After a sensational Motown Night that featured the first 9s of the season, another celebrity was eliminated on ‘DWTS.’
After a sensational Motown Night that featured the first 9s of the season, another celebrity was eliminated on ‘DWTS.’
After a sensational Motown Night that featured the first 9s of the season, another celebrity was eliminated on ‘DWTS.’
After a sensational Motown Night that featured the first 9s of the season, another celebrity was eliminated on ‘DWTS.’
The former lover of Tom Sandoval revealed she’s selling a necklace and more in a new post.
The former lover of Tom Sandoval revealed she’s selling a necklace and more in a new post.
The ‘Shake It Up’ alum rocked a sexy purple bikini complete with a knitted skirt in celebration of her birthday via Instagram on October 9.
The ‘Shake It Up’ alum rocked a sexy purple bikini complete with a knitted skirt in celebration of her birthday via Instagram on October 9.
The rapper and designer tied the know during a private ceremony in Beverly Hills, CA last year.
The rapper and designer tied the know during a private ceremony in Beverly Hills, CA last year.
Last year Meris took its digital effects prowess and built a ludicrously powerful guitar pedal, the LVX. Now the company is back with another modular creation, the MercuryX, but instead of delay it’s all about epic reverbs.
Like the LVX the MercuryX is built around a “advanced ARM processor” of unspecified origin and a 24-bit AD/DA converter with a 32 bit floating point DSP. It also inherits the LVX’s large LCD for navigating the interface and the basic scheme of combining structures, types, and processing elements to create a unique reverb effect.
In Meris’ lexicon “structures” are the core reverb effects. There are eight different options: Ultraplate, Cathedra, 78 Room, 78 Plate, 78 Hall, Spring, Prism and Gravity. Those first two are borrowed Meris’ popular Mercury7 pedal, the middle three from the company’s collaboration with Chase Bliss on the CXM 1978, while the last three are completely new creations for the MercuryX. Type determines the characteristic of the reverb, while processing elements are effects that can further alter your tone. These can be as straight forward as compression, as wild as a granulator or just a nice hazy lo-fi effect. These can go anywhere in the signal chain as well, allowing the elements to affect only the reverberations or to completely replace your dry tone.
You can also modify parameters automatically using the two LFOs, an envelope follower, a sample and hold function, or the sixteen step sequencer. Not to mention there’s an expression jack input and robust MIDI support.
And if that wasn’t enough, there’s a stereo freeze effect separate from the reverb, a tuner and an absurd 2.54 secs of predelay. The latter means you can effectively turn the MercuryX into a delay pedal thanks in part to its modular feedback routing and selectable note divisions for each stereo channel.
The early demos make it clear that the MercuryX is indeed a beast of a pedal capable of delivering pretty convincing spring reverb emulation. But it’s obviously meant for more epic and creative sounds. This is the sort of thing you might want in your arsenal if you’re into ambient, post rock or film scores.
The Meris MercuryX will set you back a decent chunk of change however. It’s available direct from Meris for $599 and through select retailers as a preorder.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/meris-mercuryx-is-a-modular-reverb-pedal-for-the-sonically-adventerous-230559405.html?src=rss
California became just the third state in the nation to pass a “right to repair” consumer protection law on Tuesday, following Minnesota and New York, when Governor Gavin Newsom signed SB 244. The California Right to Repair bill had originally been introduced in 2019. It passed, nearly unanimously, through the state legislature in September.
“This is a victory for consumers and the planet, and it just makes sense,” Jenn Engstrom, state director of CALPIRG, told iFixit (which was also one of SB244’s co-sponsors). “Right now, we mine the planet’s precious minerals, use them to make amazing phones and other electronics, ship these products across the world, and then toss them away after just a few years’ use … We should make stuff that lasts and be able to fix our stuff when it breaks, and now thanks to years of advocacy, Californians will finally be able to, with the Right to Repair.”
Turns out Google isn’t offering seven years of replacement parts and software updates to the Pixel 8 out of the goodness of its un-beating corporate heart. The new law directly stipulates that all electronics and appliances costing $50 or more, and sold within the state after July 1, 2021 (yup, two years ago), will be covered under the legislation once it goes into effect next year, on July 1, 2024.
For gear and gadgets that cost between $50 and $99, device makers will have to stock replacement parts and tools, and maintain documentation for three years. Anything over $100 in value gets covered for the full seven-year term. Companies that fail to do so will be fined $1,000 per day on the first violation, $2,000 a day for the second and $5,000 per day per violation thereafter.
There are, of course, carve outs and exceptions to the rules. No, your PS5 is not covered. Not even that new skinny one. None of the game consoles are, neither are alarm systems or heavy industrial equipment that “vitally affects the general economy of the state, the public interest, and the public welfare.”
“I’m thrilled that the Governor has signed the Right to Repair Act into law,” State Senator Susan Talamantes Eggman, one of the bill’s co-sponsors, said. “As I’ve said all along, I’m so grateful to the advocates fueling this movement with us for the past six years, and the manufacturers that have come along to support Californians’ Right to Repair. This is a common sense bill that will help small repair shops, give choice to consumers, and protect the environment.”
The bill even received support from Apple, of all companies. The tech giant famous for its “walled garden” product ecosystem had railed against the idea when it was previously proposed in Nebraska, claiming the state would become “a mecca for hackers.” However, the company changed its tune when SB 244 was being debated, writing a letter of support reportedly stating, “We support ‘SB 244′ because it includes requirements that protect individual users’ safety and security as well as product manufacturers’ intellectual property.”
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/californias-right-to-repair-bill-is-now-californias-right-to-repair-law-232526782.html?src=rss
The brother of Patrick Mahomes reacted to the candid open letter the influencer posted on Monday.
The brother of Patrick Mahomes reacted to the candid open letter the influencer posted on Monday.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is reportedly looking into how Twitter (now X) handled a security issue in 2018 that led to users’ personal information being exposed. The bug allowed people to view email addresses when passwords were reset, potentially exposing user identities, according to Bloomberg. The report notes that the SEC has been investigating whether those in charge of the company at the time properly disclosed the flaws to shareholders and put proper controls in place.
Attention was drawn to the flaw last year while Elon Musk was trying to wriggle out of his commitment to buy Twitter. Musk asserted that Twitter had long been contending with operational issues (it has had to deal with multiple security incidents over the last five years) and that it hadn’t properly protected user data.
Just as Musk was attempting to wash his hands of his takeover bid, Peiter “Mudge” Zatko, Twitter’s former head of security, flagged a number of concerns about the company to the SEC, the Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission last August in a whistleblower complaint. He claimed Twitter had “extreme, egregious deficiencies” when it came to protecting the platform against attacks.
Zatko accused Twitter of violating the agreement it made with the FTC in 2011 to settle a previous privacy case. Of note, Twitter last year agreed to pay $150 million to settle FTC charges that it violated said consent decree by misusing user phone numbers and email addresses for ad targeting.
Jack Dorsey was CEO of Twitter at the time of the incident that the SEC is said to be looking into. His successor, Parag Agrawal, was then chief technology officer. None of Twitter’s executives at the time have been accused of wrongdoing, according to Bloomberg. The outlet notes that it’s not clear when the SEC will wrap up its probe or if any enforcement action is expected as a result.
Meanwhile, the SEC has sued Musk for refusing to testify in a separate case. That one concerns Musk’s delay in disclosing his purchase of over five percent of Twitter stock in early 2022.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/the-sec-is-said-to-be-investigating-a-twitter-security-flaw-from-the-pre-musk-era-205459647.html?src=rss
A top European Union official is warning Elon Musk about the spread of misinformation on X amid the Israel-Hamas war. EU Commissioner Thierry Breton sent Musk an “urgent” letter about the company’s handling of misinformation and its responsibilities under the Digital Services Act.
The letter comes as researchers and fact checkers have warned about a wave of misinformation on X in the wake of the Hamas attacks in Israel. While Musk’s recent move to strip headlines from links shared on the platform has made it more difficult to find news, verified users have also been sharing viral clips of completely unrelated content purporting to be scenes from the unfolding conflict.
“Following the terrorist attacks carried out by Hamas against Israel, we have indications that your platform is being used to disseminate illegal content and disinformation in the EU,” Breton wrote in the letter to Musk. “Let me remind you that the Digital Services Act sets very precise obligations regarding content moderation.”
Following the terrorist attacks by Hamas against 🇮🇱, we have indications of X/Twitter being used to disseminate illegal content & disinformation in the EU.
Urgent letter to @elonmusk on #DSA obligations ⤵️ pic.twitter.com/avMm1LHq54
— Thierry Breton (@ThierryBreton) October 10, 2023
In particular, Breton called out the spread of “fake and manipulated images and facts circulating on your platform in the EU, such as repurposed old images of unrelated armed conflicts or military footage that actually originated from video games.” He also flagged the company’s newly-changed public interest policy, saying that the change “left many European users uncertain” about what type of content the platform allows.
Breton also suggested X was not responding appropriately to requests to deal with “potentially illegal content,” on its platform. “When you receive notices of illegal content in the EU, you must be timely, diligent and objective in taking action and removing the relevant content when warranted,” Breton wrote. “We have, from qualified sources, reports about potentially illegal content circulating on your service despite flags from relevant authorities.”
X didn’t respond to a request for comment, but Musk issued a brief reply on X. “Our policy is that everything is open source and transparent, an approach that I know the EU supports,” Musk wrote. “Please list the violations you allude to on X, so that that [sic] the public can see them.”
The company, which recently removed its misinformation-reporting tool and cut safety teams tasked with handling disinformation, has pointed to its crowd-sourced fact-checking tool, Community Notes, as its primary way of addressing misinformation.
In an update posted shortly after Breton shared the letter, the company said that “more than 500 unique notes” had been created over the last three days, including notes addressing “fake videos made with game simulators” and other “out of context” and “unrelated” footage. X added that it’s “actively working on” changes “that will help automatically show notes on even more posts with matching video and images” and that it’s “scaling up” notifications for people who previously engaged with content later fact-checked with a note. The company didn’t say how many users have received such notifications.
It’s not the first time European Union officials have raised concerns about the amount of disinformation on X. An EU report last month found that X had the highest prevalence of misinformation and disinformation. Under the Digital Services Act, companies like X are required to disclose details about their handling of disinformation.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/eu-official-warns-elon-musk-about-xs-handling-of-disinformation-amid-israel-hamas-war-210909999.html?src=rss
The television personality and the college student happily posed for various snapshots during a weekend full of ‘football’ and ‘family fun.’
The television personality and the college student happily posed for various snapshots during a weekend full of ‘football’ and ‘family fun.’