31 Temmuz 2015 Cuma

Twitter Product Executives Are Leaving In A Hurry

Interim Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said his product team’s shortcomings are “unacceptable.” Now, they’re walking out the door.

Jack Dorsey is experiencing his first wave of executive departures since returning to Twitter as interim CEO earlier this month.

Dorsey lost three top product execs this week. On Tuesday, right after the company's earnings results were announced, news broke that Director of Product Management Todd Jackson and Head of Growth Christian Oestlien were on the way out.

And then, on Friday, Twitter confirmed to Re/Code that Trevor O'Brien, the product lead in charge of the company's apps, is also leaving.

The departures could be little shakers that amount to nothing, or tremors foreshadowing a larger tectonic shift.

Dorsey hasn't hid his dissatisfaction with Twitter's product efforts. He's also made clear that he's willing to rethink the social media platform's fundamentals in order to grow the service.

"Product initiatives we'd mentioned in previous earnings calls, like Instant Timelines and Logged-Out experiences, have not yet had meaningful impact on growing our audience or participation," Dorsey said during the earnings call earlier this week. "This is unacceptable and we're not happy about it."

Both Oestlien and Jackson are headed to new jobs — Oestlien to YouTube and Jackson to Dropbox. There's no word yet on what O'Brien's plans are.

The moves didn't happen overnight, but the wheels begin turning during times of uncertainty: That head hunter you turned down a few times all of a sudden gets a few minutes. One conversation turns into another. And then it's decision time.

As Dorsey sets out to remake the company, he's losing a fair deal of institutional knowledge. But for someone who's said, "I want us to question everything to make it better," that may not be a bad thing.



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Famous Silicon Valley Matchmaker's Charity Is Not Actually A Charity

Instead of charging a fee, Pari Livermore asks clients to send donations to her pet charities. Problem is, one of them was not a charity at all and donations went straight to her home address.

Pari Livermore at her home in San Rafael, California, on Oct. 30, 2007.

Darcy Padilla/The New York Times

Pari Livermore, a matchmaker to many Silicon Valley elites, has become famous for the unconventional bargain she strikes with her clients: Instead of paying her directly for her services, they instead donate to her chosen charities. Glowing profiles in the New York Times and GQ, among others, have attested to the thousands of singles who paid to attend her "Red & White" parties and to private clients who paid $10,000 a year or more for her services. She often says her introductions have led to hundreds of marriages.

Over the years, Livermore has championed a variety of charities, but at least since 2007 she has directed some clients to support an organization called Spotlight on Heroes, which she described as a charity helping underserved kids in Northern California and other causes.

But BuzzFeed News has found that Spotlight on Heroes is not in fact a charity.


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Which Celebrity Is Young Twitter CRO Adam Bain?

You be the judge…


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Mark Zuckerberg Announces Pregnancy With First Child And Opens Up About Past Miscarriages

“We hope that sharing our experience will give more people the same hope we felt.”

"Priscilla and I have some exciting news: we're expecting a baby girl!" Zuckerberg writes.

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The 31-year-old Facebook founder and 30-year-old doctor have been married since 2012. The pregnancy marks a new chapter in the couples' lives, as they prepare to "make the world a better place for [their] child and the next generation."

facebook.com

Zuckerberg continues the announcement by sharing that this pregnancy marks the end of a difficult struggle with miscarriages over the past few years.

Zuckerberg continues the announcement by sharing that this pregnancy marks the end of a difficult struggle with miscarriages over the past few years.

"We've been trying to have a child for a couple of years and have had three miscarriages along the way," Zuckerberg writes. He goes on to explain how isolating and lonely the experience was for him and his wife.

"You feel so hopeful when you learn you're going to have a child," he writes. "You start imagining who they'll become and dreaming of hopes for their future. You start making plans, and then they're gone. It's a lonely experience."

Mark Zuckerberg / Via facebook.com

"Most people don't discuss miscarriages because you worry your problems will distance you or reflect upon you [...] So you struggle on your own. [But] When we started talking to our friends, we realized how frequently this happened — that many people we knew had similar issues and that nearly all had healthy children after all."

"In today's open and connected world, discussing these issues doesn't distance us; it brings us together. It creates understanding and tolerance, and it gives us hope [...] We hope that sharing our experience will give more people the same hope we felt and will help more people feel comfortable sharing their stories as well," Zuckerberg writes.


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The Congressional Black Caucus Presses Tech Companies On Diversity

Members of the Congressional Black Caucus will meet with executives of Apple, Google and Intel to encourage greater inclusion in the tech sector.

Chair G.K. Butterfield and members of the Congressional Black Caucus. Mark Wilson / Getty Images

Five years from now will the workplaces of Silicon Valley's leading tech companies remain as overwhelmingly white as they are today? The Congressional Black Caucus hopes not.

Lawmakers from the CBC's diversity task force, Reps. Barbara Lee, Hakeem Jeffries and G. K. Butterfield, the Chair of the Caucus, will meet with top brass of several major tech firms next week, in a push to increase representation of African Americans. Apple, Google, Intel, and Pandora are among the firms hosting the CBC delegation. The trip is part of the Caucus' Tech 2020 initiative, a five-year plan to address the dearth of black employees within the tech world.

"Increasing the representation of African Americans in the tech sector is a moral and economic imperative," Rep. Lee told BuzzFeed News. "When you have a diverse and inclusive workforce and leadership, new doors for growth and opportunity are opened."

A central goal of the Congressional Black Caucus is getting tech companies to develop and publish their plans to increase diversity. These inclusion plans, the Caucus says, should define short and long term benchmarks and capture both engineering and non-technical jobs. That many of the Valley's heavyweights have made a recent habit of releasing their diversity numbers has sparked real optimism within the Caucus, a group eager to partner with the private sector to grapple with enduring racial bias.

"I don't believe that the technology and innovation-economy companies are reluctant to diversify their workforce," Rep. Jeffries told BuzzFeed News. "Quite the contrary, there is a refreshing acknowledgement of the problem, and a commitment amongst many to do everything possible to remedy it."

For the CBC, the pledges of transparency and improvement coming from tech companies is an encouraging first step. Solid plans come next. "This trip will help develop concrete steps that we could collectively take to ensure that the diversity problem is addressed in a meaningful fashion," Jeffries said.

A major focus of the CBC's Tech 2020 initiative, Lee and Jeffries said, is strengthening the pipeline of qualified talent. Not only does this include exposing middle and high school-aged students to the STEM disciplines, but also connecting talented women and people of color with tech companies that have narrow, monochromatic professional networks.

Juanita Leveroni, diversity account manager at CODE2040, a nonprofit that promotes greater representation of black and Latino technologists, says she wants to expand the discussion of the pipeline problem to encompass how tech companies recruit and hire. "We can broaden the pipeline, but if we are not doing anything to change the funnel — the vetting process, the interview process, company culture, company leadership, then we are essentially just getting different people to the same result," she told BuzzFeed News.

In a statement to BuzzFeed News, Pandora expressed excitement for the upcoming visit, while also using a phrase common among tech companies earnestly describing their efforts to improve diversity. "We have work that we need to do, and the CBC will certainly add an important voice in this conversation." Pandora's diversity numbers published last August showed a near 50/50 gender split of its overall workforce.

Intel, another company hosting the lawmakers, has pledged by 2020 to shape its workforce to match the available talent pool of minorities. The company told BuzzFeed News that their diversity programs are aligned with the CBC's goals.

"I look forward to working with the tech executives to find new and innovative ways of advancing our goal of greater inclusion for African Americans in the tech sector," Lee said. "Our goal is to make this a cooperative effort."



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Here's What Apple Is Worth In Terms We Can Actually Understand

Explain it to me like I’m not in tech.

That's 16 trillion calories.

Starbucks / Michelle Rial / BuzzFeed

*Kind of makes sense to get a package at that point?

Michelle Rial / BuzzFeed


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A New App Lets Uber Drivers Report Fare Discrepancies

SquaredFare, an app independent of Uber, keeps track of rides to make sure Uber pays drivers the right amount.

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When it comes to interacting with Uber, its drivers have only two options: email support or physically go into the nearest office. Neither of which is easy for someone who spends all day driving to wherever their next passenger will take them. If, say, there is a problem with the fare Uber calculated, how does a driver know — much less quickly report it to Uber?

Now, drivers have a fast, efficient means to rectify a fare discrepancy. SquaredFare, an app created by president of the California App-Based Drivers Association Joseph DeWolf, works alongside and yet independently of the Uber app to keep track of all your fares in order to ensure they are accurate. (This app, DeWolf told BuzzFeed News, is not affiliated with CADA.)

"Another thing the app does is it allows the driver to report rider issues in a very efficient way," DeWolf told BuzzFeed News. "If there was an unsupervised child in the car, drivers can immediately send Uber a pre-scripted email explaining exactly what's happening. Drivers don't have a lot of time to stop their cars and type out emails so we have tried to make it as simple as possible to report fare issues and rider issues and get back on the road."

And even if there is nothing to report, SquaredFare keeps a record of all of a driver's rides and fares in case a driver's account is deactivated or deleted for any reason. The logistics of the app is much like that of Uber: A driver will start and stop the trip and the GPS-activated algorithm will input the time, distance, and local base fare and any applicable surge pricing into Uber's formula to determine how much that trip costs. SquaredFare, however, is not integrated with Uber's open API, which prevents the app from starting and stopping a trip automatically when the driver does so in the Uber app. In other words drivers have to start and stop the trips in SquaredFare themselves. But DeWolf said there was good reason for that choice.

"We did not use their API because number one we didn't want them to access what we're doing," DeWolf said. "It's just a trust issue, but also if we were using their API any network error that was happening in the Uber app would happen to us too. Our calculation would be shorted if Uber's was."

Though DeWolf initially feared a backlash from Uber he provided emails to BuzzFeed News showing that Uber's customer service has responded well to the pre-scripted requests to change a fare. After listing the pick up and drop off locations the pre-scripted email reads:

Please be advised that Uber undercharged the rider.

My calculation shows my mileage at 4.43 Miles, and the trip duration was hours:0, mins:13, secs:55. The fare breakdown was a base fare of $5.00. Mile charges were $10.41. Time charges were $5.57. Toll charges were $5.00. The safe rides fee was $1.00. The surge was 1.00 x.

According to my calculation, that the fare should have been $26.98. The Uber fare was shown on my phone was $26.39.

And after requesting some more information, Uber responded:

Happy to adjust this trip for you, Mohsen.

The fare has been adjusted to the correct amount of $26.98 to reflect the pickup and drop-off locations you provided.

Please continue to let us know about any trips that may need adjustment within 48 hours so that we may charge the rider and adjust appropriately.

As of right now, SquaredFare is only available in Los Angeles and San Francisco and cannot be used to report Lyft fare discrepancies. It is free to download and use for now, but DeWolf says all that will change as the company grows. "When we come up with the second version that we're already working on we'll ask for a subscription from the drivers," he said. "Some of our drivers are saving up to $70 a month on just fare adjustments and they have said to us for this particular service they'd be willing to pay up to $10 a month for this."

As for why DeWolf and his team chose not to build an app that reports discrepancies to Lyft, he said: "The vast majority of the complaints were regarding the Uber network and we saw fewer complaints about Lyft. We decided that there was a definite need for Uber riders but not so much for Lyft drivers. But certainly if they reach out to us we can build one for Lyft."

A pre-scripted email an Uber driver sent through SquaredFare

A pre-scripted email an Uber driver sent through SquaredFare

BuzzFeed News

Uber's response:

Uber's response:

BuzzFeed News


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30 Temmuz 2015 Perşembe

Twitter's New Homepage Goes Into Wide Release Today

A new homepage tries to remove some of the product’s mystery.

Twitter is widely rolling out a new homepage today that doesn't make people guess what its product does.

When viewed by someone that is not logged in to the platform, Twitter.com now displays actual tweets, where it used to only show categories. The new layout shoves high value tweets right in new users' faces. The implicit message: you're going to miss all this good stuff if you don't stick around.

The homepage, after a period of testing, is getting widely released today, the company confirmed.

The change is yet another in a slew that have taken place under the leadership of Interim CEO Jack Dorsey, who said he is willing to question everything in an effort to make Twitter more intuitive.

This homepage should take away some of the mystery of Twitter, which can often feel like a puzzle to people encountering it for the first time.



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Marc Andreessen Has Heard Some Disturbing Rumors

The venture capitalist Marc Andreessen has been awfully disturbed recently.

Michael Kovac / Getty Images


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Obama Wants To Build World's Most Powerful Supercomputer

The President signed an executive order to launch a new technology initiative.

J. Scott Applewhite / AP

On Wednesday, President Obama signed an executive order to launch a technology initiative designed to take American computing through the next decade. Called the National Strategic Computer Initiative, it lays out a plan "to maximize benefits of high-performance computing research, development, and deployment." Which means, in layman's terms, that the President wants to build the most powerful computers that have ever existed.

How powerful? About thirty times more powerful than anything working today, if the order's stated capability goal of an exascale computing system can be achieved. Exascale means a computer that can process a billion billion operations every second — what some scientists theorize it would take to model the human brain. Right now, China's Tianhe-2 holds the world record for most powerful computer at 33.86 petaflops, and there are 1,000 petaflops in an exascale system.

Leaving all the jargon behind, this order is swinging for the technological fences.

A supercomputer at the scale Obama calls for could be used for everything from defense projects to climate change research to drug development. A more powerful computer means, hopefully, that the questions we can answer will get more and more complex. The President's order signals that he wants America to be at the forefront of those discoveries, and lays out a basic framework for how to get there:

The United States must adopt a whole-of-government approach that draws upon the strengths of and seeks cooperation among all executive departments and agencies with significant expertise or equities in [high-performance computing] while also collaborating with industry and academia.

Facing technological challenges that include questions beyond how to build the computer itself, but also how to power it, program it, and find a way to build more of them, the order calls for cooperation — from the National Science Foundation, Department of Defense, and Department of Energy, among others. That spirit of collaboration is not intended to be limited to government agencies, but will include the private sector as well. Which means we might see Silicon Valley pitching in on this supercomputer idea, too.


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Facebook's Super Mario Hackathon In 11 GIFs

Facebook hosted a Super Mario hackathon this week. The winning team’s level will be included in the soon-to-be-released Super Mario Maker game.

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Hackers Are Increasingly Posting Tutorials To YouTube — And Making Money From Google Ads

A new report shows how hackers not only spread easy tutorials on how to hack web cams on YouTube, but also make money off Google Ads running alongside them. Google gets a share of the profits too.

Miss Teen USA 2013 Cassidy Wolf went public after hackers took photos of her through her web cam, now she tried to raise awareness among other teens.

Noam Galai / Getty Images

SAN FRANCISCO — Hackers are uploading videos to YouTube showing people how to break into computers remotely — making money not only from selling hacking tools but also from Google Ads that run alongside the videos, according to a report published Wednesday by Digital Citizens Alliance, a Washington, DC-based NGO.

"Everything we found in the report we found in the clear, open web," Adam Benson, Deputy Executive Director of Digital Citizens Alliance, told BuzzFeed News. "These aren't some dark, hard to find forums teaching people how to invade your privacy. These are things that are now out in the open with Youtube. They are mainstream."

YouTube, which is owned by Google, also makes a profit from these tutorials — despite their illegal content. The report found that "roughly 38 percent of the video tutorials for the best-known RATs had advertisements running alongside the videos." Google gets most of the revenue from the ads, with a portion going to whoever posts the videos, based on views. As the process of remotely hijacking a computer becomes easier (and cheaper) to carry out, it has risen in popularity, according to the report.

YouTube accounts with names like Sausarge and TheBroBro have uploaded dozens of videos, contributing to the thousands of tutorials the report says are uploaded annually to guide anyone willing to listen on how to hijack a computer. While some feature just a run-through of the methods, most include a few seconds sample of footage they have recorded off a webcam — often a shot of young girl in her pajamas, or a teen playing with her hair while staring into her webcam. The hackers who do this use a remote administration tool (RAT) and are called "ratters." The method is so simple that a 7-minute YouTube video can teach anyone with the most basic computer skills how to purchase and use the software, the Digital Citizens Alliance said. It's also getting cheaper for would-be attackers, as the hackers make money on selling the tools and by running Google Ads on the YouTube videos, the report found, citing dozens of videos that it examined.

Just one video published six weeks ago has nearly 13,000 views already. It shows real footage from an unsuspecting family watching TV in their living room when a shrill version of the song "Tip Toe Through the Tulips" begins to play. The teenage daughter walks around the living room trying to find the source of the music, testing computers and phones. She grows increasingly panicked and begins yelling, "Mom, I think that camera is picking up creepy stuff. I think somebody hacked that camera!" From the computer, where a webcam has been turned on to watch and record the entire scene, a voice cackles.

The user who uploaded the video has dozens with similar titles, all including the phrase "cam trolling" and showing variations of people filmed without their consent. In the comments section, YouTube users complement the videos on their ability to scare or confuse people, and share tips and advice on how to hack into webcams.

While some sites like PirateBay or HackerForum offer free downloads of the RATs, updated or advanced versions can be found online for a mere $10-$50. According to the report, in 2013 similar RATs could cost as much as $250.

The ads running alongside the posts ranged from Acura and American Express to the Wall Street Journal and ESPN. Those companies pay YouTube's parent company Google for the adspace, when a video poster signs up for the YouTube Partner Program, they get a cut of whatever ad revenue is generated by video views in exchange for allowing the ads.

The YouTube Partner Program's guidelines state that each video must be "approved for monetization" and so, the report concludes, "someone, or something, 'approved' the videos running with Partner Program advertising. Who, or what, would approve advertising next to videos that humiliate children? YouTube hasn't answered questions about how ads could run next to videos sympathetic to ISIS, even with many advertisers wondering how that could happen."

Matt McLernon, a YouTube spokesman, told BuzzFeed News in an email: "YouTube has clear policies that outline what content is acceptable to post, and we remove videos violating these policies when flagged by our users."

A screen grab of one YouTube video, where an attacker took over the camera of an Australian Teen. Advertisements for American Express and USB devices run in the background.

via Digital Citizens Alliance / Via digitalcitizensalliance.org

Hemanshu Nigam, a former federal prosecutor against online crimes, and current CEO of SSP Blue, an internet security consultancy group, likened the practice to what police used to call "peeping Toms." Would-be attackers, he said, begin by going to YouTube to watch the films uploaded through compromised webcams. Then they find out how easy it is to hack into computers and take over webcams, mess with URLs, and play psychological games with the victims they have compromised.

"There is access to the child's home without ever going to the child's home," Nigam told BuzzFeed News. "There is a merging of a person who may be wanting to do something illegal in the physical world. but now they say ok, maybe i can do it in the online world. And the hacking community is making it really easy to do that."

Nigam, who still consults law enforcement officials on online crimes, said women were being increasingly targeted. "The number of women and teenage girls who are targets is going up," he said Nigam. "These guys go after women. They film them and then present them with the option of doing what the hacker says or being exposed to the world in a way which might be embarrassing. It is hard to come forward and report these crimes."

The Digital Citizens Alliance report found that a woman's compromised computer is, on average, worth more than a man's, with hackers selling access to the devices of women for $5, while access to a man's computer sold for $1.

Cassidy Wolf was Miss Teen California 2013 when she received an email containing two photographs of her naked in her own bedroom. The email threatened to make the photos public if she didn't send higher-quality photos.

"Your dream of being a model will be transformed into a porn star," the email said.

The photos were taken by her laptop's web camera, which had been hijacked by Jared James Abrahams, a former high school classmate of Wolf's.

Wolf went to police in April 2013, and six months later they arrested Abrahams. He was tried and sentenced in November 2014 to 18 months in prison for hacking into the webcams of dozens of young women, including Wolf.

Today, Wolf speaks out about how difficult it was to come forward, and regularly replies to emails and Facebook messages from teens facing similar extortion attempts after their computers and webcams were compromised.

"I've heard similar stories ever since my story became public," Wolf told BuzzFeed News by phone. "I think that crimes, physical or digital should be treated the same. Technology is constantly evolving and now it is allowing these peeping Tom's into your homes without them ever actually stepping foot there."

Wolf said she was disappointed that Google was not doing more to monitor for the type of content that would allows others to carry out the same sort of crimes she faced.

"Google should be trying to get ahead of the game, this is only going to get worse" said Wolf. "I've thought about starting a YouTube channel… but I didn't know these types of videos were part of their community. I just hope that one day if I start a YouTube channel I won't have to worry about people selling this stuff on my page."


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Zenefits Is An HR “Rocket Ship” — But Some Customers Get Left Behind

Matt Chase for BuzzFeed News

Mike Hawkins's four-month health insurance nightmare began in November, when he started doing business with a Silicon Valley startup called Zenefits.

Hawkins, the founder and CEO of Netizen, a cybersecurity startup in Allentown, Pennsylvania, had heard good things about Zenefits, a health insurance broker that offers free human resources software as a lure for small businesses. Launched in 2013, the San Francisco-based Zenefits is one of the fastest-growing and most talked-about startups of the moment, with more than 10,000 companies using its services, a valuation of $4.5 billion, and a roster of powerful investors.

But for Hawkins, 33, who became a software engineer after serving in the Army, Zenefits was instead a source of one headache after another. A process he thought would take about a month instead dragged on into March, when Hawkins finally gave up.

One of his employees, Max Harris, 37, the chief business development officer, wanted an allergist's opinion about what was ailing his four-year-old daughter, Caley, who had been getting sick with respiratory infections whenever the seasons changed. Harris, a former Army intelligence specialist and Arabic linguist who served in Iraq, hadn't had health insurance since leaving a job in a Wegmans deli to join Netizen in early 2014.

Finally, in late February this year, with coverage supposed to start days later, Zenefits informed Hawkins that it had made a significant mistake, attempting to enroll his employees with an insurance provider that didn't cover the company's region. The insurance wouldn't come through as planned.

"I'm done being patient with you people," Hawkins told Zenefits in an email that he shared with BuzzFeed News. "This is why no one likes Silicon Valley — companies like yours apparently have your heads up your asses. You're growing beyond your means and you'll be bankrupt within a year."

As it rapidly matures into a Silicon Valley giant, vacuuming up customers and burning through a mountain of venture capital, Zenefits has also racked up a number of customer complaints, over issues like software glitches and human error. More than a dozen customers who were interviewed for this article — a small but angry subset of the company's book of business — said Zenefits turned the HR process into an expensive nightmare. In several cases employees like Harris, who had put their trust in Zenefits, were left without health insurance for a month or more after they had expected it.

Matt Chase for BuzzFeed News

According to Zenefits, which is led by CEO and co-founder Parker Conrad, these service failures are rare, and not reflective of the experience of most customers. The company says it keeps 99.2% of its customers every month.

"Zenefits' customer satisfaction (as measured by net promoter score) is exceptional for a software-as-a-service company, especially one with 10,000-plus customers," Kenneth Baer, a Zenefits spokesperson, told BuzzFeed News in a statement. "It's also true that we sometimes make mistakes. This is the exception to the rule, and happens less and less frequently with each passing month. But when we do make a mistake, we work hard to correct it as quickly as possible, and make things right for our clients."

Zenefits claims it has grown more quickly than any other company delivering business software over the internet; it acquired those 10,000-plus customers and hired more than 500 employees in under two years, according to its website.

And unlike other richly valued startups like Uber and Airbnb, whose products are largely luxury items, Zenefits makes much of its money trading in a service that is essential to people's lives. So when Zenefits breaks, or when it makes a mistake, or even when it takes a particularly long time to fulfill a customer's request, the consequences can be serious.

Zenefits’ success and rapid expansion can be partly attributed to the industry it is disrupting. The majority of the insurance brokers who serve businesses are deeply — almost defiantly — old-fashioned, using their powers of persuasion and tolerance for tedium to convince insurance providers to give their clients a good deal. It's a business overflowing with forms and spreadsheets that companies resent having to fill out. Many insurance brokers are local, independent outfits. A few, like Digital Insurance, a subsidiary of Fidelity National Financial, or Wells Fargo, which has an insurance brokerage arm, are major corporations.

The insurance brokerage business is extremely lucrative. After selling insurance policies, brokers are paid commissions by the insurance companies every month, in perpetuity, even if they do nothing. Zenefits has become a broker itself, collecting around 5% of its customers' monthly insurance premiums, in line with the industry standard.

This predictable stream of revenue has made Zenefits very popular among investors. The monthly payments cause Zenefits’ financial statements to resemble those of startups that sell software over the internet on a subscription basis (a widely used business model known as software-as-a-service). Except in Zenefits’ case, the software is free. That tempts customers to use it to organize their employee benefits and payroll, which in turn often encourages them to buy insurance through Zenefits. And the payments from the insurance companies keep flowing in.

"It's a genius business model," said Jonathan Marcus, the CEO and founder of Goodsie, a New York-based startup that provides e-commerce software to businesses, and which is a Zenefits customer. "I'm very jealous I didn't think of it."

Matt Chase for BuzzFeed News

The early success of the business model has some of the world's best venture capitalists enthralled with the prospects for Zenefits. Andreessen Horowitz, which has been an investor in success stories like Facebook, Twitter and Airbnb, now has more of its money invested in Zenefits than in any other company. (Andreessen Horowitz is an investor in BuzzFeed.)

From the beginning, Zenefits took an aggressive approach to entering the market and defending its turf. In the fall of 2013, just months after Zenefits launched, Conrad, the CEO, learned that a group of investors who had provided seed financing to Zenefits had also backed SimplyInsured, a rival insurance broker that used a similar business model. Zenefits and SimplyInsured had been peers in the prestigious Silicon Valley incubator Y Combinator, completing the program together in early 2013.

Conrad, concerned about a possible conflict, told the investors that he planned to return their money, according to people briefed on the matter and emails obtained by BuzzFeed News. While such a stance wouldn't be surprising for regulating later-stage investments, some experts said it was an unusual way to handle investments made at the seed stage, when a company's place in the marketplace isn't yet established.

The investors, opting to stick with Zenefits, instead sold their stake in SimplyInsured, people briefed on the matter said. Zenefits went on to raise a Series A round led by Andreessen Horowitz. SimplyInsured, focusing more narrowly on health insurance and courting smaller companies, has been left in the dust.

Zenefits is now a juggernaut, raising $500 million of venture capital in May to fuel its expansion. After opening an office in Scottsdale, Arizona, it recently signed a lease on an office in nearby Tempe, which will soon house hundreds of new employees. Late last year, in a sign of its clout, the company hired David Sacks, a founder of Yammer and a former PayPal executive, to be its chief operating officer.

"Just managing something that's growing this fast, it's kind of like building the rocket ship in mid-flight," Sacks said in a recent Zenefits promotional video. "That's an incredibly challenging thing to do."

Setting up health insurance for a small company is a complicated process, with plenty of potential for error, regardless of who the broker is. Brokers, both old-school and new, make mistakes, sometimes forcing employees to go without health insurance for months. "It's kind of like buying a house," said Jessica Miller-Merrell, a human resources expert and blogger who advises tech companies on their HR. "You have a mountain of paperwork you have to complete and sign. If you miss a particular paper, it delays the process."

Zenefits' heavy emphasis on software, Miller-Merrell added, introduces additional risks. "When you use technology to automate the process," she said, "mistakes are likely going to be made. And they're probably big ones."

The Zenefits spokesperson argued that the company's technology actually lowers the potential for mistakes, because it is less reliant on humans.

Many customers interviewed for this article declined to speak on the record; as startup companies often based in Silicon Valley, they were fearful of angering powerful friends of Zenefits, like Andreessen Horowitz or Y Combinator. But their stories showed how even small failures of the Zenefits "rocket ship" can be disastrous for its customers.

When setting up health insurance coverage, Zenefits can be prone to seemingly careless errors, several customers said — like premiums being charged for an employee who had left a company, or a current employee being incorrectly cut off from health insurance.

Several startup executives said administrative errors by Zenefits caused employees to go without health insurance while they were being resolved. In one case, a startup executive said they paid out of pocket for an employee's prescriptions during a month that the employee went without coverage.

Zenefits declined to comment on these examples. Without knowledge of the customers' identities, representatives said they could not determine whether the errors were the fault of Zenefits, an insurance company, or the customer.

Part of the problem may come down to resources. While many Zenefits customers have dedicated account managers, companies with fewer than 25 employees generally don't have one after their initial setup period. "We can't afford to have one person for every two-person company; we wouldn't be in business," a senior Zenefits executive, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, told BuzzFeed News.

Many of the unhappy customers said it seemed to them like Zenefits was growing too quickly to adequately resolve their issues. Several described a churn of customer service representatives — they would start working with one Zenefits representative, and then learn that person had been either fired or promoted to a different job.

"Everybody I talked to got promoted within two weeks, it seemed like," said Hawkins, the Netizen CEO. Marcus, the CEO of the New York-based startup Goodsie, said, "the contacts we had are no longer there."

Zenefits very well "could end up being revolutionary," said Adam Beck, a health insurance professor at the American College, in Bryn Mawr, Penn. But he said Zenefits would have to find a way to balance its reliance on technology with a personal touch.

"There is very much a human element in many aspects of insurance, really outside property and casualty," Beck said. "You do need more human interaction, just because the nature of the financial product is inherently more personal."

Some customers were willing to forgive missteps by Zenefits, especially when they related to software bugs — an issue that any fast-growing technology company has to deal with. But bugs in Zenefits software, which create problems when customers try to perform daily tasks, can be particularly aggravating.

Michael Schneider, a 34-year-old serial entrepreneur in Los Angeles, signed up for Zenefits in June after starting a company called Service, which aims to resolve customer complaints relating to any company. "Overall, I love the idea of Zenefits," Schneider said. "I hate paper, and I hate bullshit, and Zenefits seems to be a really efficient play to solve all those issues."

Schneider wanted to use Zenefits to pay a couple of contractors, but he was stymied when the software wouldn't verify Service's bank account. "They finally acknowledged it as a bug," Schneider said. The senior Zenefits executive said the bug stemmed from a software glitch known as a race condition, which prevented the system from verifying test deposits. Before the issue was fixed, however, Schneider used PayPal to pay his contractors on schedule, incurring almost $300 in fees. He said he was led to believe the fees would be reimbursed by Zenefits.

He never received the reimbursement, though he says he is now a happy customer. The senior Zenefits executive dismissed the notion that Schneider would be paid back, drawing this analogy: "It's like saying there was something I encountered, like a technical snafu or a bug, at Amazon, and so I bought the product at Best Buy for a higher price, and then I came back to Amazon and said, 'I want you to refund me the difference in cost.'"

Since Zenefits relies on insurance companies, some problems are out of the company’s hands. For Marcus, of Goodsie, the process of enrolling in health care for his small company last year was painfully slow, with insurance cards failing to arrive until late in September, the month that coverage was supposed to begin. Zenefits says this delay stemmed from the insurance company, which took a particularly long time.

But Marcus, who switched to Zenefits after becoming fed up with a local insurance broker, also had complaints with Zenefits itself. Despite the free software, he said, he didn't feel the process was much more automated than his previous experience. When an employee recently applied for coverage, for example, Marcus assumed the employee's status would be reflected in the Zenefits software. But Marcus only learned the coverage had been approved, he said, when he happened to call Zenefits to inquire about it.

"I thought there would be a change in the process, but there wasn't really," Marcus told BuzzFeed News. "There's just a lot of manual paperwork required by Zenefits, the same way that would be required by any broker."

"So, I'm left scratching my head," Marcus added. "What are they doing to earn the monthly commission they earn off of us? The answer, as a 10-person company, is nothing, really." Marcus remains a Zenefits customer.

A number of Zenefits customers have complained about their problems through Twitter, including Netizen, the cybersecurity startup in Pennsylvania. Hawkins, the Netizen CEO, said in a tweet in late November that he wasn't able to get his employees set up with insurance. He soon got an email from Matt Epstein, Zenefits's vice president of marketing, who said a gap in a Zenefits database meant Netizen wouldn't have immediate access to price quotes.

Matt Chase for BuzzFeed News

"It looks like we have live quotes for your company zip code, but not your employee zip code," Epstein said in the email. "This happens very rarely, but unfortunately happened to you."

With the automated process having fallen short, Netizen would have to use a manual method, including sending personal information about its employees to Zenefits. The senior Zenefits executive who spoke to BuzzFeed News said Hawkins didn't send this information until late January, delaying the process. Hawkins countered that he was busy and had hoped Zenefits would help him avoid this very type of paperwork.

But then, more than a month after Zenefits had received the paperwork, and with just days remaining before the coverage was supposed to start, a Zenefits representative said in an email that the company had submitted Netizen's application to a local Blue Cross member company that didn't offer insurance in Netizen's county. "There are 4 different versions of Blue Cross that operate in Pennsylvania and the underwriter did not inform us of this until your case was sent to be finalized," the email, sent on February 25, said.

Zenefits said it would have to apply again for the insurance — which would now start a month later, in April.

For Harris, the 37-year-old Army veteran who was Hawkins's first hire, the Zenefits failure came at a particularly stressful time. Harris had recently gone through a divorce. His daughter, Caley, had health insurance only through the Children's Health Insurance Program in Pennsylvania — which wouldn't fully cover a trip to an allergist to treat her seasonal illness. Harris said the problems with Zenefits aggravated his post-traumatic stress disorder.

"I had already reached out to my allergist" to set up an appointment for Caley, Harris told BuzzFeed News. "And then Zenefits was like, 'Oh, oops.'"

"I wanted to throw my computer at the wall," he said. "I was furious."

Zenefits ended up offering Netizen another option, to enroll with a different carrier by mid-March and have the coverage apply retroactively to March 1. Hawkins, frustrated by the lengthy process, dumped Zenefits instead.

He eventually got his employees health insurance through a Zenefits rival, Justworks. Harris is planning to take his daughter to an allergist in August.

“Look, I want to love the platform. It has promise,” Hawkins said in a tweet to Conrad, the Zenefits CEO, on the night Zenefits admitted its mistake. “But it has the appearance of moving too fast to keep up.”



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After Protesting Low Pay, WeWork Cleaners Are Set To Lose Their Jobs

The commercial real estate startup, valued at $10 billion, paid contracted cleaners less than half union-standard wages. Now the cleaners that protested their pay are set to lose their jobs.

MANDEL NGAN / Getty Images

Many of WeWork's New York-based cleaning staff are set to lose their jobs, just weeks after protesting for higher pay and better working conditions at the shared office space provider.

WeWork, which was valued at $10 billion in a funding round last month, currently uses a non-union contractor to provide cleaners for its New York buildings. The contractor pays less than half the standard wage paid to the majority of the city's janitors, who are unionized.

In mid-June, janitors and supporters protested at WeWork's Manhattan headquarters, asking for higher pay and better benefits. A local branch of the Service Employees International Union later filed a complaint alleging WeWork threatened to have cleaners fired if they unionized.

WeWork's contract with the cleaning company, Commercial Building Maintenance, was terminated about a week after the June 18 protest, WeWork said today. Workers say they began hearing that their jobs may not be secure in recent weeks, and were recently notified that the work cleaning WeWork's buildings would end on August 23.

"We hope the workers would get re-hired because they've all been working there in good standing for months or years without any problems," said Rachel Cohen, a representative of the SEIU, which has backed the protests. "It's quite standard with these types of contracts for the cleaners to keep their jobs and just be employed by someone new."

A WeWork spokesperson said in a statement: "CBM terminated their contract with WeWork on June 25. We are currently working to make sure we have uninterrupted cleaning service for our members." CBM did not respond to requests for comment.

While several of the workers contracted through CBM have re-applied for their current jobs directly with WeWork, according to Cohen, others have not interviewed or received information about the future of their jobs.

Because WeWork does not directly employ its cleaners, instead contracting the work through CBM, ending that contract effectively terminates the current workforce of cleaners, without the company firing a single worker. WeWork may have the option of re-hiring the workers in-house, through a contract negotiated with a different company, or not at all.

Once word came of the contract termination, workers began sending letters to the company to apply for their existing positions with whomever the new employer is, according to Cohen. Over the next week, the SEIU is organizing leafletting and other actions at WeWork buildings to inform its tenants about the contract change.



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Actor James Woods Sues Anonymous Twitter User For $10 Million

James Woods in 2013

Matt Sayles / Invision for Fiji Water

Academy Award-nominated actor James Woods filed a $10 million defamation lawsuit Wednesday against an anonymous Twitter user who claimed the star was a "cocaine addict," according to court papers filed in Los Angeles.

The Nixon and Casino star is suing the owner of the Twitter handle "Abe List" for defamation and invasion of privacy – and is demanding a jury trial, according to the complaint.

"In fact, Woods is not now, nor has he ever been a cocaine addict," the court papers state.

The actor claims that Able List launched in a malicious campaign against him that began with childish name calling in 2014 and escalated beyond the limits of free speech. The court papers said that Able List called Wood's "prick," "joke," "ridiculous," "scum," and "clown-boy" – but appears as though "cocaine addict" crossed Wood's line.

Woods intends to "unmask and reveal AL for the liar he is and recover an excess of $10 million in damages."

The malicious tweets, Woods says, have caused him international harm adding that "AL, and anyone else using social media to propagate lies and do harm should take note. They are not impervious to the law."

Twitter has since suspended the Abe List account.



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Search Plumber In San Francisco, And Google Will Find You A Plumber

The company has begun experimenting with a paid search product that could compete with Handy, Taskrabbit, and other on-demand labor startups.

Google search results for "locksmith" in San Francisco.

Google is now testing its new local home services product in San Francisco.

As BuzzFeed News first reported in April, the search giant has been experimenting with launching an advertising product that would connect search users with local home services providers such as plumbers, roofers, and cleaners.

In the San Francisco pilot, some search results for queries such as "plumber" will feature head shots of potential professionals for hire who have been vetted by Google, according to these guidelines, along with basic business information such as phone number and hours. Much as with other Google advertising products, home-services professionals will pay for placement in search results.

Earlier this month, after on-demand cleaning service startup Homejoy shut down, Google hired a number of its engineers. This rollout of paid listings appears to be a concrete step in the direction of a Google answer to Amazon Home Services, which launched in the spring and expanded to fifteen new cities last week.

Some investors have said that the local, on-demand startup space is potentially over-saturated in certain verticals, and predicted that the market will have to consolidate in the coming months. That economic reality could provide an opportunity for larger companies like Google and Amazon, which have considerably more generous margins, to use their larger native user bases to dominate this space.


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We Have Wi-Fi At 35,000 Feet — Can We Stop Getting Ripped Off For It?

Gogo lets us send email while hurtling through the sky. If only opting out from its monthly charges were as simple.

PR Newswire

There's an undeniable magic to browsing the web in the sky: sending emails among the clouds, keeping up with happenings on the ground while 35,000 feet in the air.

For the majority of fliers, this service is provided by Gogo, a Nasdaq-listed company that has built up a $1.6 billion valuation by making the once-fantastical prospect of in-flight Wi-Fi a reality on the bulk of U.S. domestic flights. But despite its great technical achievements, there's one thing not included in Gogo's slick infrastructure for signing up and paying for its service: a cancel button.

Due to the high price of a single session, Gogo makes its monthly access option highly lucrative for consumers — on a trip to San Francisco last month, I knew I needed the internet both ways, making a $50 monthly pass cheaper than purchasing two single-day passes for $30 each. There was no middle option.

But then comes the catch: You keep paying that $50 every month, even if you aren't using the service. Gogo doesn't send receipts for monthly charges, and doesn't offer an option for consumers to request receipts. While you can now cancel two days before the next billing date to avoid a charge, it used to be seven days. And to get that cancellation, you need to either call customer service, chat with a representative, or email Gogo. Apparently a "cancel" option on its website just isn't something the company wants to offer.

"It all just feels to me that they intentionally built this system to bill people who aren't using it," said Ken Rutsky, who heads a marketing consultancy in Mountain View, California, and was charged for a month of service he didn't want. "You're just not thinking about Gogo if you're not in the air. I think they know that."


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Amazon Made You A Soothing, Guitar-Filled CD

Listeners on Amazon Prime Music are getting an exclusive, all-acoustic playlist with original recordings commissioned by the company.

OAR's Marc Roberge

Amazon

On July 31, Amazon Prime Music subscribers will be treated to a streaming all-acoustic playlist, with exclusive tracks from 30 artists in a mix of covers and original songs. It is only Amazon's second excursion into exclusive streaming, following a holiday release last winter called "All Is Bright." What's really interesting about the playlist, however, is that these tracks aren't just exclusive to Amazon due to licensing agreements, they're exclusive because Amazon commissioned the recordings itself.

The collection, titled simply "Amazon Acoustics," will stream on Amazon Prime Music, Amazon's streaming service that comes free with Amazon Prime. The playlist includes a cover of Outkast's "Hey Ya" by Surfer Blood, a song by Train, and an original solo track from OAR's Marc Roberge.

"When it's Amazon, you jump on it," Roberge explained to BuzzFeed News of his decision to record a track for the Seattle retailer. "This is just a really timely and awesome opportunity. I wrote the song the day I got the call."

Exclusive tracks represent a strong emerging trend for streaming. One of the few ways the Spotifys or Rdios of the world can differentiate from the competition is to offer something unique that the others don't have. Usually that comes in the form of an artist picking one streaming service over another, like Taylor Swift putting her music on Apple Music and not on Spotify, or windowed releases — when an album would, hypothetically, be available on Spotify for a few weeks or months before getting released to Apple Music.

So "Amazon Acoustics" — as a commissioned release — is a new way to look at exclusives. It puts Amazon in similar territory with record labels, and is even more similar to the way Netflix offers exclusive shows it makes itself, taking on something of a studio role.

An all-acoustic playlist is, uh, let's say fairly out of step compared to exclusives on other on-demand music services. This year, hip-hop has been the streaming economy's biggest trend, dominating services like Spotify, YouTube, and Rdio. So, why strum when the rest of the industry thumps?

According to Steve Boom, vice president of Digital Music at Amazon, Prime Music has a different audience than its competitors. "The Amazon Prime demographic is different than the general demographic," Boom told BuzzFeed News. (We translated this to mean that it has more old people.) "[Prime] is getting wide enough to seem like it's the same, but it's not."

Boom went on to explain that Prime listeners are more of the "lean-back" variety — the kind of listener who relies on curation and ease of use for a casual listening experience, instead of a platform geared toward letting the audience find new music for themselves. Pandora, the online radio service, is a purely lean-back service, and is one of the few major platforms to also not count hip-hop as its leading genre among audience members.

Regardless of what this release could be a model for — in terms of lean-back experiences, commissioned releases, or strum-along music for a wider age category — Amazon downplays the importance of exclusivity.

"I think the jury is still out on whether exclusives will be a big deal," said Boom. "We want to provide something cool for our customers — that's the bottom line."

w.soundcloud.com



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At Jack Dorsey’s Twitter, Everything Is On The Table

Nothing is sacred with Twitter’s co-founder back at the helm.

Mike Blake / Reuters

Instead of smiling and holding the clipboard until management names a new coach, interim Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is previewing big, tough, directional changes at the company, setting out a systematic process of unapologetic upheaval.

In his short tenure as interim CEO, Dorsey has overseen a handful of potentially unpopular moves. In the past month, the company has eliminated backgrounds from Twitter's main tab, auto-expanded link previews, experimented with changing "faves" to "likes" (and the iconography from stars to hearts), dumped a big bucket of ice water on investor growth expectations, and parted ways with longtime communications head Gabriel Stricker. Phew.

In short: Everything is being reconsidered under Dorsey's not-yet-monthlong watch, something he made clear during Tuesday's second quarter earnings call, his first as Twitter CEO. Instead of using the financials to bolster an argument that Twitter's current plan is working, Dorsey opted instead to honestly discuss the company's problems. And to fix them, he said, everything — including the non-editable nature of tweets and the reverse chronological flow of posts on the platform — is being reconsidered.

"We continue to show a questioning of our fundamentals in order to make the product easier and more accessible to more people," Dorsey said.

But this won't come easy. As Twitter CFO Anthony Noto subsequently explained, investors should brace themselves for a rough ride as Twitter reinvents itself. The pair's message: Growth will suck for the foreseeable future. Deal with it.

And investors did just that, selling off the stock, which in an odd roundabout way relieves pressure for whomever the company taps as permanent CEO.

Twitter's stock falling by double digits is something of a footnote to a larger, developing story: Dorsey's emerging burn-the-farm-if-we-need-to view of the company.

Twitter has spent much of the past two years grappling with the fallout of investor expectations set too high during its 2013 initial public offering. And its efforts to tell a compelling story to the public have turned into a near Sisyphean struggle that recently resulted in the departure of Stricker.

Twitter can no longer simply stay the course; it needs to chart a new one that others — users, investors, the media, and the company's own leadership — can understand and follow.

"You'll see us continue to question a reverse chronological timeline and all the work it takes to build one," Dorsey said during Twitter's earnings call, making it clear that the relatively untouched chronology of Twitter's feed is in danger, though stopping short of saying the raw feed will be eliminated outright.

Dorsey pointed to the recently released "While you were away" feature and the still-under-development Project Lighting as two areas he sees as promising.

"Our goal is to show more meaningful tweets and conversations faster," he said.

While you were away, which uses an algorithm to display tweets that Twitter thinks you might be interested in, "does point to the direction that we want to see more of," Dorsey said.

Twitter has long resisted moving to an algorithmic feed, but as BuzzFeed News noted last month, may have no other recourse but to implement one.

Over the weekend, Dorsey even indicated — though only in a noncommittal way — he's open to the idea of making tweets editable. Responding to a tweet from Kim Kardashian, he called her suggestion of an edit function a "Great idea!" and later told BuzzFeed News: "I want us to question everything to make it better."

Dorsey's end goal, it appears, is to turn Twitter into something that's so easy to grasp that knowing what it is is almost an afterthought.

"We need to make sure that we provide a really graceful and unfolding path to get to more value faster for anyone that comes into the service," he said. "And that means they don't have to consider what Twitter is. They just have to consider what they're there for."

That said, Dorsey is at least presenting something of a moving vision, one of a world where humans view Twitter as they see phone calls or an SMS. To get there, Dorsey is poised to rip up the floorboards and perhaps more.



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29 Temmuz 2015 Çarşamba

Uber Drivers In Mexico City Attacked With Sticks, Stones, Eggs, And Flour

The attack took place yesterday near the International Airport of Mexico City. Local authorities are investigating the incident.

KENZO TRIBOUILLARD / Getty Images

Uber drivers waiting for ride requests near the International Airport of Mexico City were pelted with rocks, sticks, eggs, and flour yesterday afternoon. Though, fortunately, no drivers were hurt during the attack eight of the reported 10 cars saw substantial damage.

The Mexico City Attorney General's office has launched an investigation to determine who was behind the attack. While Uber drivers in places like France, where the company's low-cost service has been banned, have also suffered similar attacks, there's no evidence of whether this was an organized incident.

And unlike in France, all of the company's services are fully regulated in Mexico City, which became the first Latin American city to do so earlier this month.

Uber issued a statement condemning the individuals behind the attack: "The individuals who committed these acts of vandalism decided to take the path of violence [and it is an] absolutely unjustifiable act," the company wrote in a Spanish language statement. "What happened is a serious attack on freedom and the right of all to make a living with dignity. All Mexicans have the right to freely decide how we move around our city. In Uber we work just to offer safer and more reliable mobility options for citizens. Events like this are completely unacceptable and we hope that the authorities will act for justice."

BuzzFeed News reached out to Uber to learn whether or not the company will cover the damage to the drivers' vehicles, and will update when we hear back. Images and video footage of the attack can be seen here.


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Dronicide Justifiable, Claims Irate Kentuckian

A drone. A shotgun. An arrest.

Hillview Police / Via kentucky.arrests.org

William Meredith, a 47-year-old Kentucky man, was arrested on Sunday for Criminal Mischief and Wanton Endagerment after shooting a drone out of the sky on his property. According to reporting from Ars Technica, he then threatened to shoot the drone's owner when confronted.

The drone wars have begun.



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Congress Eyes Social Media As ISIS Recruits Western Women

The House Foreign Affairs Committee aims to combat “jihadi girl-power propaganda.”

PBS Frontline

Why might a young Christian woman from Tennessee travel to Syria to join ISIS, embracing an ideology that calls for her own subjugation?

Desperate for ways to combat the terror group and its recruitment efforts, U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday convened to discuss the women of ISIS.

"This violence against women is almost without parallel, from widespread rape and trafficking to forced marriage and murder," said Rep Ed Royce, who will convene a series of hearings on the status of women around the world. The graphic episodes of abuse presented at the House Foreign Affairs Committee make the success of ISIS' female recruitment strategy all the more puzzling. Members expressed their confusion and shock over and over again, asking the same question in different ways: "What motivates the women who join the ranks of ISIS?"

Social media's power to rally impressionable individuals to a cause was a central theme. "The 'caliphate' offers adventure, belonging and sisterhood, romance, spiritual fulfillment and a tangible role in idealistic utopia-building. Very few youth subcultures or movements can claim to offer so much," said Sasha Havlicek, CEO of the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, which has researched the social media activity of Western women who have joined ISIS. According to Havlicek, these women play a crucial role in projecting the images and ideas of the "caliphate." On Facebook, Twitter, Ask.fm, Instagram, and Tumblr, ISIS's Western female recruits act as prolific propagandists, pulling in other women, goading young men into the fight, and boosting troop morale. Over 550 women from Western countries including the U.K., France, and Sweden have traveled to join ISIS, according to the International Center for the Study of Radicalization.

The fact that some women have voluntarily left behind lives of European privilege is an enticing marketing point for ISIS, Havlicek argued. "The media has disproportionally covered this story of Western girls, so they know that they are high PR value." Unmarried women who have fled to ISIS also appeal to foreign fighters who like the idea of marrying a Western woman, she said. And as a long-term state-building strategy, these women will help raise the next generation of radicals.

"ISIS needs women, needs to control them, to establish its caliphate and give rise to the next generation of ISIS," said Rep. Ed Royce. "And that is why ISIS is investing heavily in recruiting foreign women to join its ranks. And with each girl who becomes brainwashed, ISIS has a new poster child for its jihadi girl-power propaganda."

During the hearing Havlicek emphasized that the Western women of ISIS do not come from a particular background; many do not claim Muslim heritage. "They don't lend themselves easily to profiling," she said. "They are very diverse in terms of their socioeconomic background, in terms of even their religious backgrounds, and in terms of their educational attainment." Two trends that Havlicek did note were the younger ages of female recruits — which she said is explained by male fighters wanting unmarried girls — and a high proportion of religious converts, which is common among radical groups.

Among both male and female ISIS members, justifications for joining the group include narratives of global persecution against Muslims and feelings of isolation. Specific to women, however, is an argument about sexual identity. According to Havlicek, the Western women of ISIS see the project of European and American female emancipation as a ruse, a form of enslavement to sexualize and control the female body. For them, ISIS represents an escape from the tyranny of objectification.

The incongruity of using 21st-century communication tools to promote a puritanical vision situated in the distant past was not lost on Rep. Gerry Connolly. "I wonder if the cruel irony of that has struck anyone," he said.

Echoing a Senate hearing held in May, in which the State Department was criticized for not doing enough to combat ISIS social media, Rep. Brad Sherman said the agency is "fumbling around in the dark." He accused the State Department of enacting ineffective and unfair hiring practices whereby only with the right combination of "Western academic brownie points" can a person get a job within the agency. He said the the State Department is now left without talented individuals who could otherwise untangle the ideology behind ISIS.

"Myth-busting doesn't work for young people in this space," Havlicek said, echoing comments made by Sen. Cory Booker at the Senate hearing where he contrasted ISIS's "fancy memes" with "crude" messaging from the State Department. "What is drawing them in is the incredibly emotive material that they are being exposed to on a 24-7 basis in these social media environments," she said. "And we can't come back with a set of facts. We need emotive stories to counter that."



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Windows 10 Is Here. What Do You Think?

Do you even care?

Giphy

This morning, Microsoft rolled out its newest operating system: Windows 10. Word on the street is that Microsoft is onto something exciting (in this case, "the street" means nerds that write about tech). That doesn't necessarily mean that anyone is paying attention, though, so we thought we'd ask you directly.



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Tesla Wants You To Tell Your Rich Friends About Your Fancy Car

Tesla is asking existing owners to refer their friends in exchange for $1000 toward their next Tesla purchase.

Scott Olson / Getty Images

Do you own a Tesla? Do you also have friends who can afford to own a Tesla? Do you have five to ten friends who can afford to own a Tesla? If you answered yes to at least the first two questions, Tesla has an opportunity for you.

Today, Tesla is launching what is perhaps the most high-stakes referral program in recent history to determine whether the company can depend more on word-of-mouth sales than physical stores. To initiate the 90-day-experiment, Tesla CEO Elon Musk is asking existing customers asking to refer the Model S to their friends in exchange for $1,000 toward their next Tesla purchase. Their friends, in turn, will get $1,000 off their current purchase. And if an existing Model S or Roadster owner successfully refers five friends, he or she has won the proverbial golden ticket — a trip to the chocolate factory.

"If five of your friends order a Model S, you and a guest will receive an invitation to tour the Gigafactory in Nevada – the world's biggest factory by footprint – and attend the grand opening party," the email to current customers reads.

While this may seem like a drop in the bucket compared to the actual price of the Model S, which can range from $70,000 to more than $100,000, it's potentially a way to leverage the tight-knit community the company has been able to cultivate among owners into less costly infrastructure for the company.

Though the program is temporary, Musk hopes it will shed light on how much of its resources Tesla has to invest in opening brick-and-mortar stores. The idea is that the more effective word-of-mouth is, the fewer stores Tesla has to open.

"We're just going to try it out," Musk said during a press call. "If it works out well long- term we'll keep going, otherwise we'll say that was an interesting experiment and move on."

If the experiment is effective and word-of-mouth sales are amplified, it could be great for the automaker, which has notably avoided marketing or advertising its cars and is also facing local regulations in several states that prohibit Tesla representatives from selling vehicles directly in those jurisdictions.

"This is a way for us to sort of have a guerrilla battle with the car dealer association," Musk said during the call. "Tesla representatives are not allowed to sell in certain states so customers who are not sales people can refer their friends there."

Additionally, Musk said, the experiment's success could also mean that the company applies the same discounts on used Model S sales but he emphasized the primary incentive is to determine how many stores the company needs to open.

"I do want to be clear we don't have any plans to close down stores and we'll still keep opening stores. It's just about how many future stores we'll open," he said.

As for advertising down the road, Musk says it's a possibility, "But we also need to have a mass market car in order to do mass media advertising. When we do the advertising years down the road we want to make sure it's entertaining and interesting and has some artistic elements. If you're a reader and you see the ad you shouldn't regret your time."

Here's the email Elon Musk is sending to customers:

Here's the email Elon Musk is sending to customers:

BuzzFeed News



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How Teen Boys On The Internet Uncovered The Greatest Catfish Of Our Time

Lucia Cole appeared to be a promising new singer, until two Ariana Grande fans discovered that her whole persona was fake, including the album she had on iTunes.

popculturediedin2009.tumblr.com

To a handful of music fans, Lucia Cole seemed like a promising up and coming r&b singer with a '90s and strong voice. She had a popular Twitter page, a Wikipedia, and songs on iTunes, Tidal, and Spotify. She was in talks to be in an upcoming Tyler Perry project, and had collaborated with Drake and Ariana Grande. Messageboards were lighting up with a rumors about her personal life: she was dating NFL player Kenny Vacarro, who was cheating on his baby's mother with her, and that she had dated Sony record executive Keith Naftaly, who was 27 years older than her.

There was only one problem: Lucia doesn't exist at all. And her songs on iTunes? They were all actually old Jessica Simpson tracks.

Lucia Cole had an album "Innocence" on iTunes. Every song was actually a Jessica Simpson song with a slightly altered title.

Lucia Cole had an album "Innocence" on iTunes. Every song was actually a Jessica Simpson song with a slightly altered title.

Lucia's iTunes page.

iTunes (deleted) / Via popculturediedin2009.tumblr.com

What makes the story of Lucia Cole as a "catfish" particularly interesting is who broke the story. It wasn't some sort of copyright protection software on iTunes or YouTube or music journalists that discovered that Lucia was fake. In fact, Lucia had managed to get a few interviews with the music press – on the site Music Times and Bossip, a pop culture site that focuses mostly black celebrities and musicians.

The two people who broke the story wide open were two male teenage pop culture junkies. The person to first crack the case was Leo Loera, a 19 year old college freshman from Fresno, CA. Leo is a diehard Ariana Grande fan (her fans call themselves "Arianators", similar to Justin Bieber's "beliebers", or Lady Gaga's "little monsters", or the Grateful Dead's "deadheads"), and Lucia caught his attention when she tweeted that Ariana Grande would appear on her upcoming album.

"It was really interesting because I had never heard the name before, and I'm kind of a music head myself so usually I know a lot about up and coming artists, indie or not."

Leo got more suspicious when he looked at her Twitter. "Her bio said that she was a platinum singer-songwriter when she was barely coming out with a debut album, and that didn't really add up to me. And then I went on her Wikipedia and there were a lot of things on her page that made it seem like she wrote it herself."

He searched her on YouTube and listened to a few of her songs. At first, Leo liked what he heard – he loves vocalists with a big strong voice and a '90s vibe, like Mariah Carey, Celine Dion. But he couldn't shake the feeling that the voice sounded like another powerhouse female vocalist he liked.... Jessica Simpson. Leo liked Jessica and was familiar with her voice, but didn't know her earlier album tracks (literally no one alive, except maybe Joe Simpson remembers 1999 Jessica Simpson album cuts).

With a little YouTube searching, Leo found the Jessica Simpson song from Lucia's album. The song titles were slightly altered – Jessica's "Your Faith In Me" became Lucia's "Faith In Me". He checked the song lyrics online and saw they were an exact match. At this point, Leo was sure that Lucia had simply uploaded an entire Jessica Simpson album to iTunes and passed it off as her own.

He started DMing other Ariantors and told them about his discovery. A large Ariana Grande fan update account tweeted about it, and the jig was up. They started poking at Lucia on Twitter, asking her about Jessica to see what kind of reaction she'd have.


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Subway Becomes Largest Restaurant Chain To Offer Mobile Ordering

The footlong sandwich maker will now take orders via app at its 27,000 U.S. stores.

Subway

Subway

Mobile ordering is quickly becoming a standard in fast food, and now Subway, which has more than 27,000 U.S. stores, has become the biggest U.S. chain to roll it out. The company has launched an app that lets customers to order and pay for their meals via their smartphone, and pick them up at stores.

The Subway app allows customers to customize a sandwich with toppings and condiments as they would at a store. In addition to the smartphone app, the chain is also taking desktop orders via its website. Some individual Subway locations have offered mobile ordering in the past, but this is the first app to be rolled out across the entire chain.

For customers, ordering ahead reduces wait times and can feel more convenient, but there are other benefits for the companies. Some chains such as Taco Bell have found that customers are more likely to pay for add ons when they order via app, as it makes it easier for them to explore the menu than a traditional board behind the register. The technology also provides valuable data to chains about their customers and their ordering preferences, allowing them to tailor their marketing.

Subway is the country's largest food chain by restaurant count. The second largest is McDonald's, which has more than 14,000 U.S. stores and says it will be testing mobile ordering in 2016. This October, the company plans to launch a new app nationally, which will initially offer special deals and promotions, but is likely to be upgraded over time.

"McDonald's digital ambition is to provide ways to streamline the entire customer journey," spokesperson Becca Hary told BuzzFeed News. "It's very important to know that everything we're doing is about growing our digital capabilities for the long term."

Starbucks, the country's third-largest chain, has already rolled out mobile ordering to a few thousand of its cafes, and plans to offer mobile ordering at all of its roughly 7,300 company-owned stores (but not its licensed stores) by the holiday season.


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Here Is What You Should Know About Windows 10

Microsoft’s bright, shiny operating system debuts today.

Microsoft

Microsoft's Windows 10 launches today and it is, in plain terms, a big deal for the computing mainstay. It's the first major overhaul of the Windows operating system since Microsoft's CEO Satya Nadella took the helm of the company. In fact, this is the first really substantive consumer release since Nadella took over, and it's just the first of several, like the HoloLens, which it announced in January of this year. How Windows 10 does should give us some insight into Nadella's abilities to manage product teams.

But more important to you, it makes a lot of changes to the operating system, some of which are a return to form of previous versions of Windows. It also marks the first time Microsoft has offered a version of its operating system for free — this is a free upgrade for anyone using Windows 7 or better.

If you're thinking of upgrading, here's what you should know.

Windows' iconic Start menu is back after its (very unpopular) removal from Windows 8. In Windows 10, it has been beefed up, with live tiles that show your most used apps, and it includes the full directory that's been the defining Windows feature that nearly everyone born pre-2000 is very, very familiar with.

The menu is now customizable; most new features can be turned off in favor of a simple, streamlined list, or expanded to full screen for those who liked the tile-dominated "Metro" grid experience of Windows 8. The Start menu's search will also feature Microsoft's assistant feature, Cortana.

Cortana is Microsoft's integrated personal assistant that uses voice recognition — it's much like Apple's Siri or Google Now. Cortana isn't just for Start — it's going to be a foundation of Windows 10 at large. The digital assistant will be a portal to searching and scheduling in your Windows experience, and attempts to surface relevant information exactly when you need it. According to Microsoft, Cortana will be able to bring up relevant news and reminders when needed (and without having to ask) and will understand context when you give it commands, much like Google Now and the recently upgraded Siri. That means you could say something like "Show me the pictures from Hawaii," and Cortana will give you an album from your vacation.

When first launched, via the search window, prompts will appear to configure Cortana for voice recognition ("Hey, Cortana" is the voice command to launch the assistant), permissions, and personalized data — like your name. Microsoft, like Google and Apple, maintains that the more information you give to Cortana, the better the program will be at surfacing the information you want, when you want it. Tell it where your home or office is, for example, and it will automatically help with directions, reminders, and recommendations for restaurants or events in the area.


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Casey Neistat’s Beme Is The New Face Of Social Media’s Raw Revolution

Raw media is the hottest thing in social today, and the platforms facilitating it — Snapchat, Periscope, Meerkat, and now Beme — are capturing the fun, weird spirit that made social fun in the first place.

Alex Kantrowitz

It's 3:30 p.m. on a Friday afternoon and 1,000 hyperventilating teenagers cheer on Casey Neistat as he tries to blow a drone out of the sky with a T-shirt cannon. Neistat, a filmmaker whose fame has soared thanks to YouTube and Snapchat, is wearing his trademark sunglasses, the temples of which get lost in his curly hair. With fellow social media phenomenon Jerome Jarre and MTV Catfish host Nev Schulman standing by, Neistat launches shirt after shirt into the sky to the delight of the teens, who shriek at each near miss.

"The drone is taunting you," screams 14-year-old Joshua Cheadle in Neistat's direction.

"It wants a piece of me," Neistat replies. A friend of Cheadle's gapes in amazement. "He talked to you, man, what an honor," he says.

The event -- which Neistat announced just hours earlier -- has all the markings of an increasingly common ritual: the mobbing of social media celebrities by legions of diehard fans. Except this time, there's a twist: The teens are here for a celebration of a technology company, Beme, not simply to worship alongside fellow adherents in the cult of Casey.

And Neistat, Beme's creator, does enjoy cult celebrity status. He rose to fame by creating highly produced videos, mostly for YouTube, which are so popular scores of kids hang out near his studio in New York every day hoping to catch a glimpse of him. Beme is designed to give them a real window into his life -- and to everyone else's as well. Yet this hot new app is just a piece of a much larger trend toward raw media. If you look at today's hot networks — Snapchat, Beme, Periscope, Meerkat — they are more about immediacy and intimacy than image building. They are about passing along the moment, in an unstructured way. They're realer, grittier. Rawer.

Beme, which Neistat released last week, may be the hottest social media app on the planet right now. It's deceptively simple and decidedly weird. It lets people share four-second video clips with no option to edit, delete, or even watch onscreen as they film. It's just a black screen that blindly captures snippets and passes them on. It's also weirdly hot, due in no small part to its exclusivity. You have to be invited to join via an unlock code from Beme or another existing user. People are auctioning them off on eBay.

"I like the raw," 15-year-old Natasha Serrano says while playing with Beme. "It's more interesting."

Beme's popularity is easy to brush off as an extension of Neistat's fame, but its rise is likely part of something else, something bigger. The app is the purest version of a new generation of social media companies built for the sharing of raw, unproduced and unpolished content, a stark contrast from social media's establishment, which has been gravitating toward professional content for years. From the live-streaming apps Periscope and Meerkat to Snapchat with its Stories tab, platforms enabling the publishing and consumption of raw content are corralling social media's energy. And they're doing it, in large part, by restoring the fun that's all but disappeared from older, more established platforms like Twitter and Facebook.

As the glob of humanity surrounding Neistat throngs Anaheim's once peaceful Stoddard Park, hundreds of free pizzas go largely ignored. Neistat grabs a megaphone and addresses the crowd, thanking them for coming out for Beme. Then he makes his way to home plate of the park's baseball diamond. The kids who are here to meet him form a selfie line that extends 200 yards from home plate to what might be the parking lot were this an actual baseball stadium. It remains in place for three hours. The Anaheim police force shows up with five vehicles. A ranger pulls her pickup onto the infield, trying to figure out whether this gathering with a permit for 100 people intentionally left off a zero. The kids are beaming like it's Christmas morning. Actually, they are probably happier than that.

It's all pretty raw.


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28 Temmuz 2015 Salı

CBS Will Live-Stream Super Bowl Ads Next Year

The network is packaging its TV commercials and digital ones together for the first time ever.

David J. Phillip / AP

Super Bowl 50 will be a milestone for the big game, and for advertisers as well.

CBS will for the first time stream the flashy commercials that accompany the event live online, the network said today, confirming news that was first reported by Variety.

That's big news for connoisseurs of the annual Super Bowl commercial extravaganza, and for the advertising industry as well. Previously, on-air ads and live stream ads were sold separately, and advertisers weren't required to buy both. Now CBS is changing that.

The conflation of TV and online commercials could send Super Bowl ad spot prices to record highs. Variety reports that 30-second national spots could rise to $4.7 million. For the 2015 Super Bowl — broadcast by NBC — 30 seconds cost $4.5 million, but the online streaming ads were sold separately, and at a lower rate. The rates were different because NBC only had 2.5 million unique viewers online, as opposed to the 114 million that watched live on television.

However, that 2.5 million was up 9% from the 2014 Super Bowl, and was a 19% jump from 2013. And with online streaming becoming more increasingly more commonplace, it's likely to grow even larger by Super Bowl 50.

Variety reports that advertisers will not be allowed to opt out, and some — like Pepsi and Anheuser-Busch — are already committed to sponsoring the broadcast.



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People Are Flooding This Dentist's Facebook After He Was Named As The Hunter Who Killed Cecil The Lion

Here’s what the internet does when it thinks you killed a lion.

American dentist Walter Palmer was identified Tuesday by The Telegraph as the hunter who paid $50,000 to kill one of Africa’s most famous lions earlier this month.

American dentist Walter Palmer was identified Tuesday by The Telegraph as the hunter who paid $50,000 to kill one of Africa’s most famous lions earlier this month.

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A spokesperson for Palmer told The Guardian: “As far as I understand, Walter believes that he might have shot that lion that has been referred to as Cecil." BuzzFeed News attempted to reach Palmer at his dental practice but was unable to get through.

A spokesperson for Palmer told The Guardian: “As far as I understand, Walter believes that he might have shot that lion that has been referred to as Cecil." BuzzFeed News attempted to reach Palmer at his dental practice but was unable to get through.

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Twitter Revenue Tops $500 Million In Second Quarter, Shares Shoot Up

The company is searching for a new CEO and still struggling to grow its user base as fast as competitors. But its latest results have impressed investors.

JUSTIN TALLIS / Getty Images

It was a steep jump, but the company's revenue growth rate is declining. In the first quarter, revenue grew 74%.


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How A Simple Apple Feature Called Switch Control Is Changing Lives

YouTube

On April 3, 2012, Christopher Hills posted a clip to his YouTube account. In the three-minute video, Hills squarely addresses his webcam from what looks like his childhood bedroom. On the white walls behind him are a smattering of posters of high-end sports cars, jets, and rocket ships — it’s the kind of teen bedroom that’s been home to countless YouTube rants, confessions, and reviews. But Hills’s demeanor is serious as he begins talking about the rise of smartphones, tablets, and touchscreen technology. “I am going to show you how touchscreens help me,” he says to the camera. Moments later, we see Hills in his wheelchair, facing a desk with an iPad perched atop. We watch Christopher, a resident of Queensland, Australia, move forward slightly, struggle for a moment, and then pause, unable to reach the iPad screen.

“I keep reading things about the touchscreen overtaking the mouse and keyboard and this really scares me,” he confesses into the camera. Hills’ Athetoid cerebral palsy has left him unable to walk or use his hands, and, at that moment in 2012, his fears were understandable. "I think touchscreens are an amazing technology, but my disability means I can't use my hands — so let's face it,” he says. The video — shot, edited, and posted by Hills — is an arresting reminder of an alarming truth: Technologies aimed at, hyped by, and marketed toward an able-bodied majority often overlook the eager constituency of the disabled.

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For Hills, that fear and frustration began to subside after 2013. That’s when Apple introduced Switch Control, an accessibility feature that helps those with limited mobility to navigate, select, and manipulate iOS touchscreen devices with the click of a button, movement of the body, or any number of alternative inputs (blowing into a tube, etc.). Launched as a feature in iOS 7, Switch Control gave Christopher and thousands of others the opportunity to finally take command of touch displays inside Apple’s applications as well as third-party programs, like games and browsers, without the use of expensive third-party devices. For Hills, though, nothing was as satisfying or memorable as being able to perform the most elemental functions.

“The thing that comes to mind is the day I made my first phone call. I was 15. I was able to call mum at work. As you can imagine, this was a very big thing,” Hills told BuzzFeed News of using Switch Control for the first time.

For decades, accessibility technology has seemed an afterthought for the world’s most powerful technology companies, leaving those who require additional assistive features with largely outdated technology or, in the case of touchscreens, no access at all.” The biggest problem used to be a general lag in software,” Elizabeth Ellcessor, a professor at Indiana University who specializes in digital media and accessibility studies told BuzzFeed News. “Software would come out and companies wouldn’t build in accessibility features for years and by that time the piece of software would be out of date,” she said.

For Hills, a gadget fan, the lag was excruciating. “When the iPhone came out, I was using these devices that were designed in the time of the Apple Newton and had not improved since then,” he told Buzzfeed News.

But the problems with assistive tech innovations were more than just inconvenient. The Dynamo, an assistive switching tool and universal remote for desktop computers that Hills used before Switch Control, cost thousands of dollars and could only serve the most basic communications functions. “Typing on the PC was possible, but it was extremely slow and, as a result, I always needed to have a [caregiver], mostly Dad, to help me whenever I needed to type more than just a few words,” Hills said.

Around the time Hills made his video about touchscreens, he was beginning to worry that he might never get to play games or even make phone calls like millions of his peers; the touchscreen revolution, he feared would leave him behind. “I knew how hard it was finding assistive technology solutions to control my desktop and here was a completely new thing and it just didn’t seem like anybody would be able to come up with a solution very quickly,” he wrote in an email to BuzzFeed News.

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But in the mid-2000s, Apple began a full overhaul of its assistive program with an emphasis on building accessibility features into products from the ground up, rather than adding them into previously developed software. In 2005, the company created a built-in voice reader called VoiceOver for its desktop computers, which it incorporated into the iPhone in 2009, allowing visually impaired iPhone users to navigate the touch device using voice controls. The company also began courting users of all abilities, focusing on previously underserved constituencies to ask them what features needed improvement and what to build next. As part of this initiative, Apple engineers also underwent mandatory accessibility training.

Apple is not alone in this space. In 2005, Google began funding research projects geared toward accessibility issues in areas such as speech, mobile, and human-computer interaction; others, like Microsoft, have also begun work to include more accessibility features in initial shipped versions of software and hardware, in order to bake assistive tech in from the beginning with features like text narration, magnification, password speaking, and high contrast text.

But for all that progress, and for all the mostly happy stories from people like Hills, companies such as Apple still have plenty to do if they are to be truly accessible. The costs of accessible tech, while much lower than they were five or ten years ago, are still expensive for disabled customers with limited financial resources, and while Apple’s Voice Control and Switch Control features are free, third-party assistive tech can often be prohibitively costly (a Freedom Scientific braille display monitor for those with vision impairments runs $7,795 for an 80 cell display.) The disparate nature of the applications inside the App Store and lack of standardized accessibility requirements for developers has left advocates in some disabled communities frustrated by the quality of numerous popular apps.

In January, a blog post from a concerned blind user noted that "Apple does have a fantastic accessibility story" but that "they’re on the verge of badly trumping that trust many people with disabilities put in them by delivering such poor quality updates that make it virtually impossible to take advantage of [accessibility] features in full force." And last July, the National Federation of the Blind, as a part of an ongoing campaign, publicly pushed Apple to bring accessibility requirements to the App Store, noting that “'it’s time for Apple to step up or we will take the next step.” That said, Mark A. Riccobono, president of the National Federation of the Blind, has repeatedly spoken out in support of Apple’s accessibility efforts, noting that, “Apple has done more for accessibility than any other company to date.” These dual feelings hint at an insidious tension for those advocating for assistive tech: They want to hold tech’s leaders accountable, but fear alienating or overstepping their bounds with their biggest allies.

And for his part, Hills said he “hope[s] software developers continue to do more. There are apps I still can’t access, such as some games," he said, adding that "it would change my life if there was a technology that could help me directly overcome my speech difficulties.”

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Less than three years after Hills posted the the touchscreen video, his life is dramatically different. He no longer needs to spend thousands of dollars on new, quickly obsolete devices to use an iPhone or iPad and is no longer forced to rely on a caregiver for tasks like typing an email. He is now an Apple-certified Final Cut Pro editor and has his own video production and editing business that he runs out of his house. And his YouTube page is home to dozens of videos geared toward educating others about accessibility tech, including Switch Control. In his spare time, Hills speaks to training and support groups and writes guest blog posts about his experiences and how to best take advantage of assistive technology.

Features like Switch Control work in practical and measurable ways to lower costs for the disabled and work to bring more and more people not only online, but further into a culture that overlooked their technological needs. Giving more people the necessary tools means not only offering up the vast and rich world of internet and all that modern software and hardware have to offer to a wider audience, it also means widening the spectrum and potential of innovation through inclusion. “I like to think about this kind of technology less like a light switch and more as a set of possibilities,” Ellcessor said. “Accessibility is about creating the possibility for those with particular bodily impairments to participate and engage in culture and in whatever ways they want to.” That possibility, and the participation that it fosters, ultimately mean adding more diverse voices into the culture.

Maybe most important though — at least for Hills — it’s about a feeling of liberation that’s hard for any company to measure in an earnings report or tech specs sheet. “These tools have allowed me to come out of my shell and make my own way in the world,” he wrote in an email to BuzzFeed News. “From communication and environmental control, to work and learning, and recreation and entertainment. Combined with the internet, Switch Control has allowed me to engage with the world more than ever before and to participate and contribute in ways that I never really thought would be possible.” Ultimately for Hills, it’s about a personal sense of dignity that comes from being able to share his voice and passion with the world.


Now, more than two years after posting about touchscreens, his videos have taken on a different, bolder tone. In one clip from last September, Hills has swapped the bedroom and posters for HD footage, complex, staged shot compositions, lens tinting, and a powerful score. The clip opens with a woman standing on a balcony, casually taking pictures of the setting sun through the trees on her iPhone. Moments later, Hills comes onto the balcony and angles his mounted iPhone toward the sunset. Using the toggling button located on his wheelchair’s headrest, Hills begins to take photos of his own along with the woman as the music swells. At its crescendo, the screen cuts to black and the screen flashes a final message: #iAmMorePowerfulThanYouThink. The tagline is Hills’s own reference to Apple’s 2014 "Powerful" advertisement as well as a crucial reminder to those building, using, and writing technology products today; and, as anyone who’s ever watched one of Hills’s videos knows, it’s also the truth.

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