The FCC will review emergency alert systems in the US

The Federal Communications Commission is planning a review of the US emergency alert systems. Both the Emergency Alert System (EAS) and the Wireless Emergency Alerts (WAS) will be subject to a “re-examination” by the agency. “We want to ensure that these programs deliver the results that Americans want and need,” FCC Chairman Brendan Carr posted on X.

The announcement of this plan notes that the infrastructure underlying the EAS — which includes radio, television, satellite and cable systems — is 31 years old, while the framework underpinning the WAS mobile device alerts is 13 years old. The FCC review will also assess what entities should be able to send alerts on those systems, as well as topics such as geographic targeting and security.

The role of emergency communication systems came under recent scrutiny after catastrophic flooding in central Texas earlier this summer that led to more than 130 deaths. Questions arose in the aftermath of whether residents in potentially dangerous areas received enough warning to evacuate, as well as if recent federal cuts to the National Weather Service’s staff and budget could have contributed to the high death toll.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/big-tech/the-fcc-will-review-emergency-alert-systems-in-the-us-212753623.html?src=rss 

Adam Mosseri says ‘people are confused’ about how the Instagram map works

Yesterday, Meta introduced a new map feature that’s almost identical to Snapchat’s Snap Map. The feature has quickly sparked a backlash, though, and not just because it’s yet another example of Instagram ripping off a Snapchat feature.

While the map requires users to opt-in to share their location, many users were surprised and alarmed to see that their Instagram map was already populated with the locations of some accounts when it launched. That’s because the map automatically pulls in location info when someone has recently shared a Story or Reel with a location tagged.

For example, I posted a Story that tagged San Francisco’s botanical gardens and it tagged me there on Instagram’s map even though I have my map location set to share with “no one.” This isn’t that different from how Instagram has worked in the past: location tags have always been visible to your followers, and the app has always had a map view that let people see public posts that have been tagged with specific places.

My story post tagged me on Instagram’s map even though location is set to “no one” because I tagged a location (in this case San Francisco’s botanical gardens).

Instagram screenshot

But Instagram’s map makes this information much more prominent and easy to access. While before you would have to tap into specific posts to see location tags, the new map puts all of this into a single view. Depending on how often you tag locations, this can make it seem like your real-time info is being shared, even when it isn’t.

All that, combined with Meta’s messy history with user privacy, has understandably ignited new concerns from people worried about their location being accidentally exposed by Instagram. Some users have questioned why the map exists at all given the potentially serious implications of unknowingly sharing your location with all of your Instagram mutuals.

It’s also led to a lot of misunderstanding. A number of prominent accounts on Threads have suggested that location sharing is on by default. At the time of this writing, “Instagram map” is the top trend on Threads, with more than 850,000 posts — most of which are privacy related. Instagram head Adam Mosseri has replied to more than a dozen accounts attempting to explain how it actually works.

Screenshot / Threads

“We’re double checking everything, but so far it looks mostly like people are confused and assume that, because they can see themselves on the map when they open, other people can see them too,” Mosseri wrote in response to a Threads user who asked why people were reporting seeing themselves on the map without opting in. “We’re still checking everything though to make sure nobody shares location without explicitly deciding to do so, which, by the way, requires a double consent by design (we ask you to confirm after you say you want to share).”

How to check your Instagram Map settings

You can find the Instagram map by swiping over to your inbox and selecting the “map” icon at the top. The settings menu in the top right corner allows you to confirm who you want to be able to find you on the map: you can choose between “friends” (mutuals), “close friends” or a list of specific accounts. The default setting is “no one,” and the app also shows a red location arrow when “no one is selected.”

Instagram screenhsot

It’s also worth checking whether you’ve tagged a location on any posts within the last 24 hours. If you have, then you’ll be tagged at that place on the map even if you’ve set your sharing settings to “no one.” Location tags only appear on the Instagram map for 24 hours, according to Meta, so it won’t keep a running log of everywhere you’ve been, and it won’t show your live location. Still, these tags could reveal more about your whereabouts than you intended. If you have tagged a place, you can either delete the post entirely or edit it to remove the tag, which should keep it from showing up on the map.

When you do opt to share your location on the map, the friends you select will be able to see where you’re at in real time. You can still set some limitations, though.

The map also has a “hidden places” feature that allows you to always hide specific locations that may be sensitive, like your home. The feature itself is, ironically, somewhat hidden. You can find it by tapping the “…” menu on the map’s location settings and choosing “hide places.” The app will then let you drag a pin on the map and choose a surrounding radius to hide. The feature works well if you want to hide the place you’re currently at, but it’s a bit clunky if you want to block off multiple locations because you can’t enter specific addresses.

Instagram screenshot

Regardless, if you’re worried about exposing your whereabouts, the safest option is to keep location sharing set to “no one” and to not use location tags in any of your content. It’s unclear if Meta plans to change anything about how the Instagram Map works in response to user concerns.

“Instagram Map is off by default, and your live location is never shared unless you choose to turn it on,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement. “If you do, only people you follow back—or a private, custom list you select—can see your location.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/adam-mosseri-says-people-are-confused-about-how-the-instagram-map-works-184736070.html?src=rss 

Microsoft has ended ‘active development’ on Contraband

The upheaval continues for gaming at Microsoft. The latest victim appears to be Contraband, a planned release from Avalanche Studios with Xbox Game Studios as publisher. The co-op open-world game from the studio behind the entertaining Just Cause series was teased in a brief, mostly atmospheric trailer at E3 2021. But very little had been heard since about the project, and it seems the axe is currently hanging pretty precariously above Contraband.

“Active development has now stopped while we evaluate the project’s future,” Avalanche said in a post on its website. “We’re thankful for the excitement we’ve seen from the community since we announced and will give an update on what’s next as soon as we can.”

Microsoft announced in May that it would cut 7,000 jobs, or about 3 percent of its global workforce. That news was followed by another cut of 9,000 positions later in the summer. Gaming has been hit hard by these changes, with several studios and planned projects shuttering as Microsoft consolidates. Here’s the rundown of other projects that have been reported to have ended so far under Microsoft’s auspices:

Everwild from Rare

Perfect Dark reboot from The Initiative

Warcraft Rumble from Blizzard Entertainment

Blackbird from Zenimax

An unnamed FPS from Romero Games

Several of the aforementioned studios, and many others under the Xbox umbrella, have also been hit by the layoffs. Some, like The Initiative, have been completely shut down.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/xbox/microsoft-has-ended-active-development-on-contraband-175333930.html?src=rss 

HBO Max plans aggressive crack down on password sharing starting next month

Another major streaming platform is set to crack down on password sharing. JB Perrette, head of streaming and gaming at Warner Bros. Discovery, just told investors that HBO Max will begin an “aggressive” messaging campaign about the practice beginning next month, according to an earnings report.

Beyond stricter messaging, the company is looking to close any and all loopholes that allow users to share account passwords by the end of the year. Perette said the company has been testing to determine “who’s a legitimate user who may not be a legitimate user.” 

“The message language right now has been a fairly soft, cancelable message,” he said. It will “start to get more fixed and such that people have to take action as opposed to right now sort of having to be a voluntary process.”

The company hopes that these actions will reap financial rewards, with Perette saying that “the real benefit will start probably in the fourth quarter and then kick in in 2026.” This isn’t a desperation move. HBO Max has actually been doing pretty well, despite consistent name changes, as it added 3.4 million new subscribers this quarter.

HBO Max is just the latest streamer to put the kibosh on password sharing. Netflix ended the practice back in 2023 and Disney+ performed its own crack down on the practice last year.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/hbo-max-plans-aggressive-crack-down-on-password-sharing-starting-next-month-164357329.html?src=rss 

GPT-5 is here and it’s free for everyone

A couple of days after announcing its first open-weight models in six years, OpenAI is releasing the long-awaited GPT-5. What’s more, you can start using it today, even if you’re a free user. With GPT-5, the company is touting across-the-board enhancements, claiming the model is its best yet when it comes to coding, writing, safety, accuracy and more.

“GPT-5 is the first time that it really feels like you’re talking to an expert in any topic,” said OpenAI CEO (and hypeman) Sam Altman during a press briefing the company held before today’s announcement. “It reminds me of when the iPhone went from those giant, old pixel [screens] to the Retina Display, and then I went back to using one of those big pixelated things and I was like, ‘Wow, I can’t believe how bad we had it.'”

At the start of the year, Altman said GPT-5 would offer a unified experience for users, and the new model delivers on that promise. For the first time, OpenAI’s default offering is a reasoning model, meaning the system is programmed to tackle complex problems by breaking them into smaller parts. Previously, if you wanted to force ChatGPT to use one of OpenAI’s reasoning models, you had to select the “Think Longer” option from the prompt bar. This meant most free users didn’t even know OpenAI had more capable models. With GPT-5, the company has significantly simplified the ChatGPT experience.

On the consumer side of things, there are only three versions of the new model. One of those — GPT-5 mini — only crops up when free and Plus users run into their regular GPT-5 usage limit. The other variant, GPT-5 Pro, is, as the name suggests, only available to subscribers of the company’s $200 per month Pro plan. On the subject of query limits, Plus users can use GPT-5 “significantly” more than those with a free account, while Pro customers can chat with GPT-5 as much as they want.

When it comes to reasoning, GPT-5 is much faster than o3, OpenAI’s previous state-of-the-art AI. “It’s so fast that I’ve had the psychological experience of wondering, like, is it really thinking enough? And then it gives a great answer,” said Altman. Perhaps more importantly, it suffers from fewer hallucinations, with OpenAI claiming the model delivers more accurate answers than any of its previous reasoning systems. We’ll see how GPT-5 responds in real-world use, but if OpenAI has made meaningful improvements here, it would be a big deal; hallucinations have typically been a major weakness of reasoning models, particularly relative to traditional large language counterparts.

OpenAI

At the same time, OpenAI says GPT-5 is its safest AI to date. For one, it includes a new feature called Safe Completions. “In the past, we’ve approached this from a sort of a binary, if we thought that the prompt was safe, we would comply. If we thought it was unsafe, the model would refuse,” said Alex Beutel, safety research lead at OpenAI. “This worked well, but as a challenge that there can be kind of carefully worded prompts that could be confusing. So if someone says how much energy is needed to ignite some specific material that could be an adversary trying to get around the safety protections and cause harm, or it could be a student asking a science question to understand the physics of this material.”

With Safe Completions, GPT-5 will try to give the most helpful answer within the safety constraints OpenAI has imposed on it. In tricky situations like the one Beutel outlined above, the model will only provide high-level information that can’t be used to harm anyone. “On average, the system is both safer and more helpful for users, and we think that’ll be much better,” Beutel added.

Additionally, when it comes to health-related questions, GPT-5 is better at flagging concerns and suggesting questions the user should ask of their healthcare provider. It will also answer those prompts more precisely, thanks to the ability to adapt to the person’s knowledge level and geography.

On top of everything else, OpenAI says GPT-5 is its best model for coding yet. It’s supposedly a better writer too, with the company promising the chatbot is better at translating your drafts into “compelling, resonant” copy.

Alongside GPT-5, OpenAI is adding a handful of new features to ChatGPT. To start, users can now choose a color for their chats, with a few exclusive options available for paying customers. OpenAI has also made it easier to connect ChatGPT to Gmail, Google Calendar and Google Contacts. Once you enable the connections, the chatbot will know when to automatically reference your Google accounts; you won’t need to select anything before you start chatting. OpenAI will begin rolling out this feature to Pro subscribers starting next week, with availability for other users to follow.

Over in the Custom Instructions pane, where you can write system prompts to tweak how ChatGPT interacts with you, OpenAI is introducing a handful of pre-set personalities. The four options — cynic, robot, listener and nerd — are available as part of a research preview, and can be changed or disabled at any time.

Last but not least, OpenAI is releasing an updated version of its Advanced Voice feature the company introduced last summer. OpenAI says the tool is better at understanding instructions and adapting its speaking style to the moment. As part of this change, OpenAI is retiring Standard Voice Mode. In practice, that means the company can now offer a better voice experience to everyone since it doesn’t need to fall back on Standard Voice Mode, which isn’t natively multi-modal like Advanced Voice and therefore worse at understanding the nuances of human speech.

If you’re wondering where this leaves OpenAI on the path toward artificial general intelligence, Altman had this to say when asked about the topic. “I kind of hate the term AGI, because everyone at this point uses it to mean a slightly different thing, but [GPT-5] is a significant step forward towards models that are really capable. We’re still missing something quite important,” he said, noting GPT-5 can’t continuously learn on its own. “But the level of intelligence here, the level of capability, it feels like a huge improvement. Certainly, if I could go back five years before GPT-3 and you told me we have this now, I’d be like that’s a significant fraction of the way to something very AGI-like.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/gpt-5-is-here-and-its-free-for-everyone-170001066.html?src=rss 

Does Chris Appleton Have an Ex-Wife? All About His Former Partner Kate Katon

Chris opened up about his past relationship with former partner Kate Katon, whom he shares children with, during a 2025 podcast interview.

Chris opened up about his past relationship with former partner Kate Katon, whom he shares children with, during a 2025 podcast interview. 

PS5 sales have passed the 80 million mark

The PS5 might be lacking the cadence of first-party exclusives that made its predecessor so successful, but that doesn’t appear to be slowing it down. Sony has announced that the console had shifted just north of 80 million units as of June 30, 2025. This puts it just behind the Xbox 360 (84 million) and well on the way to overtaking the PS3 (around 87 million) in lifetime sales.

The 80.3 million figure was confirmed in Sony’s first set of quarterly results for the current financial year, during which time it sold 2.5 million PS5s, a slight downturn from 2.8 million in the previous quarter. Compared to the same period in the last financial year, however, the company has actually shifted around 100,000 more consoles in the last three months.

Sony also sold approximately 66 million PS4 and PS5 games this quarter, almost 7 million of which were first-party titles. That’s around a 12 million year-on-year increase in overall software sales. Digital accounted for 83 percent of PS4 and PS5 games sold in the last quarter, which is a larger share than in any three-month period in the previous financial year.

The last few years saw Sony briefly shift its focus towards live service games, but one of those was a well-documented disaster, and others have since been cancelled. Clearly none of that has noticeably hurt software sales, though, as Sony has continued to grow in that area.

The PS5 turns five this November, and attention will then turn to whether it will hit the all-important 100 million mark in its lifetime. The PS4 managed that in five years and seven months, and at the time it was the fastest console to reach that number. It also didn’t have to contend with tariffs. PS5 prices increased in the UK, Australia and New Zealand earlier this year, with Sony blaming a “challenging economic environment” in which it is fighting against high inflation and fluctuating exchange rates. The company has since said it is not ruling out moving PS5 manufacturing to the US in the future.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/ps5-sales-have-passed-the-80-million-mark-161131719.html?src=rss 

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