Tech Brew Ride Home - Wed. 04/02 – The Nintendo Switch 2
Episode Date: April 2, 2025All the details from the big Nintendo Switch 2 reveal this morning. Wikimedia says AI bots are increasing its costs by 50%. North Korean IT workers allegedy continue to go after remote IT jobs worldwi...de. Meta is reading its more ambitious, more expensive smartglasses for maybe later this year. And maybe the CoreWeave IPO wasn’t a bust? Sponsors: Udacity.com/ride and promocode RIDE Links: Amazon Said to Make a Bid to Buy TikTok in the U.S. (NYTimes) Everything announced at Nintendo’s Switch 2 Direct (Polygon) AI crawlers cause Wikimedia Commons bandwidth demands to surge 50% (TechCrunch) North Korean IT worker army expands operations in Europe (BleepingComputer) How Meta’s Upcoming $1,000+ Smart Glasses With a Screen Will Work (Bloomberg) Stablecoin issuer Circle files for IPO as public markets open to crypto (CNBC) CoreWeave shares rip nearly 42% higher, rising above IPO price (CNBC) 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 TechMeme right home for Wednesday, April 2nd, 2025.
I'm Brian McCullough today.
All the details from the big Nintendo Switch reveal this morning.
Wiki Media says AI bots are increasing its cost by 50%.
North Korean IT workers allegedly continue to go after remote IT jobs worldwide.
Meta is reading its more ambitious, more expensive smart classes for maybe later this year.
And I just caught this.
Amazon made a bid for TikTok.
Here's what you missed today in the world of tech.
Breaking, breaking news.
are telling the times that Amazon has put in a bid to acquire all of TikTok ahead of the April 5th deadline,
but various parties involved don't seem to be taking the bid seriously.
I have to say this would make a ton of sense for Amazon because they don't have a social network.
And you know how TikTok has been moving toward doing commerce on the platform?
Yeah.
Quote, the bid came via an offer letter addressed to Vice President J.D. Vance and Howard Lutnik,
the Commerce Secretary, according to a person briefed on the matter.
Amazon's bid highlights the 11th hour maneuver.
in Washington over TikTok's ownership. Policymakers in both parties have expressed deep national
security concerns over the app's Chinese ownership and passed a law last year to force a sale of
TikTok that was set to take effect in January. Mr. Trump is slated to meet with top White House officials
Wednesday to discuss TikTok's fate. People familiar with the talks have outlined a potential deal
that could involve bringing on a number of new U.S. investors, including Oracle, the technology
giant and Blackstone, the private equity firm, while sidestepping a formal sale. But it isn't clear
that such a structure would satisfy the condition.
of the federal law. Amazon has some existing ties to TikTok. The video app, which counts 170 million
users in the United States, has become a major hub of retail shopping with influencers recommending
products to viewers. While the company has its own e-commerce operation known as TikTok shop,
many influencers encourage people to buy products on Amazon, which gives the influencers a cut of
the transactions. It has also provided some technical infrastructure. Amazon had previously tried to make a
TikTok clone of sorts called Inspire inside its own app. Internally, it was a
high-profile initiative, but was widely seen as unsuccessful at attracting shoppers. The company removed
it from the app this year. Amazon isn't the first retailer to express interest in the app. In 2020,
when TikTok was first pressured to sell to American owners, Microsoft and Walmart made a bid for the
company, but Amazon would be the most high-profile bidder for the company, which has also attracted
interest from billionaire Frank McCourt, as well as Jesse Tinsley, the founder of the payroll firm
employer.com, end quote. But again, there's this line at the beginning of the piece saying the bid is
not being taken seriously by various parties. I don't know what that means. Certainly, Amazon would
have a ton of money to throw around, but also at the very end of all this is the problem that
the Chinese government says TikTok is not for sale. That ultimate issue never gets addressed
when these rumors surface. The big Nintendo event was this morning where we got all the details
of the Nintendo Switch 2, except for one big detail. There were so many people watching 1.4
million towards the end that the YouTube stream crashed. They started by announcing a new Mario
cart world game, which is big, big news in this house at least. On the new JoyCon
controllers, there is now a microphone allowing you to chat with your friends in real-time Discord
style, but more than that, there's a new Nintendo Switch 2 camera that you can buy separately and
use to have your little face down on the bottom, sort of like how it works on, say, a Twitch
stream for again, live chatting when playing online. As for the console itself, it basically
looks the same, but it has a bigger 7.2 inch display with double the pixels, so it's slightly
wider, but they said with the same thickness. The screen supports 4K HDR and 120 frames per second,
though only 60 frames per second when docked. The new joycon controllers connect magnetically
instead of sliding on, and if you put the joycon down on a table on the flat side, you can
use it as a mouse for entirely new control input. There's also 3D audio available on headphones,
or if you have a surround sound system.
The storage starts at 256 gigabytes of storage,
which is good because the original Switch had only a measly 32 gigabytes,
which was crazy.
They're still supporting micro-SD cards,
but apparently proprietary ones,
and you will be able to port your Nintendo Switch storage
to your Nintendo Switch 2,
and they confirmed they would support compatible Switch 1 games as well.
But also, Nintendo Switch 2 addition games
are a new category of old games,
upscale to support the new graphics capability,
Speaking of those new capabilities, here's a partial list of the titles the Better Hardware
can now support. Eldon Ring, Borderlands 4, Split Fiction, Hogwarts Legacy, Hades 2, Street Fighter
6, Tony Hawk Pro, Skater 3, and 4, Cyberpunk 2077, Hitman World of Assassination, and a whole suite
of EA Sports Games. The launch of the new console is June 5th, but weirdly they didn't announce
the pricing or the pre-order date or process. Though they did say they were
putting up a website for the Switch 2 later this afternoon, so I guess we'll have to wait for that.
Quick edit, late breaking news. Various outlets are reporting that the Switch 2 will cost $450 for the
console or $500 for a Mario Kart World bundle. North American pre-orders open on April 9th.
Once again, another story about how AI crawlers are beginning to wreck havoc with the web.
The Wikimedia Foundation says the base bandwidth demand for downloading Wikimedia Commons
multimedia content is up 50% since January 2024, driven by AI crawlers.
Quoting TechCrunch, our infrastructure is built to sustain sudden traffic spikes from humans
during high-interest events, but the amount of traffic generated by Scraberbots is unprecedented
and presents growing risks and costs, a post from Wikimedia reads.
Wikimedia Commons is a freely accessible repository of images, videos, and audio files
that are available under open licenses or are otherwise in the public domain.
Digging down, Wikimedia says that almost two-thirds, 65% of the most expensive traffic,
that is, the most resource-intensive in terms of the kind of content consumed, was from bots.
However, just 35% of the overall page views comes from these bots.
The reason for this disparity, according to Wikimedia, is that frequently access content
stays closer to the user in its cache, while other less frequently accessed content is stored
further away in the core data center, which is more expensive to serve content from.
This is the kind of content that bots typically go looking for.
While human readers tend to focus on specific, often similar topics,
crawler bots tend to bulk read larger numbers of pages
and visit also the less popular pages, Wikimedia writes.
This means these types of requests are more likely to get forwarded to the core data center,
which makes it much more expensive in terms of consumption of our resources.
The long and short of all this is that the Wikimedia Foundation's site reliability team
are having to spend a lot of time in resources blocking crawlers to avert disruption
for regular users. And all this before we consider the cloud costs that the foundation is faced with.
In truth, this represents part of a fast-growing trend that is threatening the very existence of the open
internet. Last month, software engineer and open source advocate Drew DeVolt
bemoaned the fact that AI crawlers ignore robots. Text files that are designed to ward off
automated traffic. And pragmatic engineer, Gergley Oros, also complained last week that AI scrapers
from companies such as meta have driven up bandwidth demands for his own projects.
While open source infrastructure in particular is in the firing line, developers are fighting back with cleverness and vengeance.
As TechCrunch wrote last week, some tech companies are doing their bit to address the issue to Cloudflare, for example, recently launched AI Labyrinth, which uses AI-generated content to slow crawlers down, end quote.
This is also something we've noted a few times now.
Google researchers say North Korean IT workers are fraudulently securing remote roles at companies in Germany, Portugal, and the UK after facing sanctions in the U.S.
quoting bleeping computer. Also referred to as IT warriors, they hide their true identities and
poses workers based in other countries by connecting via laptop farms to fraudulently secure positions
as remote freelance IT employees had companies worldwide to generate revenue for the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea or DPRK regime. A security researcher with the Google Threat Intelligence
Group GTIG found North Korea's IT Army has increasingly targeted positions at companies in Germany,
Portugal and the United Kingdom, after many of its members have been charged and targeted with sanctions
in the U.S. In their efforts to secure these positions, DPRK-I-T workers employed deceptive tactics,
falsely claiming nationalities from a diverse set of countries, including Italy, Japan, Malaysia,
Singapore, Ukraine, the United States, and Vietnam. The identities used were a combination of
real and fabricated personas, said Jamie Collier, a lead threat intelligence advisor at GTIG.
IT workers in Europe were recruited through various online platforms, including Upwork, Telegram, and Freelancer.
Payment for their services was facilitated through cryptocurrency, the transfer-wise service,
and pioneer highlighting the use of methods that obfuscate the origin and destination of funds.
For instance, GTIG investigators discovered user credentials at European job websites and human capital management platforms linked to DRPI-T worker personas
looking for employment at German and Portuguese companies.
North Korean IT workers have also been linked to many projects in the United Kingdom,
ranging from AI and blockchain technology to web, bot, and content management systems development.
Another DPRK IT worker targeted multiple European organizations in the defense industrial base
and government sectors in late 2024 using fabricated references and personas to make it easier
to trick job recruiters into hiring them.
We are increasingly seeing North Korean IT workers infiltrating larger organizations to steal sensitive data
and follow-through on their extortion threats against these enterprises.
Michael Barnhart, a mandient principal analyst at Google Cloud, told Bleeping Computer in January.
GTIG's report follows multiple warnings issued by the FBI regarding North Korea's massive army of IT workers
sent abroad to generate revenue, who have tricked hundreds of companies in the United States and worldwide
into hiring them over the years.
However, the North Korean regime keeps up to 90% of wages collected this way,
generating hundreds of millions every year to fund its weapons programs.
After being discovered and fired, some of these undercover North Korean IT workers have also used insider knowledge to extort former employers,
threatening to leak sensitive information stolen from company systems.
In January, the U.S. Justice Department indicted two North Korean nationals and three facilitators for their involvement in a multi-year fraudulent remote IT work scheme,
involving at least 64 U.S. companies between April 2018 and August 2024.
The Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control also sanctioned North Korean Front Companies linked to North Korea's
Ministry of National Defense and accused of generating revenue via illegal remote IT work schemes.
The U.S. State Department now offers millions in exchange for any information that could help disrupt
their fraudulent activities, end quote.
Mark Gurman's sources say meta is ramping up work on its first glasses with a display,
codenamed Hypernova, which it could debut as early as the end of 2025 for $1,000 to maybe even
$1,400.
$200. Quote, the company's current smart glasses, the Ray-Ban meta-glasses, start at $299 and have been a
surprise hit. Meta will continue to sell that entry-level version and is banking on their popularity
to push users toward the higher-end models. Other companies, including Amazon, have pledged
new versions of their own glasses to better compete with the social networking giant.
The significant price increase for the new model is driven almost entirely by the screen,
which is a monocular panel that will be located in the lower-right,
quadrant of the right lens. That means information will only be displayed in front of the wearer's
right eye and will appear most clearly when they are looking downward. The company has also already
begun work on a second-generation version of the product codenamed Hypernova 2. The major difference
is the inclusion of a binocular display system, which means the device will have two screens
and show information in both eyes. That device is currently planned for 2027, the people said.
A look at a prototype version of the first Hypernova glasses indicates how the glasses are likely to work
when they go on sale. When they are turned on, the display shows a boot screen with logos for
meta and other partners, such as Chipmaker Qualcomm on the product. Once the device is on,
the user will see a home screen comprised of circular icons laid out horizontally similar to
the app dock on Apple's devices or Meta's Quest Mixed Reality headset. The glasses include
dedicated apps for taking pictures, viewing photos, and accessing maps. There is also support for
notifications from phone apps, including Meta's Messenger and WhatsApp. The glasses will otherwise work
similarly to the current Wayfarer-style Rayban Metas, focusing on capturing images and video,
accessing AI via built-in microphones and pairing with a phone for calls and music playback.
The new version will continue to rely heavily on the MetaVue phone app.
Like Meta's other new devices, the glasses will run a highly customized version of the Android
operating system from Alphabet's Google.
The company isn't currently planning to include an onboard app store.
Users will be able to control the glasses using capacitive touch controls on the sides of the
glasses, meaning they can scroll through apps or photos by swiping against the temple bars and then tapping to
open something specific. Meta also plans to begin offering a so-called neural wristband for the first time,
which will allow a wearer to control the glasses with gestures, such as rotating their hand to scroll
through apps and photos and pinching their finger and thumb to select items.
Meta is currently planning to bundle the accessory codename series in the box with the glasses, end quote.
We have another one. Circle has filed for a US IPO with plans to list on the new
York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol CRCL. Circle, which issues the USDC Stablecoin,
is reportedly seeking a $4 to $5 billion valuation. Quoting CNBC. This marks Circle's second attempt
at going public, a prior merger with a special purpose acquisition company or SPAC collapsed in late
2022 amid regulatory challenges. Since then, Circle has made strategic moves to position itself
closer to the heart of global finance, including the announcement last year, that it would
relocate its headquarters from Boston to one world trade center in New York. Circle reported
$1.68 billion in revenue and reserve income in 2024, up from $1.45 billion in 2023 and
$772 million in 2022. The company reported net income last year of about $156 million
down from $268 million a year earlier. A successful IPO would make Circle one of the most
prominent pureplay crypto companies to list on a U.S. exchange. Coinbase went public through a direct
listing in 2021 and has a market cap of about $44 billion, end quote.
Remember the discussion last week about Corweaves IPO may be being a bust?
Well, yesterday, Corweave's stock closed up a whopping 41.77% at $52.57 in its third trading day,
bouncing back above its $40 IPO price and bringing the company's market cap to around $24.89 billion.
It was briefly up another 20% this morning before dropping down to,
about break-even. Don't know what's going on here, but quoting CNBC, shares of the artificial
intelligence cloud company which rents out access to Nvidia's graphics processing units to other
technology companies dropped more than 10% on Monday and fell below the initial public offering price
of $40. The stock opened at $39 on Friday and closed flat at $40. Markets have also sold off
against a backdrop of macroeconomic uncertainty spurred by President Donald Trump's tariff agenda.
Corweave lowered its offering price to $40 last week from an initial, expected pricing range of
$47 to $55.
The company also downsized the offering to 37.5 million shares from 49 million.
CEO Mark Intrator told CNBC's Squawk Box on Friday that the company had to scale or right-size the transaction for where the buying interest was against a backdrop of macroeconomic headwinds, end quote.
Nothing more for you today. Talk to you tomorrow.
