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How to post a live photo on Instagram in 2 different ways

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instagram app

  • To post a live photo to Instagram, you can convert your photos to video or use the Boomerang feature on Instagram Stories.
  • The format you use to post a live photo to your Instagram will depend on if you're posting to your wall or to your story. 
  • To post a live photo on Instagram, you must be using an iPhone 6s or higher. 
  • Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

If you have an iPhone 6s or newer, you can capture live photos right from your camera app. The new-ish medium occupies the space between a still photo and video, creating a "moving" image that lets you give viewers more visual context for your images. 

Instagram was one of the last platforms to support live photos, but thanks to updates and savvy workarounds, there is a way to bring that feature to your profile. It's important to note that the ease of posting a live photo will depend on whether you want to add it to your story or your photo wall. 

Here's how to post a live photo on your Instagram. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

How to post a live photo on Instagram as a video upload on iPhone

1. Open your photos app and select the live photo you want to use.

2. Swipe upwards and choose "Save as video."

How to post a live photo on Instagram   1.PNG

3. Open the Instagram app. 

4. Tap the plus sign in the app's bottom menu. 

How to post a live photo on Instagram 2

5. Select the video you saved from your photo library. 

How to post a live photo on Instagram 3

6. Tap "Next" in the top right. 

7. Add your caption. 

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8. Hit "Share."

How to post a live photo on Instagram as a story 

1. Open Instagram.

2. Tap the camera icon in the top-left corner of the screen to access the "Stories" section.

3. On the story screen, scroll through your bottom menu until you see "Boomerang." Tap it. 

How to Boomerang for live photo 1

4. Tap the white circle on the bottom menu to begin capturing your live photo when you see the boomerang icon appear. 

5. Add text or edit your live photo in whatever way you want. 

6. Press "Send To" in the lower right. 

How to Boomerang for live photo on Instagram 2

7. Select where you want to send your live photo, including "Your Story," "Close Friends," or someone you follow. 

How to Boomerang for live photo on Instagram 3

8. You can press "Undo" to stop the action or press the blue "Done" link that appears at the bottom of the screen. 

Related coverage from Tech Reference:

SEE ALSO: My favorite photo app lets me turn my camera roll into watercolor art in seconds

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How to cancel your HBO Max subscription, no matter how you signed up for it

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HBO Max app logo

  • You can cancel an HBO Max subscription at any time through the mobile app or website.
  • Depending upon how you set up your HBO Max subscription, you may need to log into another service to complete the cancellation. 
  • HBO Max costs $14.99 per month, after a weeklong free trial.
  • Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

HBO Max is a video streaming service that carries HBO's usual catalog of TV shows and movies, along with a slew of additional content. 

It does this all for $15 per month, which is the same subscription rate as the older HBO Now, and up to five people can share the service at once, each with their own user profile. 

That's a good deal, but if you ever need to cancel your HBO Max service, you can do it in just a few minutes, using your Mac, PC, iPhone, iPad, or Android device.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Acer Chromebook 15 (From $179.99 at Walmart)

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

iPad (From $329.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $699.99 at Walmart)

How to cancel an HBO Max subscription

You can start the process to cancel your subscription using either the HBO Max mobile app or the website. But depending upon how you signed up for HBO Max, the exact steps after that will vary.

Using the HBO Max app on your iPhone, iPad, or Android device, tap the "Profile" icon in the lower-right corner of the screen. Once there, tap the gear icon in the upper-left, and then select "Billing Information."

How to cancel HBO Max 1

Alternatively, if you're on the HBO Max website, just log in and click the "Profile" icon at the top-right of the page and then click "Billing Information."

No matter how you get here, this is where the process varies depending on how you signed up for HBO Max.

You can subscribe to HBO Max directly, or via other services including Apple, AT&T, DirectTV, Google Play, Hulu, Samsung, YouTube TV, and many others. Depending upon how you subscribed, you'll see one of two options.

  • If you can cancel the subscription directly from the HBO Max app, you'll see a button marked "Manage Subscription." Click it, and then select "Cancel Subscription." Confirm this is really what you want to do, and your subscription will be cancelled. 

How to cancel HBO Max 99

  • If you're subscribed through a service that requires you to cancel elsewhere, you'll see a button marked "Learn More." Tap it, and you'll be taken to that app or service's login screen. Sign in and go to the billing information page for that service. You can unsubscribe from HBO Max there. 

How to cancel HBO Max 3

Related coverage from Tech Reference:

SEE ALSO: The best MacBooks you can buy

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The top 9 movies on Netflix this week, from 'The Nut Job' to '365 Days'

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365 days netflix

  • "365 Days" continues to dominate on Netflix and director Gaspar Noé's "Love," another erotic drama, has also gained popularity.
  • Netflix introduced daily top lists of the most popular titles on the streaming service in February.
  • Streaming search engine Reelgood keeps track of the lists and provides Business Insider with a rundown of the week's most popular movies on Netflix every Friday.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

"365 Days" is the most popular movie on Netflix for the second straight week, despite a 0% critic score on Rotten Tomatoes (and that's not the first time that's happened).

And director Gaspar Noé's "Love," another erotic drama, is also popular, with help from TikTok users who have been filming their reactions to the movie's opening scene.

Netflix introduced daily top 10 lists of its most viewed movies and TV shows in February (it counts a view if an account watches at least two minutes of a title).

Every week, the streaming search engine Reelgood compiles for Business Insider a list of which movies have been most prominent on Netflix's daily lists that week. On Reelgood, users can browse Netflix's entire movie library and sort by IMDb or Rotten Tomatoes ratings.

Spike Lee's "Da 5 Bloods" also continues to be a hit with Netflix users.

Below are Netflix's 9 most popular movies of the week in the US:

SEE ALSO: Netflix leads its rivals in original TV shows by a wide margin in both quantity and quality, according to new data analysis

9. "Da 5 Bloods" (2020, Netflix original)

Description: "Four African American veterans return to Vietnam decades after the war to find their squad leader's remains — and a stash of buried gold. From Spike Lee."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 91%

What critics said: "Lee's latest is a crackerjack drama, directed by a filmmaker who remains in total control of his once-in-a-generation gifts and utilizes them to synthesize story and history into something new." — Entertainment Weekly



8. "Love" (2015)

Description: "A man in an unsatisfying marriage recalls the details of an intense past relationship with an ex-girlfriend when he gets word that she may be missing."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 39%

What critics said: "It's bold, fleshy and audacious, at least in theory. But it is also numb." — BBC



7. "Wasp Network" (2020, Netflix original)

Description: "Based on a true and gripping story: Cuban spies infiltrate exile groups in the 1990s to stop terrorism against the island, but at a high personal cost."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 38%

What critics said: "Combining extensive research with fictionalized action, the film presents an ideologically muddled look at what are essentially acts of terrorism." — LA Weekly



6. "Magnetic" (2018)

Description: "Attracted to thrills across the globe, intrepid athletes venture to remote locations in pursuit of their extreme form of bliss."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A

What critics said: N/A



5. "Baby Mama" (2008)

Description: "When straightlaced Kate learns she's infertile, she hires immature Angie to be her surrogate, inviting hilarity as both women prepare for motherhood."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 63%

What critics said: "Baby Mama adheres fairly closely to the conventions of the studio comedy, although it's never actually predictable, probably because the characters and subject matter are so novel." — Los Angeles Times



4. "Lost Bullet" (2020, Netflix original)

Description: "Facing a murder charge, a genius mechanic with a criminal past must track down a missing car containing the proof of his innocence: a single bullet."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: N/A

What critics said: N/A



3. "The Nut Job" (2014)

Description: "When his grouchy attitude gets him kicked out of the park, Surly the squirrel hatches a plan to rob Maury's Nut Shop to stock up for winter."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 13%

What critics said: "Pretty much everything in this South Korean co-production is slightly undercooked, lacking the same degree of sprightly wit or dramatic punch regularly found in A-list studio product." — Time Out



2. "Feel the Beat" (2020, Netflix original)

Description: "After blowing a Broadway audition, a self-centered dancer reluctantly returns home and agrees to coach a squad of young misfits for a big competition."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 45%

What critics said: "A predictable dramedy." — New York Times



1. "365 Days" (2020)

Description: "A fiery executive in a spiritless relationship falls victim to a dominant mafia boss, who imprisons her and gives her one year to fall in love with him."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score: 0%

What critics said: "Thoroughly terrible, politically objectionable, occasionally hilarious." — Variety



Elon Musk trolls Jeff Bezos, calling him a copycat after Amazon acquires self-driving-car startup Zoox (TSLA, AMZN)

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Jeff Bezos Elon Musk

  • Tesla CEO Elon Musk called Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos a copycat on Friday after news broke of Amazon's reported $1.2 billion acquisition of the self-driving startup Zoox.
  • The tweet used a yellow cat icon instead of the word cat.
  • Amazon's acquisition is a step forward for the company into autonomous driving, an arena that Musk's Tesla has been seeking to dominate.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk took a jab at Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos on Twitter Friday, just a day after the Financial Times reported the Seattle tech giant acquired the self-driving-taxi company Zoox for $1.2 billion.

In the tweet, Musk called Bezos a copycat but used a yellow cat icon instead of the word "cat."

Amazon declined Business Insider's request for comment.

The tweet comes as Amazon's acquisition puts the company at a more leveled playing field with Tesla in the self-driving arena.

Business Insider's Mark Matousek reported in May that Amazon was interested in Zoox to help round out its package-delivery process

Zoox's vehicles are designed for ride-hailing, unlike Tesla's, which are designed to go directly to customers.

Tesla and Zoox have traded jabs before. Musk said in 2019 that by mid-2020, his company's self-driving cars would be fully operational without human interaction, meaning drivers wouldn't have to look at the road while driving. At Business Insider's 2019 IGNITION conference, Zoox cofounder and Chief Technology Officer Jesse Levinson said there was no chance of that happening.

"They don't have enough sensors or computers to do that given any remotely known technology that exists that humans have ever created," Levinson said at the conference, adding "they're great cars" and that the Tesla Autopilot system "on the freeway is, I think, the best out there ... I think if he focused on that aspect it would be better received."

Tesla's Autopilot feature, even in its "full self-driving" options, is not yet fully autonomous and still requires human interaction. 

Zoox was recently valued at $3.2 billion. Like other autonomous-vehicle companies, Zoox has taken a hit from the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic and laid off 120 employees in April. The company has struggled to raise capital recently, according to Axios, and this deal could help it stay afloat.

SEE ALSO: Amazon has agreed to buy Zoox for a reported $1.2 billion

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UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs. Hooker could have major ramifications for UFC's highly contested lightweight division — here's how to watch

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UFC Fight Night Poirier vs Hooker

  • UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs Hooker will be broadcast live on Saturday, June 27, through the ESPN cable channel and the ESPN+ streaming service.
  • Lightweight contenders Dustin Poirier and Dan Hooker headline a fight card of 10 matches that will air live from the UFC Apex in Las Vegas.
  • The prelims are set to start at 6 p.m. ET, and the main card is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. ET.
  • Every UFC Fight Night event is included with an ESPN+ subscription, which costs $4.99 per month or $49.99 per year.
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Top UFC lightweight contenders Dustin Poirier and Dan Hooker will face off in the main event of this weekend's UFC Fight Night. You can watch UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs Hooker on ESPN starting at 6 p.m. ET on June 27, or stream it live on ESPN+.

While UFC pay-per-view matches normally cost $64.99, this UFC Fight Night event will be available as part of an ESPN+ subscription, and the entire event will be aired on TV wherever ESPN is available.

Dustin Poirier returns to the octagon for the first time since losing the lightweight championship to Khabib Nurmagomedov at UFC 242. Before that loss, Poirier had recorded four straight victories again current and past UFC champions, including a knockout win against UFC's current interim champion Justin Gaethje.

Dan Hooker enters Saturday's match with 10 career knockout wins and three consecutive victories. Hooker's last main event match against Paul Felder during a February 2020 UFC Fight Night earned "Fight of the Night" honors as Hooker took home a decision victory with his signature kickboxing style.

With Conor McGregor's recent retirement and Nurmagomedov sidelined due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, Hooker and Poirier are both poised to challenge for the lightweight championship if they can pull out a win on Saturday.

UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs Hookerwill be broadcast from the UFC Apex in Las Vegas, Nevada, but fans will not be allowed to attend due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. To ensure the best possible conditions for the event, UFC has implemented at least 18 different safety precautions for staff, including advanced medical screenings, temperature checks, and social distancing guidelines.

Updated on 06/26/2020 by Kevin Webb: This article has been revised to include details for the UFC Fight Night event scheduled for June 27.

Here's the match schedule for UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs Hooker

espn+

Prelims — 6 p.m. ET, 3 p.m. PT on ESPN+ and ESPN

  • Kay Hansen versus Jinh Yu Frey [Women's Strawweight]
  • Jordan Griffin versus Youssef Zalal [Featherweight]
  • Takashi Sato versus Jason Witt [Welterweight]
  • Luis Pena versus Khama Worthy [Lightweight]

Main Card  — 8 p.m. ET, 5 p.m. PT on ESPN+ and ESPN

  • Sean Woodson versus Julian Erosa [Catchweight]
  • Gian Villante versus Maurice Green [Heavyweight]
  • Philipe Lins versus Tanner Boser [Heavyweight]
  • Brendan Allen versus Kyle Daukaus [Middleweight]
  • Mike Perry versus Mickey Gall [Welterweight]
  • Dustin Poirier versus Dan Hooker [Lightweight]

How to watch UFC Fight Night matches on ESPN and ESPN+

UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs Hooker will be broadcast live on ESPN, and streamed live via ESPN+.

ESPN+ subscribers can watch every UFC Fight Night event live and also gain access to a huge catalog of classic UFC matches and recent highlights. ESPN+ costs $4.99 per month or $49.99 for a full year, and it's available as an app on most mobile and streaming devices. Here's a full breakdown of additional features and details for ESPN+.

Leading up to major PPV events, ESPN+ typically offers a special deal that bundles one UFC PPV fight and an annual ESPN+ subscription for a total of $84.98. This bundle deal gives you an overall discount of $30 if you plan on following the UFC closely for the rest of the year.

In addition to ESPN+, you can also watch UFC Fight Night: Poirier vs Hooker on the standard ESPN network through various cable and satellite packages. ESPN is also available as a channel through several live TV streaming services, including Hulu + Live TVSling TVAT&T TV, and Youtube TV

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An employee at Mark Zuckerberg's philanthropic initiative reportedly demanded that he resign as its leader or from Facebook if he didn't moderate inflammatory Trump posts (FB)

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  • An employee at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative demanded that Mark Zuckerberg resign from either it or Facebook if he didn't take a tougher stance on moderating hate speech, Recode reported Friday.
  • During a town hall, the employee called Zuckerberg out over his refusal to act on controversial Trump posts about recent protests, saying the decision valued "calls to murder people for demonstrating over the political speech of the demonstrators themselves," according to Recode.
  • Zuckerberg called the idea that he would resign "ridiculous" and implied that employees should quit instead if they disagreed with his values, Recode reported.
  • Employees both within CZI and at Facebook have grown increasingly vocal in recent weeks over Zuckerberg's stance on racism and hate speech, and the company is now facing a major boycott from advertisers over the issues.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

At a town hall last week, an employee of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative demanded that Mark Zuckerberg resign, either as its leader or as CEO of Facebook, if he didn't get tougher on moderating hate speech on the social network, Recode reported Friday.

"I mean, no. None of those things would make sense," Zuckerberg replied, according to Recode, adding: "Quite frankly, the idea that we would resign from CZI is ridiculous."

CZI, a philanthropy led and funded by Priscilla Chan and her husband Zuckerberg, is legally separate from Facebook. However, according to Recode, Zuckerberg told employees to "make whatever decisions you think are right" with regards to working somewhere where they disagree with leadership's decisions.

The CZI employee's ultimatum came following controversial social media posts by President Donald Trump earlier this month in response to protests over George Floyd's death in the hands of police custody, which Twitter had taken action against while Facebook refused to, causing a revolt among its employees.

"Our position is that we should enable as much expression as possible unless it will cause imminent risk of specific harms or dangers spelled out in clear policies," Zuckerberg told Facebook employees at the time in his defense of the company's inaction.

At CZI's town hall last week, Recode reported that the employee told Zuckerberg: "It only reflects reality to say that our leader's idea of free speech values calls to murder people for demonstrating over the political speech of the demonstrators themselves."

CZI's affiliation with Facebook — through Zuckerberg — has caused problems for its work and employees there who feel Facebook's reputation is undermining its mission.

According to Recode, CZI pulled the plug on a voter data project and Color of Change, a racial justice organization, turned down CZI money due to Facebook's reputation. In 2018, New York Magazine's the Intelligencer reported that students and parents in Brooklyn protested the group's education initiative over concerns about Facebook's track record on data privacy.

Zuckerberg has also been under pressure from his employees to do more to directly address systemic racism. More than 70 CZI employees signed a letter last week demanding major changes at the organization, and at least one Facebook employee resigned over the company's stance on Trump's posts.

The chorus of critics outside Facebook is also growing. Civil rights groups including the NAACP and Anti-Defamation League called last week for advertisers to boycott the platforms, and several major brands including Unilever, Verizon, Ben & Jerry's, The North Face, Patagonia, REI, and Eddie Bauer have already said they will temporarily pull ads from the platform.

CZI did not immediately respond to a request for comment on this story.

SEE ALSO: All of the companies no longer advertising on Facebook due to the platform's lack of hate speech moderation

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5 key takeaways from Amazon's $1 billion acquisition of self-driving startup Zoox (AMZN)

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Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos delivers remarks at grand opening of Washington Post newsroom in January 2016.

  • Amazon on Friday announced its acquisition of the self-driving startup Zoox.
  • Analysts say the deal can help Amazon in many ways by expanding its delivery capacity and cost efficiency.
  • Amazon declined to share the exact deal size, but reports indicate it's over $1 billion.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Amazon announced the acquisition of the self-driving startup Zoox on Friday, signaling its first big foray into the autonomous-vehicle space.

The deal is expected to be worth over $1 billion, according to The Information. Amazon declined to share the financial terms.

In a blog post announcing the deal, Amazon shared few details on how it planned to use Zoox's technology. Zoox's leadership team, including CEO Aicha Evans and Chief Technology Officer Jesse Levinson, will continue to run the company as a standalone business, Amazon said.

"Zoox is working to imagine, invent, and design a world-class autonomous ride-hailing experience," Jeff Wilke, Amazon's CEO of worldwide consumer, said in a statement. "Like Amazon, Zoox is passionate about innovation and about its customers, and we're excited to help the talented Zoox team to bring their vision to reality in the years ahead."

Analysts say the Zoox acquisition gives a good look into Amazon's thinking over a number of different areas, including its delivery expansion and future merger and acquisition strategy.

Here are five main takeaways from Amazon's Zoox acquisition:

It's a 'stepping stone' toward expanding Amazon's delivery network and capacity

Amazon's delivery network is likely the biggest beneficiary of this deal, according to Loup Ventures managing partner Andrew Murphy. It's no secret Amazon wants to automate more parts of its logistics operations, and Zoox's self-driving technology can help by ultimately eliminating the need for human drivers.

"Amazon has made it clear that they don't want to rely on third parties for delivery, and this is a logical progression of their efforts in the space," Murphy said. 

Anthony Chukumba, an analyst at Loop Capital, told Business Insider that the Zoox acquisition was a "stepping stone" toward eventually offering free same-day delivery to all Prime members. While the technology and regulatory issues remain for a wider deployment of self-driving delivery cars, he said Zoox's underlying technology would help Amazon significantly expand its delivery capacity and cost efficiency.

"Amazon needs more final mile delivery capacity," he said.

It can save billions of dollars for Amazon

In a note published on Friday, RW Baird analyst Colin Sebastian wrote that the $1 billion price tag was a bargain for Amazon, as Zoox's team could help save "many years of R&D" and "many billions of dollars" in logistics costs. 

Zoox's experience in advanced hardware engineering, electric-battery technology, and other automation software could help Amazon move two to three years ahead in the autonomous-vehicle space, Sebastian wrote. He also said the Amazon-Zoox combination could help serve as a "counterbalance" to the growing market share of Uber and Alphabet's Waymo.  

Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak wrote in a note published last month that a Zoox acquisition could help save more than $20 billion per year in shipping costs, saying it is be a "natural extension" of Amazon's efforts to build its own third-party logistics network.

It's a sign of bigger deals to come

At over $1 billion, Zoox is the second-largest acquisition in Amazon's history, following the $13.7 billion deal for Whole Foods in 2017. 

But Tom Forte, an analyst at DA Davidson, said deals of this size could become the norm for Amazon going forward. Amazon is a much larger company today than it has ever been, with a market cap well over $1 trillion, and it only makes sense to do larger deals if it wants to the acquisition to make a meaningful impact on its business.

"It takes more to move the needle for the company than it ever has in the past," Forte said.

RW Baird's Sebastian wrote in his report that it was worth noting Amazon's strong track record with M&A. Amazon has historically allowed acquired companies to run independently, partnering only in areas that could help both ways. Twitch, Ring, Zappos, Kiva, and Whole Foods are all good examples of that approach, though some acquisitions, like the Chinese online retailer Joyo.com, were duds.

It shows Amazon's ambitions in the auto industry and other markets, like ride-hailing and food delivery

The Zoox acquisition reaffirms Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos' growing interest in the general auto industry. Bezos previously told employees he was "very excited" about the auto industry because of all the innovation taking place, adding that it's a space he's willing to "participate in." The Zoox acquisition follows Amazon's investments in other auto-related startups in recent years, including the self-driving startup Aurora and the electric-vehicle maker Rivian.

Nowak at Morgan Stanley wrote in his report that in the long term, Zoox's acquisition could open the door for Amazon to get into the ride-hailing and food-delivery markets as well. For example, a discounted ride-hailing service for Prime members could be a meaningful driver of growth for Prime subscribers, he said. 

In fact, Amazon said in the blog post announcing the deal that it's acquiring Zoox "to help bring their vision of autonomous ride-hailing to reality."

It helps improve Amazon's energy efficiency and leadership diversity

Though the Zoox acquisition is mainly directed at improving Amazon's delivery capacity, it could have side benefits of improving the company's energy efficiency and leadership diversity, according to Loop Capital's Chukumba.

Part of Zoox's vision is to build zero-emission vehicles, which is in line with Amazon's commitment to be carbon-neutral by 2040. On Thursday, Amazon also announced it was renaming Seattle's KeyArena to the Climate Pledge Arena, inspired by the Climate Pledge initiative it cofounded last year.

On top of that, the fact that Zoox CEO Evans is a Black woman can help add much-needed diversity to Amazon, which is known for having very few women or people of color in its upper ranks. 

SEE ALSO: In a leaked document, Amazon employees shared stories of racism and gender discrimination while calling for a new leadership principle on 'inclusion'

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The Trump administration told Facebook and Twitter to remove posts that call for tearing down statues (FB, TWTR, SNAP, GOOG, GOOGL)

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The pedestal where the statue of Confederate general Albert Pike remains empty after it was toppled by protesters at Judiciary square in Washington, DC on June 20, 2020

  • The Trump administration is pressuring social media outlets to take action against posts that encourage toppling statues and other "criminal activity" amid nationwide protests.
  • The Department of Homeland Security sent a series of letters to companies including Facebook, Apple, Google, Twitter, and Snapchat encouraging them to take action against such posts. Business Insider obtained copies of the letters, which were sent Friday.
  • The letters do not take issue with any specific posts, but claim that social media has encouraged "burglary, arson, aggravated assault, rioting, looting, and defacing public property."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

As protests against police brutality and racism stretch into their fourth week across the US, the Trump administration is pressuring tech companies to take action against posts that encourage the toppling of statues, describing them as "criminal activity."

Department of Homeland Security Acting Secretary Chad Wolf sent letters to companies including Apple, Facebook, Google, Twitter, and Snapchat Friday. They claim that social media sites have enabled "burglary, arson, aggravated assault, rioting, looting, and defacing public property," according to copies of the letters obtained by Business Insider.

"It is up to you to decide how to handle content on your platforms. I hope you will do your
part in countering the misuse of your platforms to promote, incite, and coordinate criminal activity
that threatens the security of all Americans," Wolf wrote in a letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Protesters have torn down or vandalized dozens of statues across the US in the past month. The majority of them were monuments to Confederate soldiers, which protesters see as a glorification of slavery.

The DHS letters to tech companies don't mention any specific posts, but rather ask the platforms to "put an end" to posts that encourage the vandalism. The letters were first reported by The Washington Post.

A Twitter spokesperson told Business Insider it received the letter and intends to respond, but did not comment further.

Representatives for Apple, Google, Facebook, and Snapchat did not respond to requests for comment.

President Donald Trump has railed against protesters over the past month, and has repeatedly clashed with tech companies in the process.

After Trump tweeted about protests that "when the looting starts, the shooting starts," Twitter applied a disclaimer to his tweet stating that it broke Twitter's rules against glorifying violence, igniting more fury from the president. Twitter applied a similar label to a more recent Trump tweet threatening "serious force" against DC protesters.

More recently, Trump tweeted that he wants to imprison protesters for 10 years as punishment for destroying monuments.

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Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk's bitter rivalry could get a shot in the arm from Amazon's acquisition of the autonomous-vehicle startup Zoox (AMZN, TSLA)

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Zoox car self-driving

  • Amazon announced on Friday an agreement to acquire the autonomous-vehicle startup Zoox.
  • Experts have predicted that Amazon will use Zoox's technology to eventually deliver packages in self-driving vehicles.
  • But Amazon published a blog post on Friday indicating it is also interested in one day launching a robotaxi service, which would put the retail giant in direct competition with Tesla.
  • Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and Tesla CEO Elon Musk are already rivals in the rocket industry, and the two have criticized each other's business practices and ideas in the past.
  • Are you a current or former Tesla employee? Do you have an opinion about what it's like to work there? Contact this reporter at mmatousek@businessinsider.com, on Signal at 646-768-4712, or via his encrypted email address mmatousek@protonmail.com.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Amazon's acquisition of the autonomous-vehicle startup Zoox may amplify the rivalry between the retail giant's CEO, Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla and SpaceX.

"@JeffBezos is a copy [cat emoji] haha," Musk tweeted on Friday in response to a story about the deal.

Experts have predicted that Amazon will use Zoox's technology to eventually deliver packages in self-driving vehicles, but a blog post Amazon published on Friday, titled, "We're acquiring Zoox to help bring their vision of autonomous ride-hailing to reality," indicates the retail giant is also interested in launching a robotaxi service. Such a move would place Amazon in direct competition with Tesla, which is attempting to develop its own robotaxi service.

"We see Amazon (and other tech players) as clear competitors, not partners, vs. the likes of Tesla and GM," Morgan Stanley wrote in a note to clients published in May, after The Wall Street Journal reported that Amazon was in discussions to buy Zoox.

Bezos and Musk are already rivals in the rocket industry, where Bezos' Blue Origin and Musk's SpaceX are developing rockets and spaceships to send people to space. To that end, they are competing for billions of dollars worth of NASA contracts to create lunar-landing systems for the agency's astronauts. SpaceX has achieved more visible milestones so far, such as successfully landing and reusing rocket boosters and, in May, becoming the first company to send people into space on a privately developed and operated space vehicle.

Even before Musk's Friday tweet, he and Bezos had criticized each other's business practices and ideas. Earlier this month, Musk said Amazon should be broken up after it initially declined to publish a book written by a coronavirus skeptic (the company later reversed that decision). And in 2019, Bezos took an apparent jab at Musk's goal to send people to Mars, saying, "Go live on the top of Mount Everest for a year first and see if you like it, because it's a garden paradise compared to Mars."

In interviews with Business Insider, Asad Hussain, a mobility analyst at PitchBook, and Dan Ives, a managing director of equity research at Wedbush Securities, were split on whether Amazon or Tesla would be more likely to roll out a robotaxi service first.

"Right now, when it comes to robotaxis, you look at Tesla and Uber as the two that in this swim lane are well ahead of the competition," Ives said.

"We're more optimistic on Amazon/Zoox's prospects than Tesla's prospects in terms of rolling out a robotaxi service," Hussain said.

Some experts have said Tesla vehicles don't have the necessary hardware to drive without human assistance, and the electric-car maker has missed multiple deadlines related to autonomy. But the company has continued to expand the capabilities of its partially automated Autopilot system beyond what other automakers offer.

The research firm Guidehouse Insights placed Zoox ahead of Tesla in its 2020 ranking of companies developing autonomous mobility services (the list was published before Amazon's interest in Zoox was first reported), and Ives said having access to Amazon's vast financial resources should accelerate Zoox's progress.

"When Musk talks about a technology, just given SpaceX and Tesla and everything he's achieved...it has a lot more credibility with investors then maybe some other companies," Ives said. "But there's only one other person," who matches Musk's reputation for delivering on research-and-development projects, "and that's Bezos."

Are you a current or former Tesla employee? Do you have an opinion about what it's like to work there? Contact this reporter at mmatousek@businessinsider.com, on Signal at 646-768-4712, or via his encrypted email address mmatousek@protonmail.com.

SEE ALSO: Microsoft's $450 million decision to close retail stores is a smart move as the stores 'never had the same cache as Apple' and retail is uncertain in the pandemic, analysts say

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How to manually clear your 'Continue Watching' list on HBO Max

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HBO Max app logo

  • To clear the "Continue Watching" list on HBO Max, you simply need to use the list's "Edit" function.
  • If you don't finish a show or movie within 30 days, it's cleared from the Continue Watching list automatically.
  • The Continue Watching list lets you pick up where you left off in a show or movie.
  • Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

When you use HBO Max, it remembers where you left off in whatever TV shows and movies you've been watching. To pick up where you left off, you can select the show from the Continue Watching row on the Home page. 

This way you can continue watching without missing a beat, even if you return to a program on a different device than the one you started the program with. 

HBO Max keeps a show in the Continue Watching list for 30 days. If you don't finish it within that time, HBO assumes you aren't going to complete it and removes it from the list. 

You can manually clear your Continue Watching list too. Here's how to do it using any browser on a Mac or PC, or the mobile app on your iPhone, iPad, or Android device.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Apple Macbook Pro (From $1,299.00 at Apple)

Acer Chromebook 15 (From $179.99 at Walmart)

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Apple)

iPad (From $329.99 at Apple)

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $699.99 at Walmart)

How to clear Continue Watching on HBO Max

The steps to clear shows or movies from your Continue Watching list are the same regardless of which device you're using, and when you clear a show or movie on one device it'll be removed on all your devices.

1. Click or tap your profile icon. On the mobile app, you can find it in the lower-right corner, while it's in the upper-right in a browser on your computer. 

2. Click "Continue Watching."

How to clear Continue Watching on HBO Max 2

3. Click "Edit" on the right side of the screen.

4. Select "Remove" or the "X" to the right of the show or movie you want to clear.

How to clear Continue Watching on HBO Max 3

5. When you've cleared all the content you want to remove, click "Done."

 

Related coverage from Tech Reference:

SEE ALSO: The best MacBooks you can buy

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Facebook is going to start labeling posts from politicians that break its rules but are 'newsworthy' enough to remain on the platform (FB)

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  • Facebook has announced a raft of new rules and features amid a mounting boycott from advertisers over hate speech.
  • CEO Mark Zuckerberg says the company will now attach labels to "newsworthy" posts from politicians that break its rules.
  • It's also tightening up its rules on hate speech in advertising.
  • One civil rights group has already said Facebook's changes don't go far enough.

Facebook will start affixing labels to post from politicians violate its rules but it chooses to leave up because they are "newsworthy," in a major reversal of its prior policies.

On Friday, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a bevy of new policies around elections, voter suppression, and hate speech, as the company faces increasing ire from civil rights groups and an unprecedented advertiser boycott that has grown to include Unilever, Verizon, Patagonia, and others.

Zuckerberg did not directly address the advertisers fleeing the social network, but asserted his company's work to tackle hate speech was more advanced than competitors, and announced new rules including banning ads that claim that specific groups, races, religions, gender identities, and others are a "threat to the physical safety, health, or survival of others."

Facebook will also prohibit ads that express "contempt, dismissal or disgust" for immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers, or suggest that they're "inferior."

Facebook has struggled in recent weeks with how to deal with controversial posts by President Donald Trump, including one that discussed "shooting" in relation to protestors and looting. Twitter determined that the post glorified violence and attached a warning label to it — but Facebook disagreed, saying that it wasn't rule-breaking and arguing against adding such labels.

Facebook's decision sparked internal fury at the company, with hundreds of employees taking part in a "walk-out" protest— the largest worker revolt in the company's history.

Zuckerberg is now changing course, writing in a Facebook post: "We will soon start labeling some of the content we leave up because it is deemed newsworthy, so people can know when this is the case. We'll allow people to share this content to condemn it, just like we do with other problematic content, because this is an important part of how we discuss what's acceptable in our society — but we'll add a prompt to tell people that the content they're sharing may violate our policies."

Facebook will also add links to the "Voter Information Center" the company is building to all posts people make about voting, including ones from politicians. He said that "this isn't a judgement of whether the posts themselves are accurate," but it appears to be at least partially a response to Trump, who has shared false or inaccurate information about mail-in voting online.

Early signs suggest that the steps announced on Friday may not be enough to quell the growing advertiser boycott, however. Rashad Robinson, the president of Color of Change, one of the civil rights groups leading the campaign, responded on Twitter: "A few minutes into the statement, Mark Zuckerberg has already said that he won't be fact-checking politicians' claims. Already, this is nowhere near enough."

Got a tip? Contact Business Insider reporter Rob Price via encrypted messaging app Signal (+1 650-636-6268), encrypted email (robaeprice@protonmail.com), standard email (rprice@businessinsider.com), Telegram/Wickr/WeChat (robaeprice), or Twitter DM (@robaeprice). We can keep sources anonymous. Use a non-work device to reach out. PR pitches by standard email only, please.

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How to impress a Google Cloud recruiter, as the unit continues to hire faster than the rest of the company during the coronavirus crisis (GOOG)

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Sundar Pichai

  • Google's CEO announced in April the company would slow down hiring except in "strategic areas", like its cloud platform. 
  • The cloud unit had the most sizable employee increase of all of Google's product areas in 2019, and is continuing to hire despite the coronavirus crisis. 
  • There are a handful of valuable skills that help Google Cloud employees thrive, said Google Cloud's VP of Human Resources, Brigette McInnis-Day. 
  • Empathy, self-reflection, and a willingness to collaborate are all important.
  • Visit Business Insider Premium for more stories.

As the pandemic forces companies to tighten budgets and cut staff, the cloud industry appears to be thriving during the crisis, including within Google. 

Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced during April's quarterly earnings call that the company would "slow down the pace of hiring for the remainder of 2020, while maintaining momentum in a small number of strategic areas." One of those strategic areas: its cloud unit.

Google Cloud saw the largest employee increase in 2019, and is still hiring rapidly despite the slowdown across other product teams, the company says. 

"What we're doing in Cloud is being very deliberate about which targeted areas we need growth," Brigette McInnis-Day, Google Cloud's vice president of human resources, told Business Insider, adding that the unit is focused on its technology divisions, customer success, and emerging markets teams. 

In the eight months since McInnis-Day joined Google Cloud to help grow its team, she's found that there are a set of valuable interpersonal skills that help employees thrive. 

Now that Google's hiring process — which includes multiple interviews, often over several days — takes place entirely online, it can actually help those more subtle skills stand out. Talking with potential hires when both parties are at home "provides more confidence and comfort in themselves versus coming into a new environment," McInnis-Day said. 

"I think it's beneficial both for the candidate and for the interviewer because you see them in a more of a personal environment," she said, "So you get to see more of what the candidate shares with you."

McInnis-Day walked us through what Google is looking for in new hires, so if you want to impress a Google Cloud recruiter, here are the traits you should try to emphasize:

Brigette McInnis-DayEmpathy 

As the Google Cloud Platform continues to grow, the team actively recruits engineers that it believes can build products based on what customers need, according to McInnis-Day . 

"We're in a unique time," she said. "From a technical perspective, it's really asking questions to understand the business issues, to make sure we know what we're solving for."

Listening to feedback and following through is a big part of retaining customers and building trust, McInnis-Day said, and the technology team is just as active in Google's relationship-building process as the sales and customer service teams are. The ability to translate customer feedback into concrete product decisions requires empathy. 

"It's very important that the solution is mirroring what's needed," she said. 

Self-reflection

Self-reflection and empathy go hand-in-hand, McInnis-Day said. As the coronavirus pandemic forced workers across the country to stay at home — and with more companies considering permanent remote work— Google Cloud engineers were pushed to think about how it would impact the long-term goals for their products. In some cases, that meant redefining what was important. 

"They're very self reflective and they know what they need or want." McInnis-Day said of employees. "They know what questions to ask." 

Honest, open reflection is key to building strong, intuitive products at any tech company, she said. Software engineers should always think beyond standard benchmarks and not be too proud to ask questions. McInnis-Day often asks herself, "Are they going to challenge the status quo?"

"We're also finding high-humility in the people — the candidates — we're seeing," McInnis-Day said. "They can tolerate ambiguity and also can take risks."

Willingness to collaborate

Collaboration is encouraged across tech companies and fostered through the open work environments, plentiful places for employees to relax, and mini kitchens littered throughout campuses at Google, Facebook and Microsoft.

The need for effective, enthusiastic collaboration has only increased since local stay-at-home orders went into place, McInnis-Day said. Employees leverage in-house tools to work with their teams and bounce ideas off each other. 

"I think the piece that's been so amazing to me coming in to work at Google is their collaborative tools," McInnis-Day said. 

Online collaboration has been a big part of Google Cloud's growth in the last few months during the pandemic, she said: "And then we look for that in the candidates as well."

SEE ALSO: 

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Apple will let you change the iPhone's default web browser and email app in iOS 14, but any plans to change others like music or maps are still far away. Here's why. (AAPL)

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gmail on iphone

  • Apple will finally let iPhone owners set their favorite apps and services as their default web browser and mail apps in iOS 14.
  • But many were left wondering why Apple is only allowing custom app defaults for mail and web browsing and not other categories like music, maps, or calendar.
  • Apple's Craig Federighi recently told YouTube personality Marques Brownlee that Apple is taking a cautious approach by starting with just email and web browsing. 
  • But he also said that this is just where Apple is starting.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

When Apple's iOS 14 update launches this fall, iPhone owners will finally be able to set their email app and web browser of choice as their default option — a change that Apple fans have wanted for years.

That means if you prefer a web browser other than Apple's Safari — like Google Chrome —or an email app besides Apple's Mail app, you'll be able to set those services as your default apps when you click a link or compose an email.

Although it's a welcome addition that will add convenience for iPhone users, many were left wondering why Apple is only offering the option to choose defaults for web browsers and email apps and not other popular categories like maps or music.

Craig Federighi, Apple's senior vice president of software engineering, recently answered that question when speaking with tech critic and YouTube personality Marques Brownlee. Apple is essentially taking a cautious approach to prevent developers from trying to work around Apple's rules and potentially mislead users, Federighi said during the interview with Brownlee.

"We know how platforms can sort of descend into chaos," Federighi said. "Particularly when apps that might not honestly even be browsers decide they're going to be a browser, and try to hook into being your browser because maybe they could redirect you to a different tracked ad experience when you click on something." 

But he also added that this is just where Apple "started," possibly hinting that Apple may expand the available choices in the future. Apple started with email and web browsers because those were two categories consumers wanted to customize the most, Federighi said.

Apple has criteria in place that apps will have to meet in order to be set as a default email service or web browser. Only general purpose web browsing apps, like Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox, for example, will be able to be chosen as default web browsing options. This should prevent developers behind other types of apps, like games, from building web browsing capabilities into their apps just so they can be set as defaults. 

"We are very careful about making sure that that experience, that we don't have people getting misled," Federighi said.

The change could also help appease app developers at a time when Apple and other large tech companies have been caught in the middle of antitrust concerns. Critics like Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts have argued that Apple's position as being the operator of the iOS ecosystem and App Store gives its own services like Apple Music an unfair advantage against competitors. The European Commission also recently launched two antitrust probes into Apple over Apple Pay and its App Store policies.

Apple announced its new version of iOS as well as other critical updates for its most important products during its Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday. The update will roll out to iPhones this fall. 

You can watch the full interview below. 

 

SEE ALSO: Apple spent its biggest conference of the year playing catch-up to Android rather than setting the stage for the iPhone's future

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Kygo's wireless headphones aren't aimed at audiophiles, but they still provide an enjoyable sound and noise cancellation for a budget-friendly sale price of just $170

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Kygo Headphones

  • Kygo's A11/800 headphones feature a fashionable design that all buyers can appreciate, but their style will appeal the most to fans of the Norwegian DJ behind the brand.
  • With up to 40 hours of playback, the headphones' battery life is more than enough to last a week, even with a lengthy commute or listening session each day.
  • There's plenty of volume and a rich sound with lots of bass, plus an app with an unusual graphic equalizer to help tailor the sound further.
  • The regular $249 price is already a good value considering the features you get, but at a current sale price of just $170, the headphones are an even better buy. 

A music producer making headphones? Well, it worked for Beats by Dre, so why not Norwegian DJ Kygo? In fact, I've only heard of Kygo due to his exploits in the world of tech, starting with headphones and speakers, and more recently a partnership with Skagen to produce a special edition Falster 3 smartwatch. 

Kygo's latest headphones are the A11/800, which sit at the top of the brand's range. The headphones feature Bluetooth support and active noise cancelling technology, just like you'd expect from a pair of expensive cans. Except, at a regular price of $249 and frequent discounts below $200, the A11/800 undercut many competitors. 

Should you be tempted? Apple's Beats line has cornered the market in DJ-backed headphones, and has steadily grown into a mega-brand with the tech to match its bold and bassy sound. Can Kygo and the A11/800 compete? I've been listening for a week to see if Beats should beat it. 

Specifications

  • Weight: 250 grams/8.8 ounces
  • Drivers: 40mm
  • Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.0, NFC, 3.5mm 
  • Codecs: AptX, AptX LL, AAC
  • Battery: 40 hours without ANC, 19 hours with ANC, two hours charging using USB Type-C
  • App: Kygo Life for iOS and Android 

Kygo Headphones

Design

The Kygo A11/800 are made from plastic with faux leather covering their memory foam ear cups, and a soft padded headband. My review model is in a stark white, and a black version is also available. The construction is solid, in that they don't feel badly made, but they do creak and groan when flexed and folded up. I noticed this especially when out walking and listening to spoken word, moving my head quickly when listening at home, and when unfolding the headphones before putting them on.

I like the simple, minimalist design. The all-white body looks cool, and the large Xs on each ear cup gives the headphones some visual interest, without going overboard with the branding. Wearing them isn't going to suddenly promote you as a huge Kygo fan, which increases the appeal to those who don't know who the DJ is. The cups are just the right size too, perfectly maintaining a sleek profile on your head, while the headphones fold down into a handy size when you're done. 

They have a vice-like grip on your head so they won't come loose. With that said, they aren't really suited for use in the gym or while exercising, as the ear cups quickly make your ears sweat. Combine this with the heavier than expected weight and a grip that won't give up, and the A11/800s aren't great for extended listening sessions. On the plus side, they don't pull on my glasses much, which is a pleasant change compared to other tightly fitting headphones.

Controls are located on the right ear cup and are a mixture of physical and touch sensitive buttons. The power, ANC, and ambient sound modes are controlled by three physical buttons on the side of the cup. These are easily located and you're told through the headphones the mode you're in, which is very helpful. 

The touch controls are less successful with an unacceptably slow reaction time, meaning I get caught in an endless play/pause loop. There's a proximity sensor to pause the music when you take the headphones off. This works well but only when you take the headphones off completely, not just off your ears to leave the headphones hanging around your neck.

Annoying creaks and limpet-like fit aside, the Kygo A11/800s are a stylish, fashionable pair of headphones that I'm proud to wear out and about. 

Performance

There is a 40mm driver inside each ear cup, and they are capable of delivering ear-splitting levels of volume. It's not the most detailed sound, but there's no question these are seriously loud. When listening to Spotify on an iPhone 11 Pro I have no need to take the headphones above half volume. This isn't really a complaint. It's nice to wear a pair of headphones that has power in reserve for when I really want to block out the world.

The balanced sound they deliver is really great, and the headphones clearly define vocals, mids, and bass in the soundstage. Where your typical Beats headphones prioritize the bass, the A11/800s add a similar degree of punch to a beautifully rounded soundstage. If my sweaty ears didn't make me take the Kygo's off after a bit, I probably wouldn't want to. The engaging, bright sound is really addictive. 

I listened to Twice's entire new "More & More" EP, with the excellent Shadow being the standout track. The A11/800s center the stunning, crystal clear lead vocals, and excite with some superb stereo separation. Listening to Clozee's "Inner Peace" further demonstrates the A11/800s' strengths, resulting in solid, punchy bass, bright mids, and a tight center-biased soundstage. Blackpink's bombastic "Kill This Love" encourages you to turn up the volume, and from the angry lyrics to the stream of low bass towards the end of the track, it sounds fantastic when you do. 

Performance isn't perfect though. I'm not hearing anything new through the A11/800s, and the sound can get muddled and harsh at higher volumes when listening to complex tracks. There is noticeable background hiss between tracks which concerns me, and with the ANC on it gets even worse. I don't think it makes any difference to the music, but it does make me concerned about why it's there in the first place. In addition to AptX, it's good to see AptX LL, the low latency codec designed for gaming, ensuring even with a wireless connection the on-screen action syncs with the audio. 

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Noise cancellation and app

The sound quality is affected when you switch on the ANC, and worse, there is a noticeable increase in pressure around the ears when you use ANC. The Kygo A11/800s tightly seal around your ears and you definitely notice the change when the ANC kicks in. When out walking, the ANC minimizes the sound from traffic around me, but not as effectively as Sony's WH-1000XM3. In the home, the Kygos remove voices around you, and the ambient sound of washing machines and kettles. 

They provide a good escape, but the extra pressure does affect the sound quality a little too much. The sound is fuller, brighter, and more enjoyable with ANC off, and with deeper bass response when on. Download the Kygo Life app and you can switch on the ANC through it instead of using the button on the headphones. The app also allows you to activate the headphones' Awareness or Ambient mode. Awareness lets in 50% of the surrounding noise and all the voices, while nothing is filtered out using Ambient mode. 

The main reason you'll want to download the app is for the equalizer, but don't think you're going to get a few sliders and that's it. Instead of this, there are four cities (stay with me here) on the four sides of the screen — New York, Ibiza, Los Angeles, and Bergen. You move a spot around the screen to tune the sound, which Kygo says matches the vibe of the city, or something. It's partially successful, and I did manage to find a setting that sounds better than the flat curve, but most spots sound pretty bad otherwise. Overall, I recommend just leaving the equalizer settings as they come out of the box. 

Battery life and connection

Connection is quick and simple, and doesn't require the app if you don't want to download it. With that said, firmware updates may be delivered through the app in the future, so it's probably worth downloading either way. The Kygo A11/800s use Bluetooth 5.0 but I've found the range to be a little shorter than other headphones. I encounter stutters and pauses around 26 feet away from the device. However, with my phone in my pocket, the connection is rock-steady. 

The battery life is supposed to be around 40 hours without ANC, or 19 hours with ANC. I've used a mixture of modes during my review and the headphones passed 30 hours, which is excellent. I've only had to charge them once and that was after more than a week of daily use. Charge time is two hours and performed using a USB Type-C cable. A 3.5mm cable is included if the headphones run out of power and you still want to listen. The battery life is a serious benefit here, and I'm constantly surprised by how slowly the battery meter in the Kygo Life app seems to decrease. 

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The bottom line

Ignore the creaky chassis and annoying background hiss, and the Kygo A11/800s deliver a fun, enjoyable sound with more volume than you'll ever want. The battery life is excellent and will definitely appeal to those who either forget to charge headphones, or want a set that lasts a week of lengthy commuting. The ANC works well, but does affect the sound, and these aren't the most detailed headphones available. For the price, the Kygo A11/800s are a good value, but if you spend more you can find a pair of headphones with much better sound quality. 

What are your alternatives?

The $299 Beats Solo Pro are the obvious competitor, sharing the ANC feature and delivering a bass-heavy sound with a lifestyle-driven design. The Sony WH-1000XM3s have better ANC and a sweet, detailed sound, but they will cost you around $350. 

We really like the sound delivered by Master & Dynamic's over-ear headphones as well, and recommend the $249 MH40s, but if you want ANC you'll have to splash out $499 for the MW65s. Sennheiser's $350 Momentum 3 headphones are very impressive all round, but are much larger and more expensive. 

Though overall performance isn't as strong as the competitors listed above, the Kygo A11/800 headphones offer a lot of value for their price. Buyers who want the best noise cancellation performance and sound quality will have to spend more, but the Kygo A11/800 are a solid purchase for listeners with less demanding audio needs.     

For even more headphone recommendations, check out our best noise-cancelling headphones guide.

Pros: Reasonably priced, effective noise cancellation, lots of volume, long battery life

Cons: Plastic case creaks, background hiss frustrates, can cause ears to get hot

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I've reviewed a few Hisense TVs in the past, but the company's latest $699 Quantum Series display is the first that I can wholeheartedly recommend without reservations

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Hisense H8G 4K TV lifestyle

  • Hisense's new 65-inch H8G 4K TV is a budget-friendly High Dynamic Range (HDR) display with impressive picture quality.
  • The TV includes local dimming for deep black levels, along with quantum dot technology for wide color capabilities.
  • The Android TV platform is integrated as well, enabling extensive smart TV support with Google Assistant voice control.   
  • For a current sale price of $699.99, the 65-inch H8G is one of the top performers in this price range.

 

Table of Contents

The market for 65-inch TVs in the under $1,000 price range has changed dramatically over the last five years. Impressive bang-for-your buck display models from companies like Vizio and TCL have been game-changers in this space, packing advanced features into surprisingly affordable packages. 

A third manufacturer, Hisense, has also been making strides in the value-priced TV arena, but its displays have typically fallen short of similarly priced models from Vizio and TCL. Starting with its 2019 lineup, however, the company began to step up its game in color and contrast, thanks in large part to the addition of full-array local dimming and quantum dots to more models in its lineup.

This improved quality now continues with Hisense's brand-new 2020 Quantum Series. The collection is led by the flagship H9G, but it's the slightly less advanced H8G that might offer the best overall value. In fact, the H8G is the first Hisense TV I've reviewed that I can wholeheartedly recommend as a comparable or, in some cases, even superior alternative to similarly priced models from Vizio and TCL.     

Design

The H8G isn't exactly a standout when it comes to style, but considering its budget-friendly pricing, the display offers a decent enough design. 

At 3.1 inches deep, the panel is a little thicker than some similar offerings. Metal left and right feet stands are also included and must be screwed into the bottom of the panel after unpacking. The top and sides of the panel feature a virtually bezel-less frame, while a thicker border rests at the bottom of the screen. With that said, the image itself does not reach the edges of the panel when the TV is turned on. Instead, a thin black border is visible around the image.

Most of the display's inputs are located on the back left side of the panel, including three side-facing HDMI (one audio return channel, or ARC). A fourth HDMI port is located in a rear-facing position to the right of the rest of the connections. Though many new 2020 TVs from other brands are starting to include HDMI 2.1 ports, the H8G sticks with older HDMI 2.0b ports. This shouldn't be a big issue for most people, but it does prevent the TV from supporting a few advanced features, like enhanced Audio Return Channel (eARC) and Variable Refresh Rate (VRR).

A black remote with rubber buttons and integrated Google Assistant voice control is also included. The remote is nothing special but it functions well, and it's an improvement over older Hisense remotes which had plastic navigation buttons that all sat flush with one another. This made it hard to feel your way around different buttons when watching movies in the dark. Thankfully, the new remote makes it easier to distinguish between different buttons. 

Specs

hisense H8G 4K TV

  • 65-inch VA LCD panel
  • 4K Ultra HD 3,840 x 2,160 resolution
  • 60Hz native refresh rate
  • Full-array local dimming with 90 zones
  • Dolby Vision, HDR10, and HDR10+ support
  • Quantum dot technology with wide color gamut capabilities
  • Measures 57.0×35.8×11.1 inches with feet stand attached
  • Weighs 44.1 pounds with feet stand attached
  • Four HDCP 2.2 compliant HDMI 2.0b inputs (one ARC)
  • Android TV platform with Google Assistant
  • Wi-Fi and Ethernet connectivity
  • 10w x 2 speakers
  • Click button remote with voice control

Setup

Like most modern smart TVs, setting the display up is a fairly simple process, but you will need an internet connection to get the TV updated and synced with your Google account. Once you turn the display on for the first time, the TV will walk you through a series of general configurations, terms of service agreements, and privacy setting options. It also offers a handy option to use an Android phone for the setup process, which easily lets you carry over your Google account info and Wi-Fi settings to the TV. 

After the initial configuration process, you can go ahead and access various streaming apps through the TV's interface, or switch inputs to your cable box, antenna, or other connected media devices. I use an Onkyo AV receiver connected to the TV's HDMI Audio Return Channel (ARC). The receiver is hooked up to an LG 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray player, a Nintendo Switch, and an Xbox One X. All of my components are correctly passed through to the TV with full 4K HDR support when available.  

If you'd like to tweak the default image settings, the TV includes an extensive assortment of picture calibration modes. For the most accurate Standard Dynamic Range (SDR) out-of-box picture in a dark room, I recommend using the Theater Dark mode with Color Temperature set to Low and Local Dimming set to High. If you're watching in a brighter environment, you should use the Theater Day mode. Meanwhile, when watching HDR10 videos you should use the HDR Theater mode, and when watching Dolby Vision videos you should use the Dolby Vision Bright mode.

Picture performance

Hisense H8G 4K TV

For a 4K TV in this price range, the Hisense H8G is a genuinely impressive display. It holds its own against other leading mid-range models, like the Vizio M-Series Quantum and the TCL 6 Series. Performance can't rival high-end TVs from LG, Samsung, and Sony, but the H8G actually looks better than several more expensive mid-tier models from those brands. 

The H8G's strong picture quality is largely a result of two display technologies: quantum dots and full-array local dimming. Quantum dots allow the TV to cover the DCI-P3 wide color gamut. This means that when you watch HDR movies on the TV, you're able to enjoy the full spectrum of colors you'd see in theaters. Full-array local dimming, meanwhile, allows the TV's LED panel to dim and brighten in specific sections across the screen. This results in deeper black levels and more precise highlights. 

LED TVs without these two features tend to produce washed out contrast and milky black levels. These flaws are less noticeable when watching TV in a bright room, but if you're someone who likes to watch movies in a dark home theater setting, then you'll definitely appreciate the benefits that local dimming and quantum dots provide.  

The H8G's implementation of local dimming uses 90 zones on the 65-inch model. Generally, the more zones a TV has, the better its  black level and contrast performance will be. So, 90 is a very solid number for a display in this class. For comparison's sake, the 65-inch Vizio M-Series Quantum also uses 90 zones, while the 65-inch TCL 6 Series uses 120 zones.     

In practice, the local dimming translates into strong black level performance, allowing dark scenes to appear nice and inky. It also helps the TV achieve a peak brightness of around 700 nits. A lot of HDR movies and shows are graded for 1,000 nits, so the H8G can get fairly close to covering the range that content creators have in mind.  

To test the TV's picture quality, I watched a variety of 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray discs and streaming titles, including many Dolby Vision, HDR10, and HDR10+ movies and shows. Though I initially ran into some odd issues with HDR10+ content, which resulted in images appearing desaturated, an update corrected this problem.

Overall, 4K HDR movies and TV shows look wonderful on the display, no matter what format they're in. Movies filled with bright colors, like "Aquaman", pop with impressive intensity while avoiding any color bleeding or harshness. The climactic underwater battle in "Aquaman" is an especially impressive showcase for the H8G's contrast and color performance, with specular highlights that dazzle and intricate fine details.

The opening scene of "The Matrix," meanwhile, offers a telling demonstration of the TV's local dimming and black level performance, resulting in inky shadows. As police officers search for Trinity in a dark apartment, their flashlights create bright highlights against deep blacks, without any noticeable artifacts.  

With that said, black level performance isn't perfect. Like all local dimming TVs, there are times when you can see the zones at work and blooming around bright objects is occasionally visible. A scene in "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" where the kids are approaching Hogwarts in boats at night is a fitting example of this. The lights on the boats cause bright halos to bleed out into the shadows, giving the scene's contrast a patchy look.

As a whole, though, blooming and vignetting are actually pretty mild on the H8G. In fact, the TV seems to favor raising the black levels across the screen as a way to help combat uneven blooming. A test pattern of a moving starfield reveals this behavior. On other local dimming TVs I've reviewed, the starfield often appears patchy, with quadrants of stars visible against pitch black space. On the H8G, however, the starfield remains nice and uniform with all the stars visible, but the dark space between the stars isn't pitch black. 

In other words, black levels on the H8G are sometimes a bit lighter than some other local dimming TVs and overall contrast isn't quite as high. This gives the TV's image a slightly flatter look compared to the TCL 6 Series. But, on the plus side, uneven blooming is less frequent.   

Like most LCD TVs that use a Vertical Alignment (VA) panel, the H8G doesn't have particularly wide viewing angles. Colors and contrast distort when viewing the picture from the side. This is common for TVs of this type, however, and performance is on par with other mid-range models. Overall screen uniformity is decent, but I do notice some light vertical lines with slight brightness differences across the screen now and then, particularly when playing HDR video games. Again, artifacts like this are pretty common for TVs of this type, and I don't think most buyers will be distracted by these minor flaws. 

Android TV features

Hisense H8G TV Google Assistant

Honestly, I've never been a huge fan of the Android TV platform. I find the interface to be a bit drab and performance has been very hit and miss across different devices I've tried. An older Hisense Android TV I reviewed was particularly problematic, with odd glitches related to the TV's settings menu that caused different modes to activate unintentionally, while also making it impossible to adjust the picture in certain apps.

Though I'm still not terribly impressed by the visual interface, my experience with Android TV has been a lot better on the H8G, and there are no major glitches to report. The platform seamlessly integrates with existing Google accounts, and includes access to a large selection of apps. Virtually any popular service you could want is featured, including Disney Plus, Netflix, Google Play, YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, and Vudu. HBO Max is also supported, which is noteworthy since that service is currently missing from Roku and Amazon Fire TV devices. The only major app that isn't currently available is Apple TV Plus.  

The interface is broken up into a series of rows, with sections for Apps, Play Next, and various recommendations. General navigation between menus is fairly responsive, but the Hulu app is unusually slow compared to other services on the display, and there can be some lag in other apps as well. 4K HDR playback and Dolby Atmos are also supported through most apps that offer such features. 

Google Assistant support is integrated, and the included voice remote works well. Content searches are accurate and the system does a nice job interpreting my spoken commands. That said, the results don't always include options for all the apps that titles are available on. Other queries, like weather and general questions, are also typically handled well, allowing you to ask the TV for details on everything from traffic to cocktail recipes.  

All things considered, the H8G's Android TV implementation is responsive and comprehensive enough that most buyers will find little need to supplement the TV with a separate streaming box or streaming stick.   

The bottom line

I've been less than impressed with some older Hisense TV models, but starting with the company's 2019 lineup, the brand has really stepped things up. Thankfully, that trend continues with its new 2020 65-inch H8G 4K TV. At $699.99, the display is one of the better 4K TVs you can buy in this price range.

Overall picture quality can't compete with flagship sets that cost over $1,000, but if you want an affordable 65-inch display with solid home theater capabilities, Google Assistant support, and a large collection of smart TV apps, the H8G is an excellent purchase.   

What are your alternatives? 

The Hisense H8G's primary competitors are the Vizio M-Series Quantum and the TCL 6-Series. All three TVs offer pretty similar performance and all three incorporate quantum dots and full-array local dimming. In general, the TCL can produce deeper black levels with better overall contrast, but it's a little more expensive and it tends to display more vignetting. Meanwhile, the Vizio is also a very strong performer, but I actually prefer the Android TV interface on the H8G compared to the SmartCast platform. 

If you're willing to pay over $1,000 for a 65-inch TV, there are better options from companies like LG, Sony, and Samsung, but in the $699.99 range, the H8G is better than any comparatively priced model from those brands. 

In addition to the 65-inch model we reviewed, the H8G is also available in a 75-inch size for $1,299.99, a 55-inch size for $499.99, and a 50-inch size for $399.99. The 50-inch model is especially noteworthy as it's becoming more difficult to find TVs with this level of performance at that size. 

Pros: Support for all three major HDR formats, 700 nits of peak brightness, local dimming, Android TV platform with a large selection of apps, voice remote with Google Assistant 

Cons: Overall contrast isn't quite as high as some competing models from TCL and Vizio, viewing angles are mediocre, smart TV navigation can be a little sluggish, no HDMI 2.1 ports

 

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NOW WATCH: How waste is dealt with on the world's largest cruise ship


Trump jokes that he helped design US Navy's newest 'yacht with missiles'

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Navy guided-missile frigate FFG(X

  • President Donald Trump jokingly accepted responsibility for the aesthetic design of the US Navy's latest series of guided-missile ships.
  • "The ships that they were building, they look terrible," Trump said. "I would change designs, I looked at it. I said, 'That's a terrible-looking ship, let's make it beautiful. It'll cost you the same, and maybe less.'"
  • "It's like a yacht with missiles on it," he added.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

President Donald Trump jokingly accepted responsibility for the aesthetic design of the US Navy's latest series of guided-missile ships.

"The ships that they were building, they look terrible," Trump said in a Thursday speech at the shipyard in Wisconsin where these warships are built. "I would change designs, I looked at it. I said, 'That's a terrible-looking ship, let's make it beautiful. It'll cost you the same, and maybe less.'"

"You know, sometimes, you can make it look great for less money," Trump added. "I said, 'This is not a good-looking ship. Let's change the design of it.' And I got people in, and we looked at different designs, and as long as we're going to do it and ... how beautiful it is, they gave me a beautiful model that's absolutely, it's like a yacht with missiles on it."

The Navy's Guided Missile Frigate (FFG) program calls for 20 of the ships — the first two costing a little over $1 billion and subsequent ships costing $940 million each, according to a government report in June. These less-expensive, small surface combatants are designed to support larger Navy groups and operate independently; and are equipped with anti-air, anti-surface, and anti-submarine capabilities.

Wisconsin-based shipbuilding firm Marinette Marine Corporation, whose parent company is based in Italy, was awarded a $5.5 billion initial contract for the design and construction of the first 10 frigates by 2035. The frigate's design is based off of an Italy's Fregata Europea Multi-Missione frigate.

"The Navy's Guided-Missile Frigate ... will be an important part of our future fleet," Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Mike Gilday said in April, adding that it was "the evolution of the Navy's Small Surface Combatant with increased lethality, survivability, and improved capability to support the National Defense Strategy across the full range of military operations.

"It will no doubt help us conduct distributed maritime operations more effectively, and improve our ability to fight both in contested blue-water and littoral environments," Gilday added.

SEE ALSO: This 'nerdy' Special Forces soldier is getting paid to play 'Call of Duty' in the US Army

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Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian is leaving his venture capital firm Initialized Capital

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Alexis Ohanian

  • Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian is leaving his VC firm Initialized Capital.
  • Per an Axios report, Ohanian is interested in pursuing pre-seed investing versus the seed-stage investments that Initialized is known for.
  • The departure comes weeks after Ohanian stepped down from Reddit's board and instead urged the company to fill the role with a Black candidate.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Alexis Ohanian is leaving the Silicon Valley venture capital firm Initialized, according to an Axios report. 

Initialized specializes in more traditional seed-stage investing. Ohanian, per Axios, is interested in pursuing "pre-seed" investments, which would entail working with companies in the earliest stages of development. He'll still work with the firm's existing portfolio companies.

Ohanian cofounded Initialized with Garry Tan in 2011. Starting in 2014, Ohanian was less involved as he began to focus on operations at Reddit, but returned full-time in 2018.

The departure comes weeks after Ohanian announced he was stepping down from Reddit's board, urging the company to fill his role with a Black candidate amid widespread demonstrations protesting systematic racism in the US.

"I believe resignation can actually be an act of leadership from people in power right now," Ohanian said at the time, citing his family as one of the reasons for spurring the act. Ohanian is married to tennis star and champion Serena Williams.

SEE ALSO: Alexis Ohanian has left Reddit's board in a 'long overdue' move. Here's how he launched Reddit into a $3 billion behemoth and became an outspoken activist in the tech world.

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NOW WATCH: Here's what it's like to travel during the coronavirus outbreak

Read the pitch deck that buzzy startup Devoted Health used to reach a $1.8 billion valuation before it signed up a single customer

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Devoted Health wants to change the way the U.S. takes care of its senior citizens, and it has big plans in its first five years to do just that.

Todd Park

The startup, which has been gathering lots of buzz in the last year, was founded to sell private health insurance plans to U.S. seniors, a market that is growing rapidly as Baby Boomers age.

Using one pitch deck, Devoted Health managed to secure $300 million from investors in a funding round led by Andreessen Horowitz late last year, with a valuation of $1.8 billion – all before it signed up a single customer.

But the deck also outlined the company's aggressive plans for its first five years. Devoted Health planned to sign up 5,000 members for 2019 and grow that to 103,722 by 2023. It expects to make about $1.2 billion in revenue in 2023 while generating a small net loss.

Here's what else Devoted Health laid out in the pitch deck:

  • How the company, in part, plans to make money by owning its own medical group in addition to the insurance operation
  • Its plan to take on the healthcare giants in Medicare Advantage
  • Why it thinks it can generate better margins than other Medicare Advantage health insurers
  • How the company can eclipse 100,000 members
  • And more about the company's aggressive five-year plan

BI Prime is publishing dozens of stories like this each and every day. Want to get started by reading the full pitch deck?

>> Download it now FREE

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In leaked memo to advertisers, Facebook's top ad exec promises an external audit of its safety tools and practices and tries to talk fleeing advertisers off the ledge

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carolyn everson facebook

  • In a new memo sent on Friday, Facebook's VP of global marketing solutions Carolyn Everson assured advertisers that the company is serious about addressing the major concerns of civil-rights groups leading a boycott of the platform to protest hate speech and divisive content.
  • Everson said that the company was committing to a third-party audit of its Community Standard Enforcement Report (CSER). She also said that Facebook was considering nine product recommendations by the boycott organizers.
  • Everson said that Facebook is exploring how to extend the offerings in its Brand Safety Hub more broadly, and was also exploring giving moderators better tools for moderating content and membership to Groups.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook's top ad executive assured advertisers that the company is serious about addressing the major concerns of civil-rights groups leading a boycott of the platform to protest hate speech and divisive content.

In a new memo sent on Friday, Facebook's VP of global marketing solutions Carolyn Everson said that the company was committing to a third-party audit of its Community Standard Enforcement Report (CSER). She also said that Facebook was considering nine product recommendations by the boycott organizers, and outlined the steps it had already taken to that end.

A Facebook spokeswoman confirmed the authenticity of Everson's memo but did not provide additional comment.

Everson said that while the report already includes figures on the total amount of hate speech that the company removes, and the proportion of hate speech that it detects proactively before it is reported, it would now also add the prevalence of hate speech to the report over the coming year. She added that Facebook was also working with the industry group Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM) to identify appropriate brand safety audit requirements, and would then work with the Media Ratings Council on an audit of its brand safety tools and practices.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his deputies, including Everson, have been making the rounds to assure top advertisers that the company is making progress on stamping down hate speech. The social media giant is reaching out to ad agencies as it faces mounting pressure over its content moderation policies and its handling of President Donald Trump's posts in the aftermath of George Floyd's death in police custody.

In the memo, Everson also said that Facebook is exploring how to extend the offerings in its Brand Safety Hub more broadly, after launching several new tools last month to give advertisers more control over where their ads appear within in-stream placements. She did note, however, that Facebook was unable to provide complete access to the content it deletes, but did provide metadata like the publisher name, video title, and ad impressions.

"We have absolutely no desire to profit from hate or misinformation of any kind, and while there are substantial technical challenges to extending the offerings in the Brand Safety Hub more broadly, we are exploring what is possible," she wrote.

Facebook is also exploring giving moderators better tools for moderating content and membership to Groups on its platform, and ways to make moderators more accountable for the content in groups they moderate, according to the memo. 

Everson also pointed to the new policies that Facebook announced on June 26 to address growing calls from civil rights groups to clamp down on racist and hurtful content on its platform. In a livestreamed address, Zuckerberg said that the company would expand its ad policy to prohibit claims that people with a specific race, ethnicity, sexual orientation or religion are a threat to anyone else. Facebook said it would also begin labeling content deemed "newsworthy" like a speech from a politician — even if it violates the company's policies.

Read Everson's memo below:

Hi All,

I wanted to update you on several new developments and provide you with a response to the 9 product recommendations by the boycott organizers. We have significant work underway to address the major concerns expressed by those calling for the boycott but acknowledge there is much more work to do. 

Mark just announced some important changes:

Changing our policies to better protect immigrants, migrants, refugees and asylum seekers. We've already prohibited dehumanizing and violent speech targeted at these groups - now we're banning ads suggesting these groups are inferior or express contempt, dismissal or disgust directed at them.

Banning posts that make false claims about ICE agents checking for immigration papers at polling places, or other threats meant to discourage voting. We will use our Election Operations Center to work with state election authorities to remove false claims about polling conditions in the 72 hours leading up to election day.


Labeling content that we leave up because it is deemed newsworthy, so people can know when this is the case. We'll allow people to share this content to condemn it, just like we do with other problematic content, because this is an important part of how we discuss what's acceptable in our society -- but we'll add a prompt to tell people that the content they're sharing may violate our policies.

These changes are the result of direct feedback from the civil rights community collected through our civil rights audit. That audit has been led by Laura Murphy, a noted civil rights expert, Megan Cacace, a partner at the respected civil rights law firm of Relman & Colfax.

In addition to the changes that Mark announced, I want you to know that we are also committing to the following important steps:

A third-party audit of our Community Standard Enforcement Report (CSER) which will be completed by a Big 4 Firm, and will include the incidence of violating content.
Adding the prevalence of hate speech to CSER over the coming year (CSER already includes the total amount of hate speech that we remove, as well as the proportion of hate speech that we detect proactively before it is reported).
We are working with the Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM) to identify appropriate brand safety audit requirements. We are committed to then working with the Media Ratings Council on an audit of our brand safety tools and practices.

I also want to respond to the 9 product recommendations from the boycott organizers to describe work that is already underway and areas where we are exploring further changes.

The first set of recommendations ask that we provide more support to people who are targets of racism, antisemitism, and hate.

The first recommendation is to create a separate moderation pipeline staffed by experts on identity-based hate for users who express they have been targeted because of specific identity characteristics. Today, hate speech reports on Facebook are already automatically funneled to a set of reviewers with specific training in our identity-based hate policies in 50 markets covering 30 languages. In addition, we consult with experts on identity-based hate in developing and evolving the policies that these trained reviewers enforce.

The second recommendation is to put targets of hate and harassment in touch with Facebook. We agree it is important to provide support to people who have been targeted on our platform. Our approach, developed in consultation with experts, is to follow up with people who report hate speech and tell them about the actions we've taken. We also provide user controls that allow people to moderate comments on their posts, block other users, and control the visibility of their posts by creating a restricted list. We are open to exploring ways to put people who report hate speech in touch with additional resources to find support, as we do do when people report content for suicide and self-injury. That could include helping people connect with organizations who counter hate speech and harassment in their communities.

The third recommendation is to provide more granular information about identity-based hate speech reports. We are committed to continuing to improve transparency about our Community Standards enforcement, and as I mentioned above, we intend to include the prevalence of hate speech in future CSER reports, pending no further complications from COVID-19.

We also hear the request to understand the kinds of hate speech that people report to us - including whether a report is based on a specific protected characteristic like ethnicity. As we have been improving our ability to recognize hate speech proactively across languages and geographies, we have prioritized speed and our ability to remove hate speech. While that has helped us tackle hate in the aggregate, we understand there are gaps felt for how hate can impact individuals or specific groups. We deeply value the views and experiences of groups wounded by hate. We will continue to support efforts to understand how particular communities are targeted by hate on our platform and the connections between online and offline hate, but we don't yet have specific detail on the frequency of attacks on specific groups on our platform.

The next set of recommendations focuses on how we can ensure we do not generate revenue from hate speech or misinformation - including preventing ads from appearing near content labeled as hate or misinformation, telling advertisers how often their ads have appeared next to this content, providing refunds to those advertisers, and providing an audited transparency report.

In response, we first want to emphasize again that hate speech violates our community standards and we remove it as soon as possible. We also work with third-party fact checkers to identify misinformation, and we put prominent labels and reduce the distribution of content or disapprove related ads if the content is rated false or partly false on our platform.

We already take some steps to help advertisers understand how their ads show up on our services, and to provide refunds in certain circumstances. For example, we have built a Brand Safety Hub where advertisers can review publishers, individual in-stream videos, and instant articles in which their ads were embedded. We refund advertisers when ads run in videos or instant articles that are later rated false or partly false by our third party fact checkers. We are not able to provide complete access to content that has been deleted, including for violating our Community Standards, but we do provide metadata such as the publisher name, video title, and ad impressions in these circumstances.

We have absolutely no desire to profit from hate or misinformation of any kind, and while there are substantial technical challenges to extending the offerings in the Brand Safety Hub more broadly, we are exploring what is possible. It will take some time for us to do this, and to obtain more detailed feedback about the systems and controls that would work for our advertisers and our community.

With respect to transparency and audits, our Community Standards Enforcement Reports provide extensive information about our efforts to keep our community safe. We've also set the standard in our industry by publishing regular transparency reports so people can hold us accountable for progress. We will continue investing in this work and will commit whatever resources are necessary to improve our enforcement.

We also have received certification from independent groups, like the Digital Trading Standards Group which specifically examines our advertising processes against JICWEBS' Good Practice Principles and is a requirement for achieving the Interactive Advertising Bureau's Gold Standard. We will continue to work with advertising industry bodies such as the Global Alliance for Responsible Media and the Media Ratings Council to audit our brand safety tools and practices.

The last set of recommendations relate to improving the safety of private Groups on Facebook. Our team of 35,000 safety and security professionals, including 15,000 content reviewers, actively review potentially violating content today, including in private Groups. Our proactive, AI-based detection tools are also used to identify hateful content and Groups that aren't reported to us.  We clearly have more work to do here.

We believe that Group moderators already play a vital role in maintaining their Groups, and we therefore hold them to a higher standard. If moderators post or permit posting of violating content, the Group incurs penalties that can result in the Group being removed from Facebook (or, for less severe violations, prevented from being recommended to others). We are exploring providing moderators with even better tools for moderating content and membership, as well as ways to make moderators more accountable for the content in groups they moderate, such as providing more education on our Community Standards and increasing the requirements on moderatoring potential bad actors.

In summary, we have thoroughly reviewed the 9 product recommendations from the boycott organizers and know we share the goal of limiting hate and divisive content on our platform. 

To reiterate, our immediate next steps include:
A third-party audit of our Community Standard Enforcement Report (CSER) which will be completed by a Big 4 Firm, and will include the incidence of violating content.
Adding the prevalence of hate speech to CSER over the coming year (CSER already includes the total amount of hate speech that we remove, as well as the proportion of hate speech that we detect proactively before it is reported).
We are working with the Global Alliance for Responsible Media (GARM) to identify appropriate brand safety audit requirements. We are committed to then working with the Media Ratings Council on an audit of our brand safety tools and practices.
Last, as Mark announced today, we are updating our policies effective immediately:
Changing our policies to better protect immigrants, migrants, refugees and asylum seekers. We've already prohibited dehumanizing and violent speech targeted at these groups - now we're banning ads suggesting these groups are inferior or express contempt, dismissal or disgust directed at them.
Banning posts that make false claims about ICE agents checking for immigration papers at polling places, or other threats meant to discourage voting. We will use our Election Operations Center to work with state election authorities to remove false claims about polling conditions in the 72 hours leading up to election day.
Labeling content that we leave up because it is deemed newsworthy, so people can know when this is the case. We'll allow people to share this content to condemn it, just like we do with other problematic content, because this is an important part of how we discuss what's acceptable in our society -- but we'll add a prompt to tell people that the content they're sharing may violate our policies.

This isn't work that ever finishes. Hate is an insidious feature of every society, and that is reflected across all platforms. But we also believe in our responsibility to help change the trajectory of hate speech - and while we know we can't eradicate it, we will continue to do everything in our power to shatter its presence on our platform. We are proud of our efforts to improve proactive detection of hate speech, and we'll continue to invest there. We won't permit hate to have a home on Facebook, and we want to work with you as we have through the years, to continue improving on our efforts. We will continue to be your partners, and we will continue to value the feedback you give us on where you see us falling short.

Thanks so very much
Carolyn

SEE ALSO: Facebook doubles down on damage control, with Zuckerberg personally addressing major advertisers on its client council as brand boycott intensifies

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NOW WATCH: Pathologists debunk 13 coronavirus myths

A group of young techies is behind a mysterious app that's succeeded in getting Tech Twitter to clamor for invites, donate to Black Lives Matter charities, and tweet '👁👄👁'

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it is what it is EyeMouthEye

  • A mysterious invite-only app has captured the attention of the tech industry on Twitter after a combination of three emoji —  👁👄👁— flooded their feeds starting Thursday.
  • The purpose of It Is What It Is — and whether it's even real — is unclear. Purported users have posted screenshots on Twitter, and more than 20 young tech employees have added the app's Twitter handle to their profiles.
  • Nonetheless, the It Is What It Is team has succeeded in getting interested users to donate to a Black trans fundraiser and introducing the tech industry to  👁👄👁, which is used to express shock or disgust.
  • A similar emphasis on secrecy and exclusivity is what attracted Silicon Valley to Clubhouse, an audio-chat app that debuted earlier this year and became an instant hit among its users.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Ever feel like you're looking in on an inside joke that everyone online understands besides you? Welcome to itiswhatitis.fm.

On Thursday night, the tech industry was introduced via Twitter, en masse, to this emoji combination: 👁👄👁. Word spread about a mysterious app called "It Is What It Is," as Silicon Valley clamored to figure out what the hype was all about and how the elite could secure their own access to the invite-only platform.

But most of us have yet to figure out what's really going on and whether this is a real app — or something else — or merely an elaborate satire of tech marketing. The website doesn't help explain any further: The only clickable thing on it is a box directing you to "give us ur info," where you can enter your email to, presumably, get on the app's waitlist.

Nonetheless, the team behind IIWII has successfully captured the tech industry's attention ahead of whatever it has planned for Friday night at 7pm PT.

Both the name and the emoji associated with the app are, expectedly, based in meme culture, as Josh Constine first pointed out. The emoji can be traced back to this YouTube video from last year, and is now freely used across social platforms for "expressing surprise, shock, anger, or disgust," according to Urban Dictionary.

The name — It Is What It Is — goes beyond a commonly used idiom. The audio from this video of a group of teens echoing these words has, since then, become a popular soundtrack for short videos on the viral app TikTok.

It's unclear who is exactly behind the app (if that's what it is), but more than 40 young software engineers and recent college graduates in the tech industry are displaying the app's Twitter handle — @itsmoutheyemouth — in their profiles, with job titles like "cheerleader," "head of fun," "chief gay," and "chief optometrist." These faux titles are reminiscent of the trend on TikTok where users put "CEO of" in their account descriptions.

While the majority of tweets regarding the app have thus far been forms of trolling, and rows of 👁👄👁, users associated with the "project" also have successfully gotten excitable techies to try scoring an invite. It Is What It Is has shared links to charities supporting the Black community and trans people of color, including the Okra Project, the Lovaland Therapy Fund, and Solutions Not Punishment

The people behind It Is What It Is seem to be onto something. The dramatic pull of exclusivity and secrecy in Silicon Valley was demonstrated earlier this year, after an invite-only audio-chat app called Clubhouse launched in beta. Although the app has just 5,000 users, it's already valued at $100 million.

Business Insider tried to reach out on Twitter to some of the users who seem to be associated with the app. The only response we got: "It Is What It Is."

SEE ALSO: Trolls 'Zoombombed' TikTok's Pride event with racist and homophobic slurs, shutting down the day-long event only minutes after it started

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NOW WATCH: What makes 'Parasite' so shocking is the twist that happens in a 10-minute sequence

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