twitter, which had sued Mr Musk to force the takeover to move forward, was seen as having the stronger case.

In the letter, attorneys for Mr Musk said he intended to move ahead to complete the transaction, pending receipt of the financing and an end of the legal fight.

A spokesperson for Twitter acknowledged the firm had received the proposal, adding “the intention of the company is to close the transaction at $54.20 per share” – the price that Mr Musk promised in April.

The apparent win for Twitter sent its shares soaring more than 20% to more than $52 apiece. But the value remained lower than the takeover price, in a sign of lingering investor doubts the deal will go through.

Later on Tuesday, Mr Musk wrote in a tweet: “Buying Twitter is an accelerant to creating X, the everything app”.

Elon Musk and Parag Agrawal
Elon Musk and Twitter boss Parag Agrawal have feuded publicly

When Mr Musk first revealed plans to buy Twitter in a $44bn deal, he said he wanted to clean up spam accounts on the platform and preserve it as a venue for free speech.

But the billionaire, a prolific Twitter user known for his impulsive style, balked at the purchase just a few weeks later, citing concerns that the number of fake accounts on the platform was higher than Twitter claimed.

Twitter executives denied the accusations, arguing that Mr Musk – the world’s richest person with a net worth of more than $220bn – wanted out because he was worried about the price.

The back-and-forth followed a sharp downturn in the value of technology stocks, including Tesla, the electric car company that Mr Musk leads and is the base of much of his fortune.

The fight, which was scheduled to go to trial 17 October, saw the two sides face off in lengthy court filings, private messages and bitter public spats on Twitter, where Mr Musk has more than 100 million followers.

In one such exchange, Mr Musk responded to Twitter boss Parag Agrawal with an emoji for faecal matter.

Preparation for the trial had ensnarled many of the biggest names in tech, as lawyers for the two companies demanded communications about the deal.

Mr Musk, who could have paid a $1bn break-up fee to walk away, was set to be interviewed ahead of the trial this week.

Some industry watchers, who were taken by surprise by the development, questioned whether the latest twist was a concrete offer or a delay tactic.

A dramatic turnaround

It’s hard to keep track with this deal. On, off, now – it appears – on again.

However there’s a lot to read into Twitter’s brief statement.

The “intention” to go through with the deal suggests a nervousness that this is a delaying tactic from Musk’s team.

The statement effectively can be read as – ‘We are going to pursue this sale, whatever Elon Musk says or does’.

The way Twitter also, so pointedly, says it will sell the company at $54.20 suggests they are still worried about Musk lowballing.

So far Musk has been a highly erratic negotiating partner – hot and cold. Keen one minute, looking for the exit the other.

You can see why Twitter is playing it cautiously.

At Twitter, which has been thrown into turmoil since Mr Musk first turned his attention to the firm, staff told the BBC that their bosses were initially silent on the matter, even as the report spread widely.

Investors have long been sceptical that the takeover would go forward, especially since Mr Musk was seen as offering a heady price for a firm struggling to attract users and grow.

Twitter shares had been trading below $43 apiece at the start of the day.

News that Mr Musk had proposed to honour the original agreement sent shares in the company soaring almost 13% before trading was halted.

Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives said Mr Musk’s chance of winning in court was “highly unlikely”.

“Being forced to do the deal after a long and ugly court battle in Delaware was not an ideal scenario and instead accepting this path and moving forward with the deal will save a massive legal headache,” he wrote in a report after the news.

But he added, that Mr Musk’s ownership of the platform, a top venue for politicians and journalists to spread news and opinion, would still likely cause a “firestorm of worries and questions” in Washington and beyond.

Reports /TrainViral/

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Uber chief convicted for concealing a felony

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Uber’s former chief security officer has been convicted of failing to tell US authorities about a 2016 hack of the company’s databases.

A jury in San Francisco found Joe Sullivan – fired from Uber in 2017 – guilty of obstruction of justice and concealing a felony.

Increasingly, companies negotiate with ransomware hackers.

But investigators said they must “do the right thing” when their systems are breached.

The conviction is a dramatic reversal for Sullivan, who had at one point in his career prosecuted cyber-related crime for the San Francisco US attorney’s office.

After Sullivan’s conviction his lawyer, David Angeli, said “Mr Sullivan’s sole focus, in this incident and throughout his distinguished career, has been ensuring the safety of people’s personal data on the internet,” the Washington Post reported.

But prosecutors said the case was a warning to companies.

“We expect those companies to protect that data and to alert customers and appropriate authorities when such data is stolen by hackers,” US attorney Stephanie M Hinds said.

Ms Hinds accused Sullivan of working to hide the data breach from US regulator the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), adding he “took steps to prevent the hackers from being caught”.

At the time, the FTC was already investigating Uber following a 2014 hack.

When it was hacked again, the attackers emailed Sullivan and told him they had stolen a large amount of data, which they would delete in return for a ransom, according to the US Department of Justice (DOJ) .

Staff working for Sullivan confirmed data, including about 57 million Uber users’ records and 600,000 driving-licence numbers, had been stolen.

According to the DOJ, Sullivan arranged for the hackers to be paid $100,000 (£89,000) in bitcoin in exchange for them signing non-disclosure agreements to not reveal the hack to anyone,

The hackers were paid in December 2016, even though they had refused to provide their true names.

The payment was disguised as a “bug bounty”, a reward used to pay cyber-security researchers who disclose vulnerabilities so they can be fixed.

The Washington Post reported that the process enabled Uber to gather clues about the two hackers. The firm eventually identified the pair – both of whom have since been convicted of criminal offences – in January 2017 and required them to sign new agreements in their own names.

This conviction has sent shivers down the spines of many cyber-security executives.

With organised ransomware gangs, government-backed hacking teams and anarchist kids targeting companies, being a chief information security officer is already a daunting job.

Sullivan being personally convicted for a decision taken on behalf of his employer sets a scary precedent, some say.

For observers, the crimes Sullivan committed in 2016 also read as odd by today’s standards.

Negotiating with hackers and paying them to keep quiet is literally done every day now by corporations hit by ransomware gangs.

The key difference here, the jury found, is that Sullivan tried to cover it up.

Giving cyber-criminals what they want no longer carries the seriousness it once did, but companies, then and now, must always be transparent about how they respond to cyber-incidents that affect them and their customers.

The DOJ said that Sullivan “orchestrated these acts despite knowing that the hackers were hacking and extorting other companies as well as Uber, and that the hackers had obtained data from at least some of those other companies”.

A new management team at Uber eventually reported the breach to the FTC in 2017 after carrying out their own investigation.

In 2018, Uber paid US states $148m to settle claims that it had been to slow to reveal the hack.

Shock ruling

The verdict was a surprise to many working in computer security. At the time Sullivan had reportedly informed some senior figures at Uber about the threat.

The court also heard that internal legal advice had suggested that there was no need to disclose the hack if the attackers were identified, and agreed to delete the data and not spread it further.

Responding to the judgement, Dr Ilia Kolochenko, founder of ImmuniWeb, and a member of Europol Data Protection Experts Network, wrote, “The Uber case is just another illustrative example of the unfolding global trend to hold cyber-security executives accountable for their companies’ data breaches.

“Serious misconduct, such as deliberate concealment of a data breach despite the regulatory requirement to report the breach to mitigate harm, may even entail criminal sanctions.”

Dr Kolochenko said cyber-security executives should urgently check that their employment contracts address issues such as coverage of legal fees in case of a civil lawsuit or prosecution in relation to their professional responsibilities. The contracts should also contain a guarantee that their employer will not sue them – as victimised companies may also do this in case of security incidents, she added.

Sullivan has not yet been sentenced, and may appeal against the judgement.

Reports /TrainViral/

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