Tech Brew Ride Home - Wed. 01/08 – Fallout From Meta’s Content Moderation Changes
Episode Date: January 8, 2025Tons and tons of controversy and fallout from Meta’s announced content moderation changes yesterday. I’ve got I think a fair, comprehensive rundown of all the angles. Interesting new rounds for Bl...uesky and Anthropic. And the coolest stuff I’ve seen from CES thus far, including: are rollable laptop screens finally ready for prime time? Sponsors: Acorns.com/ride Links: Meta’s fact-checking changes are just what Trump’s FCC head asked for (The Verge) Social-Media Companies Decide Content Moderation Is Trending Down (WSJ) AI Startup Anthropic Raising Funds Valuing It at $60 Billion (WSJ) Lenovo’s Latest Laptop Has a Rollable OLED Screen (Wired) BMW’s new iDrive turns the whole windshield into a heads-up display (The Verge) New Nike Therapeutic Shoes at CES 2025 Look Like Nothing You've Ever Seen Before (CNET) EcoFlow’s Solar hat is better for the planet than your style (Engadget) Anker made a solar beach umbrella, because of course (Engadget) This Slim Little Battery I Saw at CES 2025 Is Like a Tesla Powerwall for Your Fridge (CNET) I Watched a Printer-Size Gadget Boost a Phone's Battery Life in Seconds (CNET) This toaster-looking gadget boosts your phone’s battery in seconds (The Verge) If you’re constantly losing cables, this could be your ideal charger (The Verge) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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On April 4th, 2023, around 2 in the morning, a man was found stabbed multiple times on a sidewalk in downtown San Francisco.
Hey, who did this to you?
What happened next turned the story into a political firestorm.
Reports have identified the victim as Bob Lee, the founder of Cash App.
From Bloomberg Podcasts, this is Foundering, the Killing of Bob Lee, beginning April 16.
Welcome to the Tech meme right home for Wednesday, January 8th, 2025. I'm Brian McCullough today.
Tons and tons and tons of controversy and fallout from Meta's announced content moderation changes yesterday.
I've got what I think is a fair, comprehensive rundown of all the angles.
Interesting new rounds for Blue Sky and Anthropic.
And the coolest stuff I've seen from CES thus far, including are rollable laptop screens finally ready for prime time?
Here's what you miss today in the world of tech.
So meta's decision to change its content moderation processes announced yesterday caused a whole lot of controversy.
If you checked tech meme this morning, like half the page was made up of articles talking about this.
Employees inside meta have apparently been sounding off internally.
Lots of criticism from outside as well, like meta's fact-checking partners,
politifact in fact-check.org saying they had no role in deciding what the company did with the fact-checked content that they provided,
denying Meta's claim that Meta had no control over the moderation. And other fact-checking partners,
including USA Today, say they were blindsided by Meta's decision to drop them and reject claims
of being too politically biased. Now, a lot of the controversy stems from speculation that these
moves were made to curry favor with the incoming administration. In fact, yesterday, Donald Trump
said, meta has, quote, come a long way after the company announced it will end its fact-checking
program, and that meta's, quote, presentation was excellent.
But a taste of this controversy. The Verge is reporting that meta is dropping fact-checking after
incoming FCC head Brendan Carr threatened it over such practices.
Quote, Trump's FCC chairman pick and current FCC commissioner, Brendan Carr, is a self-identified
free speech defender with a creative interpretation of the First Amendment.
In mid-November, as part of a flurry of lightly menacing missives to various entities,
Carr sent a letter to Meta, Apple, Google, and Microsoft attacking the company's fact-checking
programs. The letter was primarily focused on NewsGuard, a conservative Bede Noir that
meta doesn't actually work with. But it also demanded information about, quote, the use of any
media monitor or fact-checking service, and it left no doubt about Carr's position on them.
Quote, you participated in a censorship cartel that included not only technology and social
media companies, but advertising, marketing and so-called fact-checking organizations, Carr wrote.
The incoming Trump administration and Congress, he continued, will take, quote, broad-ranging
actions and those actions can include both a review of your company's activities, as well as efforts
by third-party organizations and groups that have acted to curtail those speech rights, end quote.
In case the implications weren't clear enough, Carr spelled out exactly how his agency could
punish them, quote, for now I am writing to obtain information from you that can inform the FCC's
work to promote free speech and a diversity of viewpoints. As you know, Big Tech's prized liability
shield, Section 230, is codified in the Communications Act which the FCC administers. As relevant here,
Section 230 only confers benefits on big tech companies when they operate in the words of the statute
in good faith, end quote. Prize liability shield you've got there, and it'd be a real shame if
someone administered it, end quote. Now, again, that's the Verges take on it. That was quoting from the
verge. Those aren't my words, but there are also a ton of takes that I could pull from from all sides.
Instead, I think I'm going to lean on the Wall Street Journal here because I think they have the best
summation of all of the angles of this debate. Quote, Mark Zuckerberg's announcement that
meta will end fact-checking and remove speech restrictions across Facebook and Instagram shows how
Donald Trump's presidential election and the U.S. political wins that swept him into a second term
have accelerated a move by social media giants away from refereeing what is said on their platforms.
Trump ally Elon Musk led the charge starting in 2022 when he acquired the platform then known as Twitter
and slash content policy jobs and loosened content restrictions. In 2023, YouTube and META
halted policies that had curbed claims of widespread fraud in the 2020-U.S. presidential election,
and META has cut spending on trust and safety efforts as part of Zuckerberg's effort to enhance
efficiency. Such moves are scaling back policies and operations that have involved tens of thousands
of staffers and contractors, as well as billions of dollars in aggregate costs, and that
alienated the conservatives who are set to control both houses of Congress as well as the White House.
These platforms are realizing that if they want to have a role in where tech policy is going to go over the next four years, this is the game they've got to play, said Katie Harbath, a Republican and former Facebook public policy director who has advocated for more guardrails around social media.
Shrinking or dismantling fact-checking and content moderation systems, though, risks upsetting other users, as well as some advertisers, politicians, and employees by supercharging the kinds of hate speech and deliberately misleading information that compelled the companies to create those systems in the first place.
The culture has grown too woke, and as a result, we are correcting for it.
But moves of this sort seem like an overcorrection, said Michael Casson, a longtime ad executive
and founder of consulting firm 3CV.
We shouldn't throw brand safety principles away completely, end quote.
It also widens a divide over online speech with Europe, which has been strengthening
laws, making tech platforms responsible for the content they carry at the same time that
the pendulum has been swinging the other way in the U.S.
Zuckerberg and other social media leaders long-resisted content.
moderation beyond what was required legally. They emphasized that they were platforms, not publishers,
and shouldn't be held liable for harmful content a user posts on their sites.
Though Facebook established some content guidelines in its early years, it also routinely
launched its services and languages that no one on its staff spoke. A series of public
controversies, including revelations of Russian election interference efforts in 2016,
the spread of fake news, and Facebook fueled ethnic violence in Myanmar, spurred Zuckerberg
to publicly temper his initial assertion that a light touch on moderation was aversion.
you. But his enthusiasm for moderation was at best tepid. In November 2016, amid complaints that Facebook may
have swayed the election, Zuckerberg warned, quote, we must be extremely cautious about becoming
arbiters of truth ourselves, end quote. Cost also has played a role in the company's thinking.
Tech companies have beefed up automated content moderation systems, but the work has remained
labor intensive. While meta has boasted about the billions of dollars it has spent on safety and
security layoffs in recent years disproportionately hit the company's safety staff.
META's new move, quote, allows them to cut even further at the amount of money that they spend on trust and safety because they're just going to do less of it, said Laura Edelson, Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Northeastern University, end quote.
Quick couple of interesting raises here. First up, sources are telling Business Insider that Blue Sky is finalizing a new round at around a $700 million valuation, led by Bain Capital Ventures. Blue Sky raised a $15 million Series A in October and an $8 million, $7,000.
seed back in 2023. And the journal's sources say Anthropic is in advance talks to raise $2 billion
and around led by light speed venture partners at a $60 billion valuation. Anthropic was valued
at $18 billion last year. Quote, the deal would make Anthropic the fifth most valuable
U.S. startup after SpaceX, OpenAI, Stripe, and Databricks, according to data provider CB Insights.
It was valued last year at $18 billion and around led by Menlo Ventures.
Much of Anthropics funding to date has come from its close partner Amazon, which committed
$4 billion to the startup in November, bringing its total investment since 2023 to $8 billion.
Amazon's November investment was a convertible note, meaning it will translate to equity
at the valuation set in the current round.
Anthropic develops and operates its technology in data centers operated by Amazon and Google,
which has also invested billions of dollars in the startup.
The startup's annualized revenue, in extrapolation of the next 12 months' revenue based on recent sales,
recently hit about $875 million, one of the knowledgeable people said,
most of that has come from sales to businesses, end quote.
We've seen rollable PC prototypes at CES for years,
but it looks like the form factor is finally ready for prime time.
Lenovo has announced the Thinkbook Plus Gen 6 Rollable AI PC,
a laptop featuring a 14-inch screen that can extend vertically to 16.7 inches
coming in Q1 for $3,49 bucks.
wired. Laptop screens can feel cramped, but what if you could magically just get more real
estate without having to carry around a portable monitor? That's precisely the purpose of Lenovo's
thinkbook plus Gen 6 rollable AIPC. Yes, rollable. It has an OLED display that with the push
of a button extends the 14-inch screen upward to make for an awkward aspect ratio, but
roughly doubles the screen space to 16.7 inches. Two screens are better than one for productivity,
but what if one screen could be two, but still one?
Yes, it plays a fun animation and some music when it does its rolling thing.
You can also activate the rolling action with a palm gesture.
Once it scans your palm, shift it up or down to raise or lower the screen.
Pressing the button on the keyboard is way faster.
You can take advantage of Windows 11 window snapping features to put apps one on top of the other.
I stacked two browser windows, but you can put other apps below two.
Considering I'm already that guy who brings a spare portable monitor everywhere,
this just seems like a more elegant solution that takes up less space in my bag.
And of course, anyone can take advantage of the long aspect ratio to get a better look at documents,
PDFs, and web pages, end quote.
Quoting a gadget.
Just this functionality would be a feat on its own.
However, to help maximize the potential of its rollable display, Lenovo added a custom set of
multitasking features that allow you to add widgets to the expanded screen space or use it as
a visual clipboard and a place to view frequently used docs.
and when you're doing something like sharing your view during a video call, you can use the extra display as a virtual monitor, so you have a clean desktop for presentations.
But to me, one of the most impressive things about the Thinkbook plus Gen 6 rollable is that it's not that much bigger or heavier than a traditional clamshell of a similar size.
It weighs around 3.6 pounds and measures 3 quarters of an inch thick.
Performance looks solid too, thanks to the inclusion of Intel's Core Ultra 7 CPU, up to 32 gigabytes of RAM, and 1 terabyte of SSD storage.
And while its port selection is just okay, you still get two Thunderbolt 4 jacks and 3.5
millimeter audio along with other handy features like Wi-Fi 7 and a 5 megapixel webcam with
an electronic privacy shutter.
So even with Lenovo's focus on the laptop's futuristic screen, you still get a pretty
well-rounded machine, end quote.
And quoting Windows Central.
Lenovo can call the ThinkBook Plus Gen 6 a co-pilot plus PC because it's built with AI-enabled
features like Lenovo AI now and co-creator from Power.
paint, thanks to its choice of Intel Core Ultra Series 2 processors that include built-in
NPUs or neuro-processing units for local AI computing instead of relying on the cloud.
It's becoming a standard with modern machines, but it makes even more sense for a device
aimed at professional creators. It's expected to launch in Q1, 2025, and it doesn't come cheap,
with a starting price of $3,49, end quote.
You know what, let's just do a quick CES roundup. Everything I'm going to talk about is linked
in the show notes, but here is a list of some of the coolest things I saw at CES thus far this week.
If rollable laptops making your screen bigger is something that has been coming down the pike,
something I've been expecting to come for years now, is smart windshields in cars,
i.e. putting a heads-up display-like screen right on the windshield. Well, BMW's new I-Drive
does exactly that, quoting the verge. The new heads-up display runs along the narrow
black strip at the bottom of the windshield that stretches between A pillars. The display is three-dimensional
and includes speed, adaptive driving assistance information, stoplight and road sign information,
navigation information, and state of charge. It's customizable, too, allowing drivers to set up
the information they want to have in their eyeline while on the road. Unlike other HUDs or HUDs,
where you have to be at the right angle to see the information displayed, BMW says the new display
will be visible to both the driver and passenger.
BMW also integrated navigation and ADAS features into the HUD so that the path you're following
turns green when using onboard navigation with driver assist, end quote.
So that's supposedly coming to an unnamed X-class SUV later this year.
Next up, though, Nike's new X Hyper Ice Recovery Shoes, quoting CNET.
The innovative new footwear lets you adjust to the compression of your feet and calves,
as well as warm your weary muscles.
These battery-powered boots include compression and heat for both warm-ups and post-workout recovery.
Nike says a system of dual-air Norma-Tek bladders bonded to warming elements spreads heat evenly throughout the boots,
aiming to warm the muscles and tissues in your feet and ankles.
The Nike X hyper-ice shoes have a few buttons that allow you to control three different levels of compression and heat.
It massages and compresses your ankles and feet, and from our test of the shoes,
you can especially feel the heat around your ankles, end quote.
Lots of things solar at CES.
Echoflow has a solar hat that you can wear to charge up to two devices
with a maximum output of 5 volts,
so you might have to stay outside a while for it to work,
but anything that helps top off your phone battery is better than nothing.
This is maybe more practical.
Anchor has made what they are calling the Solix Solar Beach Umbrella
that can get solar rated power of up to 80 watts.
Might be enough to power a small,
cooler or something like that while you're sitting in the sun in the sand? Speaking of keeping things
cool, what's the biggest headache if your house suddenly goes without power because of a brownout or
whatever? Your fridge, right? All that food getting spoiled. Well, a company called BioLite has a
refrigerator backup battery. They say it takes 30 minutes to install because it's thin enough to
put behind your fridge and can deliver up to 10.5 kilowatt hours of capacity. This is apparently enough
to keep an 18 cubic foot fridge running for up to 60 hours or a larger 26 cubic foot fridge
powered for up to 30 hours. But what about keeping your phone charged? Well, what about a device
that can give you 100% charge on your phone in just two seconds? Say hello to the Swipit,
quoting the Verge. I didn't have a phone toaster on my CES bingo card, but here we are.
Swipit is a unique solution to the problem of keeping your phone battery charged up,
and it promises a life where you basically never have to plug your phone into a charger
again, but it'll cost you. To be clear, there isn't an actual toaster involved. Swipit, which rhymes with Whipit,
and I'm sorry you have that song stuck in your head now, includes a system of interchangeable batteries
that fit into specially designed phone cases. You use your phone like normal, and the extra battery
charges your phone through a power connector integrated into the case, much like plenty of other
battery cases on the market, but instead of having to recharge the external battery, you swap it out.
To change the battery out for a new one, you insert your phone, case and all, into the Swipit Hub,
which is the toaster looking bit. Inside the hub, a fully charged battery is swapped into your case.
The old one is retained to recharge, and your phone is ready to go with a fresh external battery.
The whole thing happens within seconds. The demo unit I saw was pretty noisy about it all,
but I'm told final production models will have much better sound dampening, end quote.
And finally, this is maybe the most practical thing I've seen. You know how you
have phone chargers all around the house, and sometimes the actual USB cables part of the charger
gets lost, or you can't find the cables. At the very least, you have these ugly cables dangling out
of all of your sockets. It looks messy. Well, from the why has no one thought of this before file,
Basis has a new entercore wall charger that has two retractable USBC cables that are, again,
retractable. They coil up inside the device when not needed. So out of the way, out of the way, out of
sight and man, do I need this for every room in my house in every car we have?
I guess it's obvious that I'm a dad and so I have a dad's obsession with keeping everybody's devices
charged. Being the papa and walking around the house and plugging in people's devices so they'll be
charged and ready is the new dad who goes around the house turning off lights to save on the
electricity bill. Guilty as well charged. Talk to you tomorrow.
