Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 3, 2018

Waching daily Mar 27 2018

Facebook is investigated over data protections [Lucien Bruggeman]

The Federal Trade Commission said it is opening an investigation into Facebook after news reports raised substantial concerns about the privacy practices of Facebook.

A statement from Tom Pahl, acting director of the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said: the FTC takes very seriously recent press reports raising substantial concerns about the privacy practices of Facebook.

The FTC probe comes amid reports that data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica, allegedly misused Facebook data from up to 50 million user profiles.

Some members of Congress and privacy advocates have pushed for the FTC to look into whether the matter violates a 2011 consent decree in which Facebook said it would uphold a number of privacy protections.

Facebooks CEO Mark Zuckerberg signed his name in ads taken out in newspapers in the U.S.

and the United Kingdom on Sunday apologizing for its failure to protect user information.

This was a breach of trust, and Im sorry we didnt do more at the time.

Were now taking steps to make sure this doesnt happen again, the ads said.

The Senate Judiciary invited Zuckerberg to testify at an April 10 hearing on data privacy.

ABC News has reached out to Facebook for a response.

In a statement, Cambridge Analytica said, that in cooperation with the social media company, it had deleted all the Facebook data and related information in 2015.

The data firm said that such information was not used as part of its work with the 2016 Trump presidential campaign.

This Facebook data was not used by Cambridge Analytica as part of the services it provided to the Donald Trump presidential campaign; personality targeted advertising was not carried out for this client either, Cambridge Analytica said in a statement.

The company has made this clear since 2016.".

Cambridge Analytica has also previously said it was unaware the data was improperly obtained by a third party and that it was destroyed as soon as they were made aware.

That third party, Aleksandr Kogan, the Cambridge University researcher who collected information on millions of Americans through Facebook for Cambridge Analytica, told ABC News that both the social media giant and the data firm are making him a "scapegoat.

The Trump campaign has said it never used data from Cambridge Analytica.

Cook County in Illinois is suing Facebook and Cambridge Analytica for harvesting of Facebook user data and Facebook for not protecting the data.

Additionally, 37 state attorneys general sent a letter to Facebook Monday demanding to learn more about the social networks practices, privacy protections and the scope of the data breach. [Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE, LIKE, SHARE and COMMENT to get the latest news]

For more infomation >> Facebook is investigated over data protections [Lucien Bruggeman] - Duration: 4:15.

-------------------------------------------

Juneau is finalist for Seattle Public Schools Superintendent - Duration: 0:44.

For more infomation >> Juneau is finalist for Seattle Public Schools Superintendent - Duration: 0:44.

-------------------------------------------

Police Investigating After Shooting Victim Is Found In Oakland - Duration: 1:51.

For more infomation >> Police Investigating After Shooting Victim Is Found In Oakland - Duration: 1:51.

-------------------------------------------

What is included in our 8 week challenge - Duration: 4:37.

For more infomation >> What is included in our 8 week challenge - Duration: 4:37.

-------------------------------------------

Man With A Plan - What Is Happening? - Duration: 2:55.

For more infomation >> Man With A Plan - What Is Happening? - Duration: 2:55.

-------------------------------------------

CNN 10 - March 27, 2018 | A Chinese Space Station is Expected to Fall Toward Earth | CNN Student New - Duration: 10:01.

CNN 10 is taking you to Egypt for our first story this Tuesday. I`m Carl Azuz. Thank you

for watching the show.

Polls are open in the North African country of 97 million people. A three- day long election

began on Monday that will determine the next president of Egypt. But experts say that`s

a foregone conclusion, that the country`s

current leader, President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, is certain to win another term.

This is Egypt`s third election since long time leader Hosni Mubarak was forced out of

power in 2011. And that time, like several countries in the

Middle East and North Africa, Egypt saw a wave of protests against its government that

led to significant changes in leadership. But today, like

several of those same countries, Egypt continues to struggle with economic problems, limited

opportunities for its people and terrorism.

President Sisi was first elected in 2014 and a win this week would bring his second and

last four-year term. One reason why the vote is being

watched worldwide is because if turnout is high, it`s possible President Sisi will try

to change Egypt`s constitution so he can serve longer.

Let`s take a ride around the streets of Cairo. If you haven`t noticed, Egypt is having a

presidential

election. A kaleidoscope of campaign posters wallpapers the city.

But you might have noticed something missing, the opposition.

It`s not my fault, Egypt`s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said in an interview. I swear

to god I wish there would have been more candidates for

people to choose what they want, but they were not ready yet. There`s no shame in this.

There were high profile contenders, but Egyptian authorities arrested former army General Sami

Anan on a number of charges. Ahmed Shafiq, a

former 2012 presidential candidate, withdrew amid reports of intimidation. Human rights

lawyer Khaled Ali withdrew after saying he was under pressure

from authorities.

Muhammad Anwar Sadat, the nephew of late Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, also says he felt pressure

to withdraw.

After searching, we finally found the subtle posters of Mousa Mustapha Mousa, a last minute

and little known challenger.

President Sisi was going alone in this game and if he falls, we all fall.

REPORTER: Mousa is accused of being a stooge of the government, a tool, to give the election

the veneer of legitimacy. He denies this and insists his

platform makes him the better candidate.

No one doubts Sisi will win. The real challenge is voter apathy. His get out the vote campaign

aims to drive Egyptians to the polls, and give him

the broad mandate he needs for another four years.

Ian Lee, CNN, Cairo.

This week, a Chinese space station is set to fall from space.

It`s the size of a school bus and weighs more than nine tons.

Chinese officials say most of the space station will burn up upon re-entry.

But two-thirds of the Earth`s surface is in the potential impact zone.

However, the odds of getting hit by debris are miniscule.

If you were lucky enough to win the Powerball a thousand times, that`s how unlucky you would

haves to be to actually get

hit by a piece of this thing.

It will look like a bright show in the sky.

Since 2011, it served as an experimental lab. After its two year mission ended, China placed

the space station into sleep mode.

China had planned to control its fiery descent, but it stopped sending data back to Earth.

That made a controlled re-entry impossible.

rom a falling space station to the rise of e-commerce,

the U.S. Census Bureau estimates that American spent more than $453 billion last

year buying stuff online. E-commerce sales have been growing for years now, so that`s

not new. What is are the challenges this creates for

shipping companies. They have to continually upgrade and expand to keep up with the amount

of items being shipped as opposed to bought in a store.

For a sense of how all that`s managed, we`re visiting a United Parcel Service facility

in the Bluegrass State.

Hair spray for Houston, dog food for Dallas, samples to Sydney, a contract for Kansas.

Sorting parcel seems so simple. The goods come in, they`re sorted, and then they leave.

But when your warehouse is bigger than 94 football fields, and your handling 2 million

packages a day, there`s no room for a snooze, at the UPS

Worldport hub in Kentucky.

In charge of it all is Jason Foote.

This facility, while in a normal day, they only process 2 million packages. In their

peak season,

we`ll handle more than double that.

Well, only, that`s an enormous number.

It is. But so do every day.

Cameras and conveyors everywhere, 155 miles of moving belt. While automation is key, humans

remain part and parcel of this

operation. Many of them working here, local students, and the pace is relentless.

This is never ending. Hour after hour, these small packages flow into his tidal wave of

sorting that now has to take place to ensure

these little packages end up in the right destination.

That`s where the humans come in. They needed to fill freight containers to the brim.

What you want to do is you want to build up as high as you can.

QUEST: Kyle is the supervisor and showed me how. Think of playing Tetris.

If you`re building a wall, you want to go as high as you possibly can, right, and then

what you want to avoid is making columns.

But when you get all the way to your height, you want to then build out.

Suddenly, a song came into my mind, little boxes on the hillside, little boxes made with

ticky tape, little boxes on the hillside and they

all look just the same.

Live crickets.

Crickets in the cargo, and Amazon logo`s grinning down on me everywhere.

It`s not very complicated.

E-commerce is what`s filling these containers.

It`s about half past 1:00 in the morning, and the tempo has increased. Roughly 380,000

packages an hour are now flowing into the

Worldport.

My parcels depart as quickly as they arrive, as those metal containers slide towards the

planes.

Amid all this high technology movement of commerce, there`s a delicious simplicity about

the way these containers are dragged around by

hand.

The fact is as the network grows with demand, so does the risk of problems and challenges.

It`s a fine balancing act for those in

control.

We have 120 aircraft coming in, so it`s bound to have its high (ph), but we do it every

night. We make that balance every single night.

And that`s when you`re called up, and they say, is that right?

No, we have about 10,000 people who are working at night, to do a great job. They don`t even

need me.

Kentucky is UPS`s biggest facility and it`s not big enough. Future expansion means the

place will handle half a million

packages an hour. As our love of e-commerce grows exponentially, so does this logistics

powerhouse.

Charles has a head filled with motors. We`re not insulting someone. We`re reporting on

a robot at the University of Cambridge. It`s named

Charles and its built-in servos help it mimic human expressions.

Cameras and computers factor in here. They record and analyze positions of real people`s

facial features and then send them over to Charles who

appears to imitate their expressions.

So, what`s the value here? Researchers are trying to figure out if a more expressive

robot is better at engaging the people who interact with it.

So, does that make Charles two-face or multi-faceted?

It`s time to face up and face back. Some folks may make it about face if they came face to

face in a face-off or had to face time with the face they

didn`t trust. I guess it all comes down to whether you want Charles in charge of your

facial expressions.

I`m Carl Azuz for CNN 10.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét