Showing posts with label Social media news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social media news. Show all posts

Microsoft Edge is getting a performance mode to improve RAM, CPU, and battery usage

Microsoft Edge is getting a performance mode to improve RAM, CPU, and battery usage

 Microsoft is putting a new performance mode in its Edge browser to see how it works. Any testers of the Microsoft Edge Canary version of the browser have access to the new mode, while others can activate it manually with a flag. “Performance mode optimizes performance, responsiveness, memory, CPU, and battery usage.”

" Microsoft claims. "Performance changes can differ based on the personal requirements and browsing habits.”

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It's unclear how the output mode affects Edge, but it does have an impact on the Sleeping Tabs functionality. When you allow performance mode, the timeout for Sleeping Tabs is set to five minutes. When you have a lot of tabs open, Microsoft added sleeping tabs in Edge earlier this year, which allows the browser to instantly release device resources for unused tabs.

This improves the performance of new tabs and prevents the window from hogging memory and CPU power in the background.

Laptop users would undoubtedly benefit the most from Edge's performance mode, as browsers may have a significant effect on battery life.

over the last six months An upgrade in November improved CPU utilization significantly, and an update earlier this year improved RAM and GPU usage significantly.

Introducing the Events from Facebook App

events-asset1-homeEveryone day, more than 100 million people use Facebook events to discover things they can do with their friends — from festivals and 5Ks to neighborhood fairs and nightlife. With hundreds of millions of events shared on Facebook every year, the fear of missing out is becoming a thing of the past.
Today we’re announcing Events from Facebook, a new app we designed for event seekers who are passionate about keeping up with nearby events and finding things to do with their friends. Whether you’re looking for something to attend this weekend or just wondering what’s happening in your area, Events will help get you there.
Here’s how it works:
When you open Events, you can quickly catch up on new events your friends are interested in, recently-announced events by the Pages you like, and updates from events you’re already connected to.
If you’re looking for something to do this weekend or even right now, you can easily browse event recommendations based on time, location and your interests. Explore events happening where you are or in places you like to go using the interactive map. You can also search for events in any city if you’re planning ahead for a trip.
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Finally, you can keep track of all of your upcoming events in the calendar, which lets you see which days you’re already attending an event and when you’re free. You can even choose calendars you want to add from your phone and view them alongside your Facebook events, so it’s easier to make plans.
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The actions you take on events in the app will also be visible and available on Facebook. This way, your friends can see what you’re interested in and what events you’ve shared with them, even if they don’t have the app.
Events is available in the App Store for iPhone users in the US today, and is coming soon to Android.

Facebook Messenger receives end-to-end encryption once enabled

Facebook Messenger receives end-to-end encryption once enabled


Encryption is a must but sadly, not all developers and companies offer such. For Facebook, it may have taken the Messenger team a long time to encrypt the app but at least the company has finished doing it. This end-to-end encryption is now available for the millions of Messenger users all over the world. That’s about 900 million of active FB chat users who can be rest assured that their conversations are safe, private, and secure.Facebook has rolled out the feature but it’s not set on default. You need to enable the ‘Secret Conversations’ feature for each conversation. That can be a hassle for most people but you gotta do what you need to do. Enable the feature so in the future, you won’t complain and cry when you’ve been hacked and all your secrets are out in the open.
You need to encrypt a conversation first so the Secret Conversations feature will go on full force action. Facebook hasn’t officially made an announcement about this update for both Android and iOS but it should be available now.
You just need to update the Facebook Messenger app. You will soon see a ‘Secret’ option location on the top right of the ‘new message’ window. Feel free to choose an expiration time for your conversations and messages so you can be sure that your words are gone forever. Message encryption is only available to those who will update their Facebook Messenger.
Download Messenger from the Google Play Store

Introducing Marketplace: Buy and Sell with Your Local Community

Facebook is where people connect, and in recent years more people have been using Facebook to connect in another way: buying and selling with each other. This activity started in Facebook Groups and has grown substantially. More than 450 million people visit buy and sell groups each month — from families in a local neighborhood to collectors around the world.
To help people make more of these connections, today we’re introducing Marketplace, a convenient destination to discover, buy and sell items with people in your community. Marketplace makes it easy to find new things you’ll love, and find a new home for the things you’re ready to part with. We’ll continue to build new options and features to make this the best experience for people. 
To visit Marketplace, just tap on the shop icon at the bottom of the Facebook
Discover Items for Sale Near You
Marketplace opens with photos of items that people near you have listed for sale. To find something specific, search at the top and filter your results by location, category or price. You can also browse what’s available in a variety of categories such as Household, Electronics and Apparel. Use the built-in location tool to adjust the region you’re looking in, or switch to a different city altogether.
When you find something interesting, tap on the image to see more details from the seller, including a product description, the name and profile photo of the seller, and their general location. You can also save the item to find it later.
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Decided that you want it? Send the seller a direct message from Marketplace to tell them you’re interested and make an offer. From that point on, you and the seller can work out the details in any way you choose. Facebook does not facilitate the payment or delivery of items in Marketplace.
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Post Items for Sale in Just a Few Steps
Selling an item in Marketplace is just as easy as browsing for one. Simply:
  1. Take a photo of your item, or add it from your camera roll
  2. Enter a product name, description and price
  3. Confirm your location and select a category
  4. Post
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Now anyone looking in your area can find your item and message you if they want to buy it. You can also choose to post to Marketplace and a specific buy and sell group at the same time.
To keep track of all of your current and past transactions in Marketplace, visit the Your Items section. There, you can view your saved items, products you’ve posted for sale, and all your messages with people.
Now in Four Countries, With More to Come

Over the next few days, Marketplace will be rolling out to everyone over 18 years old in the US, UK, Australia, and New Zealand on the Facebook app for iPhone and Android. We will continue expanding to additional countries and make Marketplace available on the desktop version of Facebook in the coming months.

WhatsApp’s privacy U-turn on sharing data with Facebook draws more heat in Europe



A dramatic privacy about-face by messaging app WhatsApp this summer, in which it revealed an update to its T&Cs would for the first time allow the sharing of its user data with parent company Facebook, is getting the pair into hot water in Europe.
This week Facebook was ordered to stop harvesting data on WhatsApp users in Germany by the Hamburg city DPA, which hit out at the controversial change to WhatsApp’s T&Cs as both misleading to users and a breach of national data protection law. (Facebook disagrees, and is appealing the order in Germany.)
It now looks the UK’s national data protection watchdog, the ICO, is preparing to ramp up its action too. The ICO had already been — in its words — “considering” the deal, questioning whether the two companies were being transparent with users about how their data is being shared and used.
But speaking to the BBC’s PM program on Radio 4 yesterday, information commissioner Elizabeth Denham said it has launched “an investigation into the data-sharing”.
Asked by the BBC whether the ICO intends to follow the Hamburg DPA’s lead and order the data-sharing to be stopped, Denham said: “My intervention is an advocacy intervention on behalf of all of the WhatsApp users in the UK — and boy have we heard from them! They are quite concerned.
There’s a lot of anger out there. And again it goes back to promises, commitment, fairness and transparency.
“There’s a lot of anger out there. And again it goes back to promises, commitment, fairness and transparency. We have launched an investigation into the data-sharing, remembering that in 2014 when Facebook bought WhatsApp there was a commitment made that between the two companies they would not share information.”
The new WhatsApp T&Cs state that user data — including the mobile number used to register to use the service and a user’s last seen time within the app — will be shared with Facebook and the “Facebook family of companies”, including for marketing and ad targeting purposes.
Users reading the T&Cs before clicking ‘I agree’ might notice that there is a way to opt out of the data-sharing for ad targeting — but the agreement default opts users in, and the text next to the toggle to refuse to share is arguably confusingly worded. So it’s likely that many WhatsApp users will have agreed to the new privacy policy without realizing that means they are now handing data to Facebook.
“It’s an active and important investigation,” Denham added, during the PM interview. “I know the public wants to hear from us as to what we’re doing — and you will hear from us very shortly.”
A spokeswoman for the ICO could not confirm whether or not the ICO has aformal investigation into the data-sharing underway at this point, but did say it would be putting out an update soon, perhaps later today or on Monday.
In the PM interview, Denham was also pressed on whether the ICO is doing anything to stop data flowing now, while it probes the arrangement, but she said she thinks no data is yet flowing from UK WhatsApp users to Facebook.
“We are told that data is not yet being shared — so I am hoping that there is a pause in the data-sharing, and some rethinking of the terms and the consent and what data is being shared,” she said.
We’ve asked Facebook to confirm whether or not it is harvesting UK WhatsApp data at this point or not and will update this post with any response.
Making a general statement about the data-sharing agreement earlier this month, Europe’s Article 29 Working Party, the data protection body that represents the collective views of the DPAs of all 28 Member State of the EU, asserted that: “Users should keep control of their data when Internet giants massively compile it.”
Denham also referenced the WhatsApp-Facebook privacy controversy in other public comments this week, making her first public speech since taking over the role from the prior ICO, Christopher Graham.
Speaking at an event in London she noted: “We are currently reviewing data sharing between WhatsApp and other Facebook companies — all of this is about transparency and individual control.”
(Ironically that event, a one day conference entitled Personal Information Economy 2016, organized by a business consultancy called CtrlShift, was funded with the help of Facebook cash — the event organizers confirmed to TechCrunch Facebook was one of the sponsors. So no surprise another of the speakers was Facebook’s Stephen Deadman, aka its global deputy “Chief Privacy Officer”. Ctrl Shift said all sponsors for the event were “printed clearly” in the event brochure that was shared with delegates on the day.)
In a wide-ranging first public speech that set our her priorities for leading the UK regulator through turbulent post-Brexit times, Denham said the ICO intends to pick and choose its investigations with the aim of maximizing its impact — to, as she put it, “enable results which can cascade across a sector”.
She added that technology is “already at the forefront of most of our major investigations”, noting that the ICO has also been asking questions about themassive Yahoo data breach, finally confirmed last week.
“As an independent regulator we have powers to issue fines of up to half a million pounds which could eventually rise to four percent of a business’ global turnover,” she warned. “In an ideal world we wouldn’t need to enforce, but we will use the stick in the cupboard when necessary. And remember it’s not just about the money — it’s about your reputation too, with your customers, the public and in the media spotlight.”
EC’s competition commissioner also eyeing big data and privacy
The Facebook-WhatsApp data-sharing agreement has also caught the attention of the EC’s competition commissioner, Margrethe Vestager, who earlier this month revealed her department was asking questions about the privacy policy changes, noting that the fact they didn’t merge data was factored in when the acquisition was approved.
Speaking at a conference on big data in Brussels this week, Vestager argued for the need for EU-wide regulation on data — referencing the Facebook-WhatsApp controversy and suggesting new rules are needed to enable the region’s regulators to keep up with tech giants’ use (and potential misuse) of data.
“Europe’s competition enforcers need to work together on big data — not just the Commission, but the national competition authorities as well,” she said. “Many of them are already doing that. Our French colleagues have launched a sector inquiry on big data. And the German authority is looking at whether Facebook may have misused its power to impose unfair privacy terms.
“But if we want to be able to deal with big data issues throughout the EU, then every national authority has to have the tools it needs to enforce the rules… I think there’s a strong case for new EU rules as part of the answer.”
Big data as a currency that can be used by tech giants to stifle competition is a theme Vestager has spoken on several timesbefore.