31 Ocak 2017 Salı

The ACLU Just Joined A Silicon Valley Startup Incubator

Sam Altman, president of Y Combinator.

Drew Angerer / Getty Images

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has joined the winter 2017 class of startups hosted by Silicon Valley startup incubator Y Combinator (YC), which in the past helped companies like Twitch, AirBnb, and Reddit achieve and manage initial growth. The ACLU, a 97-year-old nonprofit, falls outside the profile of a typical YC company, but the incubator has invited nonprofits to participate since 2013.

In a statement, ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero said, "We’re thrilled to have the help of Y Combinator to help us reach new audiences and be at the leading edge of technology. Beyond financial contributions, the Silicon Valley community can help organizations like ours harness recent membership surges and spread the word about what the ACLU is doing."

The ACLU raised $24 million this past weekend — six times its average amount of annual donations — after it wrested a stay on President Trump's immigration order from a New York federal court.

Public outrage over the order, which barred refugees and immigrants from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US, fueled protests at airports around the country. The crowds there were jubilant at the news from the ACLU. Several prominent figures in the tech industry matched donations to the ACLU. Most notably, Lyft gave the organization $1 million in a deftly timed move in its perpetual fight with Uber, which recently turned political.

The ACLU and Y Combinator began speaking weeks ago when YC partner Kat Manalac reached out to Romero for feedback about YC’s upcoming call for civic tech startups. Manalac told BuzzFeed News that Romero responded with a request for help on the ACLU's own projects, which led Manalac to recommend it for YC's incubator, and YC founder Sam Altman and Romero "worked out the details yesterday." Several YC mentors will travel to New York to work with the ACLU.

In a statement, Altman wrote that YC itself will donate to the ACLU and give it "full access to the Y Combinator network and community." The accelerator won't have any financial interest in the ACLU. As part of its participation in the program, the nonprofit will also present to venture capitalists at YC Demo Day in March.

Altman wrote that the ACLU plays "a particularly important role now"; he invited engineers in particular to work with the organization, signaling that the nonprofit may have come to Silicon Valley specifically to attract some help from the area's technical talent. Altman said on Twitter that 25 startup founders responded positively to the call.

YC has funded nonprofits before, declining to take its usual equity stake in favor of a donation. The incubator put out a call for civic technology companies in 2014, but the niche industry faces funding problems, and VCs are hesitant. Nevertheless, Altman put out a similar call the same day that the ACLU was accepted.

Like many of its fellow tech companies, YC traveled a bumpy road during election season and after. Peter Thiel, the tech billionaire and prominent Trump supporter who is now a member of the president's transition team, sits on Y Combinator's board, which has drawn criticism from many in Silicon Valley. Sam Altman vigorously defended Thiel's role in YC, though Altman himself did not vote for Trump.

After Trump's victory in November, Altman told BuzzFeed News he was "officially very worried." Most recently, Altman has come out strong against Trump's immigration order, offering support and a job to recently fired attorney general Sally Yates.




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People Are Canceling Tesla Orders Because Elon Musk Is Advising Trump

Tesla CEO Elon Musk, left, meets with President Donald Trump and business leaders at the White House on January 23, 2017.

Nicholas Kamm / AFP / Getty Images

At least five people who had paid deposits to reserve Model 3s have canceled their orders over Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk’s decision to work with President Trump by sitting on two of his advisory groups.

Musk has joined Trump’s economic advisory group, as well as a manufacturing council. Other tech companies, such as Uber, have come under fire for their political decisions since Trump was elected, forcing their leaders to take sides. Musk, whose cult fan base views him one of the leading luminaries for clean energy, has faced criticism for working with Trump. The president has called climate change a hoax, and recently signed an executive order restricting immigration that spurred protests at airports across the country. The backlash over Uber’s collaboration with Trump led to a viral #DeleteUber campaign, and Musk’s stance has also cost Tesla business. Five customers showed BuzzFeed News confirmations of their cancelled reservations for the $35,000 Model 3, which required a refundable $1,000 deposit.

Nate Erickson

I feel that someone that wants to colonize Mars and who worries about the machine uprising should not be scared to voice opinions counter to the Trump administration,” Jodie Eason, who lives in Chicago and canceled her Model 3 order with her husband, told BuzzFeed News. “We figured that speaking with our dollars is really the most effective way to get through to business people.”

Tesla declined to comment.

Musk told CNBC before the election that Trump was “not the right guy” for the White House. Now, he’s collaborating with him. In an interview with Gizmodo last week, he said “the more voices of reason that the President hears, the better.”

“Simply attacking him will achieve nothing,” he said. “Better that there are open channels of communication.”

On Sunday, about two days after Trump signed an executive order suspending the intake of refugees and restricting immigration, Musk tweeted that he would take suggestions for amendments to the other, and discuss them with the president.

One former Tesla customer in New York City who put down a deposit for a Model 3 called Musk’s comments on the immigration order “rather disappointing.” “Stronger words came from Starbucks,” said the source, who was granted anonymity because his company does not allow employees to speak to the media.

"To see someone I’ve always looked up to give such a half-hearted, mealy-mouthed statement — it was really disappointing."

Nate Erickson, who lives in the Los Angeles metropolitan area and describes himself as “a huge, huge fan of Elon Musk and pretty much everything he’s done,” paid his $1,000 deposit on the first day the company began accepting reservations last spring. He canceled the order Monday morning, after watching Musk’s reaction to Trump’s immigration ban.

“To see someone that I’ve always looked up to so much, give such a half-hearted, mealy-mouthed statement — it was really disappointing,” Erickson told BuzzFeed News.

“I understand what he’s trying to do. It’s just that I don’t really agree with it,” Erickson said. “He’s somehow deluded himself into thinking that by having a seat at the table, he’ll actually be listened to.”

Jenny Messerly, a software engineer in the Bay Area, canceled her Model 3 order over the weekend.

“While I would like to help fund technological progress to fight climate change, as an LGBT American, raw survival is now the main concern,” she told BuzzFeed. “Learning of Elon Musk's relationship with Trump was the decisive factor for me.”

She said she was surprised to see Musk serving as an adviser to Trump, particularly on two separate councils. “Two is certainly worse than one, in that it indicates deeper ties,” Messerly said.

Another Tesla customer, who lives abroad, canceled his two Model 3 orders, citing Trump’s nationalistic statements, the immigration ban, and plans to build a wall along the US-Mexican border. “Especially, being a German, we have very bad associations with these attributes,” Ahmet Yalcin wrote.

Ahmet Yalcin

“The reason for ordering the cars was the beautiful mission of the company to save our planet, and the values of the company's leadership,” Yalcin told BuzzFeed. “The reason for canceling the cars now is a personal conflict created by their recent political activities and alliances which do not reflect company's core values.”



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Uber Is Telling Customers The Immigration Ban Is "Against Everything We Stand For"

Carl Court / Getty Images

Uber, whose founder is an adviser to President Trump, is telling customers that the immigration ban is "unjust, wrong, and against everything we stand for as a company," in an escalation of its public criticism of the policy.

The language is being used in a message sent to users who delete their accounts with the company. #DeleteUber was trending on Twitter on Saturday, as protesters highlighted CEO Travis Kalanick's membership of a White House advisory group.

Protesters also criticized Uber for suspending surge pricing during a taxi strike at JFK Airport Saturday, where the largely immigrant taxi driver community was protesting President Trump’s executive order. On social media, many perceived that move as undermining the taxi workers’ protest.

In response to account deletion requests on Sunday, Uber told users, "We share your concern that this ban will impact many thousands of innocent people" and said it would compensate drivers affected by the order.

Since Monday night, messages confirming account deletion have contained a more blunt message: "Uber shares your views on the immigration ban: it's unjust, wrong and against everything we stand for as a company."

Both messages link to an Uber statement from Saturday, in which the company first promised it would compensate drivers affected by the immigration ban.

“We want to be as clear as possible. The initial response was less clear than the second one,” an Uber spokesman told BuzzFeed News. “Clarity is always better.”


The Battle Between Uber And Lyft Has Become Political

#DeleteUber Started Trending After A Taxi Strike Against Trump’s Refugee Ban



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Apple Sales Hit An All-Time High Over The Holidays

Stephanie Keith / Getty Images

Apple's sales reached an all-time high in the final three months of 2016, with the company reporting record sales of its iPhones, Mac computers and Apple watches.

Revenue hit $78.4 billion for the quarter, slightly up from the $76 billion the company made in the same period of 2016. The quarter was a crucial test for Apple, whose sales typically peak during the holiday season, and whenever it rolls out a brand new phone. The new iPhone 7 was released just a few days before the start of the quarter.

Apple

iPhone sales rose by 5% over the year prior, but overall profit dropped by 2.6% to $17.9 billion. Apple shares are up 25% in the last year, but its stock is still trading below the all-time high it reached in 2015. In after-market trading on Tuesday, the company's shares were up almost 3%.

Beyond the iPhone, Apple's software services business continues to boom — it generated over $7 billion in revenue in the three-month period, up 18%. The services business includes iTunes purchases and Music subscriptions, AppleCare, and Apple Pay. The company's "other products," segement, which includes the Apple Watch, saw a 8% decline in revenue, while the iPad had a 22% drop.

One year ago, powered by the release of the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, Apple reported the most profitable quarter in corporate history, earning $18.4 billion in profits on $76 billion of revenue.

Since then, the company reported its first annual decline in sales since 2001, raising questions among observers if Apple, despite continued sky-high profits that would be the envy of any other company, could still provide the massive growth it had experienced since the dawn of the iPod.

While the growth figures reported today were positive, it's not the type of strong sales growth that's typically been associated with brand new iPhone releases.

“We’re thrilled to report that our holiday quarter results generated Apple’s highest quarterly revenue ever, and broke multiple records along the way. We sold more iPhones than ever before and set all-time revenue records for iPhone, Services, Mac and Apple Watch," Apple chief executive Tim Cook said in a statement.





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The Fate Of Net Neutrality Is Still Up In The Air In The Trump-Era FCC

Pool / Getty Images

Some of the most pressing questions about the way Americans interact with each other online and connect with their favorite services remain unanswered Tuesday, following the first meeting of the Federal Communications Commission in the Trump Era.

Ajit Pai, the new FCC Chair who was selected by President Donald Trump, declined to answer key questions on internet and telecom policy including the fate of Net Neutrality, the AT&T-Time Warner merger and a proposal backed by the Obama administration to overhaul the market for cable boxes.

"We haven't made any determinations at this time," Chair Pai said, referring to the future of Net Neutrality rules. "My present position is pretty simple: I favor a free and open internet and I oppose Title II."

Established in 2015 under President Obama, network neutrality rules require internet service providers like Comcast and Verizon to treat all web traffic equally. Heralded by the Obama administration, internet giants, and consumer advocates, the open internet rules were designed to protect websites and services like Netflix from being slowed, blocked or up-charged by broadband providers. The rules came into effect after broadband companies were designated so-called Title II services. The reclassification allows the government to impose more robust regulations on internet providers. It was aggressively opposed by telecom companies and by Republican members of Congress and the FCC.

Chair Pai voted against the open internet rules when he was an FCC commissioner, and he has argued that market-based solutions, not government regulations, will better ensure an open and competitive web. "The Internet has become a powerful force for freedom, both at home and abroad," Pai wrote in 2015. "So it is sad to witness the FCC’s unprecedented attempt to replace that freedom with government control."

While Pai did not elaborate on his comments at the meeting, experts tell BuzzFeed News that a Republican-controlled FCC could work to dismantle net neutrality in several ways: by simply ignoring violations and not enforcing the open internet rules; overturning them through the FCC; or pressing Congress to rewrite telecom law.

"If Ajit Pai's past record is any indication of how he'll be as chairman, he won't be doing much policing of that industry," Joshua Stager, policy counsel for New America's Open Technology Institute told BuzzFeed News. "He thinks that the telecom industry can police itself just fine."

When asked to comment whether the FCC should review the AT&T-Time Warner mega-merger, Chair Pai declined. The $85 billion deal is currently under review by the antitrust division of the Justice Department. Unlike the DOJ, which can sue to block a deal when the transaction is found to be anticompetitive, the FCC standard for approving a deal is broader. Businesses have to show the commission that the deal serves the public interest, a threshold that some experts say is harder to clear than the DOJ's.

Pai also declined to share details on the fate of the set-top box proposal, a plan created during the Obama-era FCC to open up the cable box market to technology companies. Former FCC Chair Tom Wheeler, who backed the plan, saw it as a much needed corrective to exorbitant rental fees and outdated interfaces that cable customers were more or less stuck with. Pai said the proposal is one of 23 items the FCC is reviewing that were carried over from the last administration. The plan is not expected to advance under the leadership of the new chair.



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30 Ocak 2017 Pazartesi

Amazon And Expedia Attack Trump's Immigration Order In Court

Timothy A. Clary / AFP / Getty Images

The attorney general of Washington state filed a lawsuit Monday challenging President Donald Trump's controversial immigration order, and he's counting two Washington-based companies as courtroom allies: Amazon and Expedia.

Both companies submitted sworn statements as part of the lawsuit, each highlighting the business harms they face as a direct result of Trump's travel ban. The legal battle marks the latest move in escalating tensions between technology companies and the Trump administration that has thus far played out only in public statements.

"Expedia believes that the executive order jeopardizes its corporate mission and could have a detrimental impact on its business and its employees, as well as the broader U.S. and global travel and tourism industry," Robert Dzielak, Expedia's executive vice president and general counsel, wrote in a declaration.

According to Dzielak, more than 1,000 Expedia customers who hold passports from one of the 7 affected countries — Syria, Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, and Yemen — have current bookings that begin, end, or connect in the United States. Dzielak noted that it's unclear which of its customers will be affected, and how, posing additional burdens to the company as it tries to interpret and monitor how the executive order is being applied. In addition, Expedia said that several of its employees based in the US and abroad will be prevented from traveling.

"The direct financial impact to Expedia resulting from the Executive order ranging from increased business costs to the broader impact on the global travel market is not yet known," Dzielak wrote.

Ayesha Blackwell-Hawkins, Amazon's senior manager of mobility and immigration, said the executive order "immediately — and negatively — impacted employees, dependents of employees, and candidates for employment with Amazon."

Amazon is aware of 49 employees born in one of the seven countries, 47 of whom are citizens of another country, while the remaining two have permanent legal residents elsewhere.

"One example of an impacted employee is a senior Amazon lawyer who was born in
Libya but has been a UK citizen for many years," Blackwell-Hawkins wrote. "This employee had plans to travel to the United States for business during the month of February. We have instructed the employee to cancel her plans and remain in the UK rather than risk being denied entry to the United States."

Amazon said it is aware of 10 dependents of employees who were born in the countries affected but live in the US lawfully.

In addition, Amazon has extended employment offers to seven people born in Iran but who are currently citizens of other countries: Germany, Canada and Australia. According to Blackwell-Hawkins, Amazon is "assessing alternatives," possibly placing them in other countries outside the US.

In an email to employees Monday, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, said his company would explore legislative options to challenge the immigration order. "We are working other legal options as well," he wrote.

A spokesperson for Microsoft, another Washington-based business, told BuzzFeed News: "Microsoft has been supportive and has provided information to the Attorney General and is willing to provide further testimony if necessary."

Earlier in the day, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer defended the president's immigration order. "The majority of Americans agree with the president," he said. "They recognize that the steps that he's taken were to keep this country safe and to make sure that we didn't look back and say 'I wish we had done the following.'"

Here are the declarations in full:




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Twitter To Make Big Product Changes This Week To Combat Harassment

Key changes are coming to Twitter this week as the company attempts to solve its harassment and abuse problem.

In a tweetstorm posted late Monday, Twitter VP of Engineering Ed Ho conceded that Twitter didn't move fast enough to tackle harassment last year, and said that a number of product changes are coming "in the days ahead" to address it.

Among the fixes Twitter plans to implement: one that adjust mute and block controls to prevent repeat offenders from creating new accounts. Ho did not explain the solution Twitter has in mind. But some observers have recommended the company tie accounts to phone numbers, giving it a way to more easily police trolls who bypass its rules.

Twitter is expected to report its earnings for the final quarter of 2016 next week. Harassment, which was a regular issue on its calls with analysts last year, could be a theme once again.

Here's Ho's full tweetstorm:




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Here’s What Airbnb Is Actually Doing For Refugees

When Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky tweeted Saturday night that his company would be offering free housing to immigrants displaced by President Trump’s travel ban, the move was lauded as one of the strongest in Silicon Valley.

Trump signed an executive order on Friday banning refugees and immigrants from seven Muslim-majority nations from entering the United States. Over the weekend, a string of tech companies came out against the policy with measured responses, usually saying that they didn’t support it and offering assistance to employees impacted by the ban.

But an offer of free housing made Airbnb stand out from the crowd. The company is asking its hosts around the world to volunteer their Airbnb listings as free housing for refugees and immigrants. If people need a place to stay and no hosts are willing to put them up gratis, the company says it will cover the costs.

In an email to BuzzFeed News, an Airbnb spokesperson said the company is already working with individuals who reached out about a place to stay, as well as with relief organizations that are in touch with immigrants in need of housing.

The ability to travel freely, and be accepted wherever you go, is central to Airbnb’s brand. Over the last year of the company’s public relations crises, from its apology for allowing racial discrimination on the platform to its promise to work with cities rather than suing them, it’s become clear that Airbnb is heavily invested in maintaining its reputation as the nice guy of the sharing economy. It’s an image that has slipped in recent years, as housing advocates attack the company — and Airbnb is willing to leverage both its capital and global network of homeowners in order to maintain it.

“We believe that you should be able to travel to, and live in any community around the world,” said Chesky in an email to employees on Sunday. “This is what we mean when we say anyone should be able to belong anywhere. If we want this to be more than just something we put on a plaque, we have to take action.”

Airbnb has been helping people in crisis find a place to stay since 2013. The company has activated a disaster response tool during a hurricane in the United States, an earthquake in Japan, and bombings in Europe; now, it’s doing the same thing for “refugees and those who may have unexpectedly been affected by the recent travel ban into the United States.” Hosts around the world can sign up to volunteer their homes, and Airbnb connects them with displaced people as needed.

The company didn’t say whether any immigrants have been connected with hosts yet, or the locations of people who had asked about housing.

Airbnb isn’t alone in these efforts. Other online platforms that exist specifically to offer housing to refugees have popped up over the last couple of years, including Refugees Welcome, a Danish platform used throughout Europe, and EmergencyBnb.com, built by an Egyptian immigrant living in the United States. Both of those platforms are free to the guests, and rely on the generosity of hosts.

Airbnb, meanwhile, says it has provided “over 3,000 nights” of free housing to relief workers and donated $1 million to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The company also invites hosts to “offer warm meals” to refugee families, an initiative it plans to expand in 2017.

Not every sharing economy company that dove into the realm of the political during protests against the immigration ban on Saturday got the same positive results as Airbnb. Uber experienced a major backlash when it offered affordable rides to and from the anti-Trump protest at JFK airport in New York. Critics said it was undercutting a concurrent strike by taxi workers, who opposed the refugee ban on the grounds that it could spark Islamophobia against Muslim drivers. That, combined with the fact that Uber CEO Travis Kalanick is signed on as a Trump economic adviser, inspired thousands of customers to vow to boycott the company, and by Saturday night, #deleteuber was trending nationally on Twitter.

Airbnb, meanwhile, continues to be lauded for its offer of free housing to immigrants, regardless of whether it ends up costing the company anything. As Uber attempts damage control by targeting a pro-immigration message from Kalanick to “people interested in American Civil Liberties Union” on Facebook, Airbnb’s Instagram account has been underscoring its message of openness and acceptance by sharing glossy photographs of happy travelers and landmarks in Iran, one of the countries on Trump’s ban list.

Via instagram.com



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Jeff Bezos Says Amazon Is Exploring "Legislative Options" Against Trump's Refugee Ban

Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos gets on an elevator for a meeting between President-elect Donald Trump and technology industry leaders at Trump Tower in New York, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2016. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

Evan Vucci / AP

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos on Monday issued one of the strongest corporate statements of opposition to President Trump's refugee ban yet.

In an email to all employees (full text below), Bezos said Amazon does not support the order and is exploring "legislative options" for opposing it. He also noted that Amazon will submit a declaration in support of Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson, who is filing a lawsuit in federal court to stop the order.

Bezos, who was among tech executives who met with the president at Trump Tower in December, said Amazon's legal team has filed a declaration of support of the Washington State Attorney General's lawsuit against Trump.

When Bezos announced that Amazon would be creating over 100,000 new jobs in the next year and a half, Trump was quick to take credit for the move; at the time, Amazon did not respond to request for comment as to whether Bezos' meeting with Trump had played a role in the announcement.

Other tech executives, including those from Google, Apple Uber and Tesla, have been responding to Trump's executive order with varying degrees of severity since Saturday; BuzzFeed News is keeping track of their responses here.

Here's the full text of the email from Bezos:

RE: Advisory—New Executive Order’s Potential Impact on Amazon Employees

A quick update on where we are. This executive order is one we do not support. Our public policy team in D.C. has reached out to senior administration officials to make our opposition clear. We’ve also reached out to congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle to explore legislative options. Our legal team has prepared a declaration of support for the Washington State Attorney General who will be filing suit against the order. We are working other legal options as well.

We’re a nation of immigrants whose diverse backgrounds, ideas, and points of view have helped us build and invent as a nation for over 240 years. No nation is better at harnessing the energies and talents of immigrants. It’s a distinctive competitive advantage for our country—one we should not weaken.

To our employees in the U.S. and around the world who may be directly affected by this order, I want you to know that the full extent of Amazon’s resources are behind you.

Thank you,

Jeff



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Facebook Promises Improvements After Removing Conservative Post

Getty Images / Alt National Parks Service

On Thursday evening, Cyrus Massoumi published a post on his conservative news website, Mr. Conservative, that he knew could cause trouble for his business. The post, written as an open letter to his readers, warned that Facebook could censor conservative-leaning news as a result of its efforts to remove misinformation from the platform.

Massoumi shared it with the more than 2 million fans of his Facebook page, and within minutes his worst fears seemed to come true. Traffic began plummeting as the number of people being referred from his Facebook page fell off sharply. He believed Facebook was taking action against his page.

“This is an algorithmic execution,” he wrote in a Skype message to BuzzFeed News at the time.

Then he saw that three earlier posts on his Facebook page had disappeared without warning or explanation.

“The way to censor that article if you specifically wanted to without deleting it would be to delete the previous posts,” he said.

Cyrus Massoumi

Massoumi’s experience is one of a series of recent content takedowns and bans imposed by Facebook and Google that have sparked concerns from publishers and activists about how these dominant platforms are applying their policies, and about the level of transparency they offer in explaining their decisions.

In response to a BuzzFeed News inquiry, a Facebook spokesperson said the company will aim “to do better.” They also emphasized that censorship played no role in the actions, and said the bans were in fact a result of automated systems meant to thwart spammers and other bad actors.

In Massoumi’s case, he did not receive a message from Facebook about the removed posts. At the time he assumed he was being censored, especially given the timing of the removals. Similarly, the Russian-government-funded broadcaster RT accused Facebook of taking politically motivated action when its largest Facebook page was given a temporary posting ban as a result of what the social network said was a copyright violation. Over the weekend, the Alt National Parks Service Facebook page, which sprung up in opposition to Trump’s policies, was handed a temporary ban on new likes. That also caused some to accuse Facebook of censorship.

A Facebook spokesperson told BuzzFeed News all of the above actions were taken by automated systems rather than by the community standards team that evaluates content for hate speech, graphic violence, and other violations.

“Facebook is a platform for all ideas,” said the spokesperson, who spoke on the condition that they not be named. “Our mission, and business, relies on giving people of all different voices and opinions a place to share. We're continuously working to improve how we serve everyone in our community — from better communication to more effective and accurate systems — and will learn from these experiences to do better.”

In the case of Google, last week it announced that it took action against 340 websites on its AdSense platform after reviewing a total of 550 sites “suspected of misrepresenting content to users.” When asked to disclose the list of sites and/or publishers, a Google spokesperson said they don't comment on individual cases.

“We communicate with the publisher or the site directly for warnings or violations,” they said, noting that it could violate the privacy policy to disclose information about AdSense publishers publicly or to third parties.

However, after BuzzFeed News exposed a network of more than 40 sites that published hundreds of fake news articles in 2016, a Google representative emailed to say they had removed those specific sites from AdSense. When asked why they commented on that instance but not others, the spokesperson said they reached out to correct the impression that the sites were still in AdSense.

Getty Images

Facebook has close to 2 billion global users, and Google powers an ad network that earns revenue for close to 2 million websites. Performance on one or both of their platforms will make or break a content business — which means each ban or removal is treated as a life-or-death scenario by publishers.

Scrutiny of Facebook's and Google’s actions is even more intense now that both companies have initiatives aimed at stopping the spread of online misinformation and deceptive content. American conservatives in particular have expressed concerns about the possibility of censorship. Massoumi raised the possibility of his site being targeted in a November interview with BuzzFeed News.

But even the liberals pushing Facebook and Google to crack down on what has often been pro-Trump fake news say they find the lack of transparency troubling. Angelo Carusone, president of the liberal watchdog group Media Matters, told BuzzFeed News it’s a struggle to get information from the companies. When his group sent Google a list of sites it considers fake news, he says the company did not follow up to say what, if any, action had been taken.

“There is a lack of transparency and unwillingness to at least identify the sites they take action against,” he said.

He said Google has been more of a challenge to deal with than Facebook.

“I think Google is doing worse in a weird way, even though they have better metrics to tout,” he said, citing its recent report of banning 340 sites. “I believe Facebook is genuinely committed [to fighting fake news] but has internal confusion and business concerns they are grappling with.”

Facebook and Google both say they are trying to balance a desire to act quickly and at a massive scale with the need to be transparent and communicate clearly with publishers and other partners.

“We’re talking about the scale of the internet here, and these bad actors move quickly,” a Google spokesperson said. “That’s what we’re trying to fight against.”

So just as automated systems like algorithms decide which content rises to the top of the News Feed and Google results, they can also remove content, ban pages and ads, and take actions that keep content and revenue out of the hands of publishers. When this is done without notice or a clear explanation, people worry about censorship and malicious intent on the part of platforms.

On Jan. 18, the broadcaster RT received a message from Facebook saying a temporary posting ban was a result of a copyright claim made by Current Time, a Russian-language broadcaster funded by the US government. But Current Time publicly denied that it registered a complaint. Within roughly 24 hours, Facebook restored RT’s posting privileges, but it did not immediately explain why RT was banned. A Facebook spokesperson now says RT was not the only publisher affected by the system error at the time.

The spokesperson also said the ban on new likes for the Alt National Parks Service page was instituted because it received a significant number of new likes in a very short period of time. That can trigger a temporary ban, since malicious pages often use automated methods that cause a spike in likes, according to Facebook.

After the ban was lifted, the Alt National Parks Service posted to say it had been put in place because of “complaints” registered with Facebook. The spokesperson said this was not the case, but commenters on the page continue to speculate about who was making the complaints.

View Video ›

Facebook: AltUSNationalParkService

The three posts Massoumi said were removed from his page included one post about Matt Damon expressing hope that Trump would be successful, another about the Mexican president canceling a meeting with Trump, and a third about recent insults directed at Melania Trump. One was restored without notice the next day.

The Facebook spokesperson said the post that was removed and later reinstated was initially taken down in error by an automated system designed to thwart spammers. (The company said it did not have any record of action being taken on the other posts Massoumi said disappeared from his page.)

It wasn't the first time Massoumi had seen a post disappear and then reappear without explanation. On Jan. 20 he told BuzzFeed News via Skype that a Facebook post about the Trump inauguration was removed that day and later reinstated. He also said conservative-oriented posts about Muslims had recently been removed by Facebook’s community standards team due to what they said were hate speech violations. As a result, Massoumi, who was raised in a Muslim family, said he no longer posts about Muslims.

“I’m self-censoring, but my fans think they are getting everything authentically,” he said. “So, it’s worse than 1984, because you think you are getting real news, when in actuality I weigh everything against the risk of Facebook employees flagging it.”

In addition to concerns about humans reviewing his posts, Massoumi says he now has to worry about Facebook’s automated systems going awry and removing posts or imposing bans.

“I assumed it was much more nefarious,” he said. “In fact it’s entirely random.”



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Soon You'll Be Able To Talk To Your Starbucks App

Starbucks

Starting this summer, you won't have to watch a barista roll their eyes when you order a double upside down macchiato half-decaf with room and a splash of cream in a grande cup. You'll have the option to talk to a non-judgmental chatbot.

Starbucks plans to add a virtual assistant, which you can talk to or text with, to its already-popular mobile ordering app this summer. The bot is called My Starbucks Barista, and it's available to about 1,000 people to beta test right now.

The chatbot will allow you to order via talk or text and add modifications, if for example, you specify that you want your "banana bread warmed." Just like a regular barista, it will respond with questions like, "What size?"

Starbucks has made a video of someone making the kind of detailed orders only a human might understand.

Voice-activated AI bots have become increasingly popular in the US, sparked in part by the success of Amazon's Echo speaker and AI assistant Alexa, which you can use to order items off Amazon, dim the lights in your room, or queue up streaming music. Siri, the voice-activated assistant Apple debuted back in 2011, hasn't quite pleased customers in the same way that Alexa has.

Starbucks has also given Alexa the ability to order Starbucks for you. It allows customers "to order their 'usual' Starbucks food and beverage items as they move throughout their day," according to the company. But if your usual order is complicated, you won't be able to change that order while you're talking to Alexa.

The same day as Starbucks announced the feature, the company was embroiled in controversy.

On January 29, Starbucks CEO Howard Schulz responded to Trump's immigration order from last Friday by saying that human rights in the USA were "under attack." He pledged to hire 10,000 refugees over the next five years at Starbucks locations around the globe. Some Trump supporters were livid.

Even still, the controversy probably won't hurt the popularity of Starbucks' ordering app.

People use the apps so often that Starbucks has had to redesign some stores in response. At an investor conference presentation in December 2016, Starbucks said that 8 million people had downloaded the app, with one third of them using Mobile Order and Pay. Mobile transactions accounted for 21% of Starbucks' US transactions in 2015, the same year it rolled out the Mobile Order and Pay throughout the US, according to Wired. That figure grew to 27% in 2016, the company said in a statement.



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Square Really Wants More Businesses To Use Apple Pay

Square

Square, the mobile payments company run by Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, is offering US businesses a special promo this year: It won't charge them any fees to process about $12,000 worth of Apple Pay transactions if they're using Square's chip and contactless payments reader. Square's normal processing fee is 2.75%, so companies can save up to $350.

Though Square is most commonly associated with small retailers, this promotion extends to companies of any size, according to the company. Companies already using Square's reader or new customers who sign up in 2017 can take part. If the company is new to Square, it can purchase a reader at a discount, and the deal will apply for a year after it signs up.

The promotion is contingent on the retailer setting up marketing materials at their point of sale — Square asks them to verify this with a picture — encouraging customers to use Apple Pay. The company piloted the program in Portland, OR in 2016 and said that the number of contactless transactions at retailers tripled.

The company said it hopes to "educate buyers and sellers" about the benefits of contactless payments, namely increased security and speedier transactions. For that reason, the promotion is aimed at sellers with a visible point of sale — like a countertop.

Jesse Dorogusker, head of hardware at Square, told BuzzFeed News, "We're promoting contactless and bringing it to our customer base because it’s typically the small businesses who lag behind in technological innovation, who don't reap the benefits of technological advances."

The promotion is part of a larger effort to integrate Square with Apple Pay and for each to promote the other. Square CEO Jack Dorsey announced in December 2016 that Square Cash, the company's virtual bank account that can link to a Visa debit card, would integrate with Apple Pay.

When asked why the company focused so much on the partnership with Apple, Dorogusker said, "Contactless is new in the States. The only way to break through is with pristine implementation, and the two of us are really the only ones who have that right now."

Chip credit cards proliferated throughout the US during 2016, but they've encountered issues with their processing speeds. Many people hate them.

Square claims their chip card reader is much faster than others, and the company hopes that encouraging use of contactless payments will give it a further edge over other payments processors.

Dorogusker said, "We've been focusing on the performance of our chip card reader, and that's going well, but the ritual of a tap makes way more sense."



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29 Ocak 2017 Pazar

The Battle Between Uber And Lyft Has Become Political

Getty

In the 36 hours between President Trump’s signing of an executive order restricting immigration and the same rule’s effects being halted by a federal judge in New York, the rivalry between Uber and Lyft abruptly became political. Largely as a result of its CEO’s decision to serve as a Trump advisor, Uber is facing a hashtag-driven social media revolt – even though it appears to be doing more to support drivers affected by the new immigration ban than Lyft.

In Trump’s politicized America, brands are caught up in a rapidly evolving political crisis, and are being forced to take sides. Trump’s executive order suspended the intake of all refugees for 120 days and Syrian refugees indefinitely. It also blocked people from Syria, Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, and Yemen from entering the US for 90 days. In the hours following the order, as the scope of the order became clear, pressure mounted on tech companies – who employ many immigrants on H1B visas – to publicly respond. For Uber and Lyft, who already compete for users with nearly identical services in a number of deeply anti-Trump cities, the ramifications of their political statements were immediately evident. By Saturday evening #DeleteUber was trending on Twitter. Meanwhile, Lyft was being touted as an easy Uber alternative and lauded for its denunciation of Trump and $1 million donation to the American Civil Liberties Union.

Shortly after noon on Saturday — less than 10 hours after Trump signed the executive order — Uber told BuzzFeed it had reached out to about a dozen employees who may be affected with offers of support, including legal help. Travis Kalanick, the ride-hail giant’s chief executive, who has agreed to sit on Trump’s economic advisory group, prompting protests outside Uber’s San Francisco headquarters, emailed staff at 1:20PM.

If any Uber driver was outside the country and could not reenter as a result of the executive order, Uber would compensate that driver pro bono “to help mitigate some of the financial stress and complications with supporting their families and putting food on the table.”

Uber has disagreed with governments across the world before, Kalanick said, adding that it has effected change by fighting in some cases, and in others, “from within through persuasion and argument.” He promised that the executive order, shortened as #MuslimBan on social media, was “an issue that I will raise this coming Friday when I go to Washington for President Trump’s first business advisory group meeting.”

Five hours later, Lyft’s cofounders emailed their staff, too.

What people saw when they compared the statements: Uber is willing to work with Trump. Lyft is “firmly against” Trump’s actions.

Uber had responded faster to Trump's executive order, focusing on how it could help its employees. Lyft responded later – without some of the promises Uber made – but its broad denunciation of Trump’s refugee ban drew praise. Lyft’s leaders directly condemned Trump’s executive order as “antithetical to both Lyft’s and our nation’s core values" (It’s worth noting that tech billionaire and Trump advisor Peter Thiel is a Lyft investor who has publicly criticized Uber for being “ethically challenged.") While Kalanick’s statement was one of the stronger ones to be issued by a tech CEO, it didn’t directly reject Trump. Instead, Kalanick said, “whatever your view please know that I’ve always believed in principled confrontation and just change; and have never shied away (maybe to my detriment) from fighting for what’s right.”

Kalanick also posted his note to staff, with the subject line “Standing up for what’s right,” on Facebook.

Making the optics even worse for Uber, the company had suspended surge pricing near New York’s JFK Airport after taxi drivers stopped working to join anti-Trump protests there. To some, the move appeared to undercut the protesting taxi drivers – many of whom are Muslim and immigrants – by keeping prices stable to entice riders. #DeleteUber began trending on Twitter.

Within a few hours, Uber apologized.

“We’re sorry for any confusion about our earlier tweet — it was not meant to break up any strike,” Uber told BuzzFeed News in a statement. “We wanted people to know they could use Uber to get to and from JFK at normal prices, especially tonight.”

On Sunday morning, Lyft sent users an email reiterating its position and noting it would donate $1 million to the American Civil Liberties Union “to defend our constitution.”

The email helped Lyft further capitalize on the political tension that riled its – and Uber’s – user base and spurred the #DeleteUber to trend on Twitter the prior night.

Meanwhile, Uber crafted a conciliatory response to riders who noted the company’s willingness to collaborate with Trump as their reason for deleting the app. “We share your concern that this ban will impact many thousands of innocent people,” it read, with a link to Kalanick’s full statement.

Uber did not immediately reply to a request for comment as to whether it was sending this response to every individual who cited the company’s relationship with Trump as a reason for deleting the app. But it appears others received a similar response as well.

Kalanick’s position as Trump advisor is causing internal tensions at Uber as well. On Saturday, after Kalanick’s email to staff, a software developer said he should resign from Trump’s advisory group and explicitly denounce the president.

Last week, Business Insider published portions of an internal email in which Uber’s chief technology officer called Trump a “deplorable person.”

Read how other tech companies reacted to Trump’s executive order here.




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#DeleteUber Started Trending After A Taxi Strike Against Trump's Refugee Ban

Protestors rally during at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

Stephanie Keith / Getty Images

Hundreds of people tweeted they are deleting their Uber accounts Saturday amid accusations the company took part in taxi cab strike-breaking in New York during a protests against President Trump's refugee ban.

Cabbies affiliated with the New York Taxi Workers Alliance refused to pick up passengers at New York's JFK airport for an hour Saturday in solidarity with those protesting President Trump's executive order banning refugees and limiting immigration from Muslim-majority countries.

They also sent out calls on social media for Uber and Lyft drivers to join in their show of support for the protests at Terminal 4. The city's taxi drivers are a disproportionately Muslim and immigrant workforce, and many drive for apps in addition to independent for-hire work.

Shortly after the designated strike time of 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., Uber sent a tweet telling customers surge pricing had been suspended.

Since surge pricing increases the cost for passengers when demand is high, suspending it looked to some like an active undermining of the NYTWA's strike. Uber told BuzzFeed News it was aware of the hour of solidarity, which its drivers were free to participate in, and the official strike hour had technically ended 36 minutes prior.

One popular Weird Twitter denizen, @Bro_Pair, tweeted out the following about an hour later.

Others repeated the claim that Uber had actively broken the strike, with some re-posting the full statement from the NYTWA in support of the protests.

"We're sorry for any confusion about our earlier tweet — it was not meant to break up any strike," Uber said in a statement to BuzzFeed News. "We wanted people to know they could use Uber to get to and from JFK at normal prices, especially tonight."

Uber said the tweet about the suspension of surge pricing was intended to alert customers that Uber was a service available at regular, rather than inflated, cost. Uber has received criticism in the past for implementing higher prices during high-traffic times — and for ways its surge pricing affects worker organizing.

Earlier in the day, Uber CEO Travis Kalanick sent an email to employees addressing Trump's executive order with the subject line, "Standing up for what's right." Kalanick is also a member of Trump's new business advisory council.

In the message, he said Uber's "People Ops team" had already reached out to the "dozen or so employees who we know are affected" and that the company was "working out a process" to compensate drivers during the next three months to "help mitigate some of the financial stress and complications with supporting their families and putting food on the table."

Uber maintains that drivers are independent contractors, rather than company employees, a classification that is currently being disputed in a number of courts around the country.

Kalanick also said in the email he would "raise the issue" that the ban "will impact many innocent people" when he attends Trump's first business advisory group meeting in the coming days.

Some tweeted that Kalanick's presence on that advisory group contributed to their decision to delete the Uber app.

For others, it was both the alleged strike-breaking and the cooperation with the Trump administration.

Read the full Uber company-wide email below:

Date: Sat, Jan 28, 2017 at 1:20 PM
Subject: Standing up for what's right
To: Uber Team


Team,

Yesterday President Trump signed an executive order suspending entry of citizens from seven countries—Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen—to the United States for at least the next 90 days.

Our People Ops team has already reached out to the dozen or so employees who we know are affected: for example, those who live and work in the U.S., are legal residents but not naturalized citizens will not be able to get back into the country if they are traveling outside of the U.S. now or anytime in the next 90 days. Anyone who believes that this order could impact them should contact immigration@uber.com immediately.

This order has far broader implications as it also affects thousands of drivers who use Uber and come from the listed countries, many of whom take long breaks to go back home to see their extended family. These drivers currently outside of the U.S. will not be able to get back into the country for 90 days. That means they will not be able to earn a living and support their families—and of course they will be separated from their loved ones during that time.

We are working out a process to identify these drivers and compensate them pro bono during the next three months to help mitigate some of the financial stress and complications with supporting their families and putting food on the table. We will have more details on this in the coming days.

While every government has their own immigration controls, allowing people from all around the world to come here and make America their home has largely been the U.S.’s policy since its founding. That means this ban will impact many innocent people—an issue that I will raise this coming Friday when I go to Washington for President Trump’s first business advisory group meeting.

Ever since Uber’s founding we’ve had to work with governments and politicians of all political persuasions across hundreds of cities and dozens of countries. Though we share common ground with many of them, we have had areas of disagreement with each of them. In some cases we’ve had to stand and fight to make progress, other times we’ve been able to effect change from within through persuasion and argument.

But whatever the city or country—from the U.S. and Mexico to China and Malaysia—we’ve taken the view that in order to serve cities you need to give their citizens a voice, a seat at the table. We partner around the world optimistically in the belief that by speaking up and engaging we can make a difference. Our experience is that not doing so shortchanges cities and the people who live in them. This is why I agreed in early December to join President Trump’s economic advisory group along with Elon Musk (CEO of Tesla), Mary Barra (Chairwoman/CEO of General Motors), Indra Nooyi (Chairwoman/CEO of Pepsi), Ginni Rometty (Chairwoman/CEO of IBM), Bob Iger (Chairman/CEO of Disney), Jack Welch (former Chairman of GE) and a dozen other business leaders.

I understand that many people internally and externally may not agree with that decision, and that’s OK. It's the magic of living in America that people are free to disagree. But whatever your view please know that I’ve always believed in principled confrontation and just change; and have never shied away (maybe to my detriment) from fighting for what’s right.

Thanks,

Travis

Caroline O'Donovan contributed reporting to this story.



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28 Ocak 2017 Cumartesi

Nearly 200 Google Employees Affected By Trump's Immigration Order

Chandan Khanna / AFP / Getty Images

President Trump's executive order banning immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries is causing alarm inside Google, with close to 200 employees affected and others who have accepted jobs experiencing difficulty.

The executive order "affects the lives and families" of at least 187 Google employees, CEO Sundar Pichai told staff on Friday in an email that was reviewed by BuzzFeed News. In addition, 14 people who accepted jobs at the tech giant are coming from places covered by the ban and are currently working with Google lawyers, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Google is offering legal advice to employees who are in the United States on green cards to help them understand how they might be affected, the person said. The company has also updated an internal travel help site "with our best understanding of the situation" and made its global security team available to employees abroad, Pichai told staff.

"It's painful to see the personal cost of this executive order on our colleagues," Pichai said.

At a company discussion on Thursday, employees "heard from two Googlers grappling with what this might mean for them and their families," Pichai continued. "Just as that discussion was happening, another Googler was rushing back from a trip to New Zealand to make it into the US before the order was signed."

Google did not immediately respond to inquiries for this article. Previously, Google said it was "concerned about the impact of this order and any proposals that could impose restrictions on Googlers and their families."

Bloomberg News earlier reported on Pichai's email. Read the full email below:

President Trump has signed an executive order that temporarily stops foreign nationals from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen from entering the US regardless of their visa status. This order affects the lives and families or at least 187 Googlers that we know of so far.

Our first order of business is to help Googlers who are affected. We're updating Go/TravelAdvisory with our best understanding of the situation, but if you're abroad and need help please reach out to our global security team via go/GSOC. For other questions, please email [immigration support email address].

It's painful to see the personal cost of this executive order on our colleagues. Yesterday at TGIF we heard from two Googlers grappling with what this might mean for them and their families. Just as that discussion was happening, another Googler was rushing back from a trip to New Zealand to make it into the US before the order was signed.

We wouldn't wish this fear and uncertainty on anyone — and especially not our fellow Googlers who contribute so much to our products, our business, and our lives. In times of uncertainty, our values remain the best guide. We're upset about the impact of this order and any proposals that could impose restrictions on Googlers and their families or that could create barriers to bringing great talent to the US. We've always made our views on immigration issues known publicly and will continue to do so.

But let's also focus on what we can do as individuals and co-workers and help one another and support the Googlers who are experiencing this first hand.



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Read Apple CEO Tim Cook's Email To Employees About Trump's Refugee Ban

Drew Angerer / Getty Images

This afternoon Apple CEO wrote a memo to employees addressing Donald Trump's executive order temporarily halting the US refugee program for 120 days. "I share your concerns," Cook wrote to employees. "It is not a policy we support."

Here is the memo in full:

Team,

In my conversations with officials here in Washington this week, I've made it clear that Apple believes deeply in the importance of immigration -- both to our company and to our nation's future. Apple would not exist without immigration, let alone thrive and innovate the way we do.

I've heard from many of you who are deeply concerned about the executive order issued yesterday restricting immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries. I share your concerns. It is not a policy we support.

There are employees at Apple who are directly affected by yesterday's immigration order. Our HR, Legal and Security teams are in contact with them, and Apple will do everything we can to support them. We’re providing resources on AppleWeb for anyone with questions or concerns about immigration policies. And we have reached out to the White House to explain the negative effect on our coworkers and our company.

As I've said many times, diversity makes our team stronger. And if there’s one thing I know about the people at Apple, it’s the depth of our empathy and support for one another. It’s as important now as it’s ever been, and it will not weaken one bit. I know I can count on all of you to make sure everyone at Apple feels welcome, respected and valued.

Apple is open. Open to everyone, no matter where they come from, which language they speak, who they love or how they worship. Our employees represent the finest talent in the world, and our team hails from every corner of the globe.


In the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, "We may have all come on different ships, but we are in the same boat now."

Tim

Tim Cook wrote the memo to employees from Washington D.C., where he's been taking meetings with top lawmakers. Yesterday, BuzzFeed News reported that Cook met with Senator Orin Hatch where they discussed ways to grow the economy and our tech industry. He also met with Democratic senator, Mark Warner.

Earlier this week, Politico reported that Cook also had dinner with Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump Thursday evening, along with fellow Apple employee, Lisa Jackson, Apple's vice president of environment, policy and social initiatives. Jackson was the head of the EPA under President Obama from 2009-2013. Ivanka Trump has stated publicly she plans to focus some of her efforts during her father's presidency on the environment.

In December, Cook met with Trump and his transition team alongside other tech leaders. “Personally, I’ve never found being on the sideline a successful place to be,” Cook said in a Q&A session with Apple staff. “The way that you influence these issues is to be in the arena. So whether it’s in this country, or the European Union, or in China or South America, we engage. And we engage when we agree and we engage when we disagree. I think it’s very important to do that because you don’t change things by just yelling. You change things by showing everyone why your way is the best. In many ways, it’s a debate of ideas.”



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27 Ocak 2017 Cuma

Sheryl Sandberg Just Criticized Trump’s Abortion Rule, And People Have Feelings About It

Drew Angerer / Getty Images

Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook COO, self-described feminist, and the author of Lean In, wrote a Facebook post on January 26 decrying Donald Trump's reinstatement of the "global gag rule."

The mandate, which Trump reinstated on Monday via an executive action, prevents foreign healthcare providers who receive US aid from providing abortions to women or even talking about them. Public health experts believe it will lead to more unsafe abortions around the world.

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Facebook: sheryl

She posted her thoughts alongside a New York Times article about how women's healthcare providers around the world were preparing to deal with the gag order.

Before publishing the statement, Sandberg had come under fire because she did not attend or comment on any of the global Women's Marches. In the days after the protest, the only post on her Facebook page was an interview with long-distance swimmer Diana Nyad. A Facebook spokesperson told BuzzFeed News that Sandberg could not attend for personal reasons but that "she wishes she could have been there."

Some people were quite pleased that Sandberg spoke out against Trump.

Sandberg's words weren't met with unanimous cheers, however.

Some pointed out that Sandberg's statement was framed in support of policies that would reduce the number of abortions, rather than fully supporting a women's right to choose.

Others argued that as the founder of Lean In, Sandberg should have been a more vocal opponent of the Trump administration.

Pando Daily founder Sarah Lacy rebuked the Facebook COO's silence on issues affecting women and the Women's Marches, which drew massive crowds not only in the US, but around the world. "Sandberg can not or will not even acknowledge the most feminist thing that’s happened, which was largely organized on her company’s site and aligns with her stated personal political views," wrote Lacy. "I’m not sure we could have clearer evidence at this point that Facebook is bending over backwards to embrace a Donald Trump world."

Lacy pointed to LeanIn.org's mission statement, which reads, "We are committed to offering women the ongoing inspiration and support to help them achieve their goals. If we talk openly about the challenges women face and work together, we can change the trajectory of women and create a better world for everyone."

Trump's campaign and presidency have been peppered with concerns over women's rights, including the explosive moments when tapes of him saying he would grab women "by the pussy" on Access Hollywood surfaced and when he called Hillary Clinton "a nasty woman." Beauty pageant contestants accused him of walking into their dressing rooms while they were naked, to which Trump responded "I sort of get away with things like that." On the same day as Sandberg made her post, Vice President Mike Pence spoke at the annual March For Life. Pro-abortion rights groups are not enthused about the prospect of the Trump/Pence administration.

Sandberg previously met with Trump and Pence during a closed door meeting with tech executives at Trump Tower. The Silicon Valley bigwigs who attended were widely criticized for not vocalizing their previously stated opposition to some of Trump's policies.

Nitasha Tiku contributed to this report.



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Mark Zuckerberg Just Criticized Trump's Immigration Order

For the first time since the election, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has commented on the president's proposed polices. He posted on his Facebook profile on Friday to say that he's "concerned about the impact of the recent executive orders signed by President Trump," especially the ones related to immigration restriction.

He writes, "Expanding the focus of law enforcement beyond people who are real threats would make all Americans less safe by diverting resources, while millions of undocumented folks who don't pose a threat will live in fear of deportation." Zuckerberg advocated for continuing to allow refugees into the country and keeping the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) in place.

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Facebook: zuck

He closed his statement by saying that he will work with the team behind FWD.us, a controversial immigration reform political advocacy group backed by Bill Gates, Yahoo! CEO Marissa Mayer, Netflix CEO Reid Hoffman, and Zuckerberg himself. The initiative launched a failed bid for reform in 2013 and restarted in late 2015.

Zuckerberg spoke out against the president while he was campaigning but had remained silent about him after the election.

Some have criticized the timing and narrowness of Zuckerberg argument as he calls out the "best and the brightest" immigrants, foreshadowing a debate over the H1-B visas for highly skilled foreign workers.


Zuckerberg's comments come on National Holocaust Remembrance day. Last year, the German government opened an investigation into Facebook over Holocauast-related hate speech.



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Mark Zuckerberg Cancels His Lawsuits Forcing Hawaii Families To Sell Land

Chad / Via Flickr: supercooper; Manu Fernandez / AP

Mark Zuckerberg will drop his lawsuits over Hawaiian land, he writes in an op-ed for the Hawaiian newspaper The Garden Island. He said he did not previously understand the "quiet title" process but has reconsidered his legal actions after learning more about it.

The billionaire CEO of Facebook bought 700 acres of land on Kauai for $100 million in 2014, though he did not receive exclusive rights to the land with the purchase. In seeking those rights, he began what's called a "quiet title" process, which allows for ownership of land to be decided by a judge.

The question of land ownership stems from the privatization of Hawaiian land by The Kuleana Act of 1850 and the ensuing controversy. Prior to the act, Hawaiians did not have private land ownership. The pieces of land in dispute became known as "kuleana lands."

He writes, "Our intention is to achieve an outcome that preserves the environment, respects local traditions, and is fair to those with Kuleana lands." He pledged to "work with the community on a new approach."

Zuckerberg's quiet title lawsuits named hundreds of Hawaiians with small claims on parcels of land that may have conflicted with his own, sparking a backlash from the community he sought to join. To critics, his actions reeked of the white conquest of indigenous lands that brought Hawaii into the United States in 1893.

In an effort to smooth over the tension, Zuckerberg wrote in The Garden Island, "The right path is to sit down and discuss how to best move forward. We will continue to speak with community leaders that represent different groups, including native Hawaiians and environmentalists, to find the best path."



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A Twitter Bot For Handclap Emoji Tweets Had To Shut Down Because It Became Racist

On Twitter, there’s a convention of adding the handclap emoji between each word for added emphasis. Imagine it done out loud, with a clap for each word: the effect is like a preschool teacher yelling at a child who doesn’t listen, or a cheerleader rah-rah-ing a statement. Like this:

The convention has been a meme for a few years, which means it’s permuted into various levels of irony. Like this:

Serena Parr, a graduate student at NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program, came up with the idea for a bot that would retweet emoji handclap tweets as a class project a few weeks ago. Since the handclaps are used for something you’re saying with conviction, Parr thought it would be amusing to see a feed of people’s most emphatic opinions, both serious and silly.

The first challenge was searching for these tweets. Normally, you can’t search emojis on Twitter, so Parr turned to a tool made by Matthew Rothenberg for his very fun website Emoji Tracker, which shows you real-time emoji use on Twitter. With a little bit of coding magic, the bot was made and launched in mid-January. She called it @lol_yelling.

And then, the inevitable and obvious thing happened. Much like Tay, the Microsoft Twitter bot that quickly became a Neo Nazi, within just two days, @lol_yelling took on the tenor of the rest of the cesspool of Twitter.

Parr wasn’t naive to the fact Twitter is often full of harassment and abuse, and she deleted her own personal account recently. “It was making me feel bad and miserable about the world,” she told me. She built into her bot a word filter to block out offensive language. But racism on Twitter isn’t just tweets that use the n-word. Ideologically racist stuff, like someone insisting that reverse racism is real or arguing that MLK’s “I have a dream” speech is bad because black people also owned slaves, kept getting through Parr’s filter. It was the kind of stuff that wouldn’t necessarily get someone banned, but is offensive to a reasonable person.

“If you click on these profiles, they’d retweet the most vile, racist, disgusting things. It was a strange glimpse into how this part of Twitter works,” Parr said. “There’s also really bad images and memes that would never get caught by a racist word filter.”

Less than five full days after it was created, Parr deactivated the bot, because she didn’t want to have to keep filtering out the bad tweets. She was keenly aware that the handclap emoji convention started in Black Twitter — the fact that it’s become so widespread that racists are using it makes the whole thing even more ironic and sad.

The bot isn’t doing any more retweets, but its account is still up, in case you want to enjoy it as a living monument to the fact that Twitter ruins everything .



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No, Signatures On The White House Petition Site Aren't Intentionally Frozen

Lumy010 / Getty Images

You may have seen stories going around questioning whether the Trump administration has frozen the signatures on certain initiatives on the We The People petition platform. That's likely not the case.

President Obama's administration created We The People in 2011 as a way for citizens to communicate with the White House about issues that mattered to them. The platform allows anyone to start a petition that others can digitally sign to show their support, and Obama's White House said it would respond to any petition that received 100,000 signatures within 30 days. That clause is still part of the "about" page on We The People, though whether the Trump administration will respond to petitions is unconfirmed. On the day of his inauguration, Trump's administration archived all existing petitions on the platform.

Right now, though, We The People seems to be barely registering some signatures. A petition titled "Preserve the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities" only had 96 signatures at press time, despite accruing hundreds of shares on Twitter alone. (The president is expected to cut funding for the NEA and NEH dramatically.) Another petition for a similar cause has showed a relatively static number of signatures, despite a continuing high volume of social shares. It is possible that the similarity of these petitions is spreading signatures thinly between them, though another petition about something entirely different shared widely on Twitter also has only one signature.

Trump's administration seemed to acknowledge that something was wrong with the website, but denied it had intentionally stalled the platform. A spokesperson for the White House told BuzzFeed News, "It's a question of high volume at the end of the day, but the signatures are being captured. Because of high volume they're having to change how they’re being captured." The spokesperson did not elaborate on what that change would entail.

Some of the shortened URLs that appear in shared social media posts for petitions have recently been leading to broken webpages, which also may be affecting the petitions' signature counts.

Macon Phillips, who served as Obama's coordinator of International Information Programs, oversaw the creation We The People. In response to questions about how slowly the site seems to be counting signatures, he told BuzzFeed News he didn't think it was intentional interference by Trump's administration. "The system doesn't really allow you to make it behave that way. It seems like more of a caching issue. I think the team there is still trying to get their heads around how it works," he said. President Trump has appointed a new acting director of International Information Programs, Jonathan Henick, who did not immediately respond to request for comment.

The number of signatures on a few other petitions also indicate that the administration is not suppressing signature counts on We The People. Two petitions on the site, "Immediately release Donald Trump's full tax returns, with all information needed to verify emoluments clause compliance," and "Divest or put in a blind trust all of the President's business and financial assets," have reached 372,520 and 114,924 signatures, respectively, at press time. White House spokesperson Kellyanne Conway responded to the tax returns petition on TV recently, at least indirectly — at first, she refused to release the returns, but then later walked back on that refusal.

This is the latest development in the Trump administration's tech struggles. Earlier this week, it was discovered that the @POTUS official Twitter account was tied to a Gmail address. The account registration was changed after journalists flagged the registration on Twitter.

Adrian Carrasquillo contributed to this report.



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Here's What It Feels Like To Be Trolled In Trump's America

Lam Thuy Vo / BuzzFeed News

A couple of weeks ago, Washington Post homepage editor Doris Truong found herself at the center of a partisan flame war.

During a break in Rex Tillerson’s confirmation hearing for secretary of state, an Asian woman was spotted appearing to take snapshots of Tillerson’s notes. Bloggers quickly decided that the woman in the video must be Truong, who also happens to be Asian. One Reddit thread, for instance, was titled “Fake News Journalist Doris Truong caught taking photos of Rex Tillerson's notes from confirmation hearing today.”

The thing is, Truong was not covering the Tillerson hearing. To put it in her own words: “Trolls decided I was taking pictures of Rex Tillerson’s notes. I wasn’t even there.”

On a typical day, Truong gets maybe a half dozen mentions on Twitter. By 10 a.m. on Thursday, Jan. 12 — the day after she had been falsely identified as the woman from the picture — she had 4,638 new mentions since the previous evening. And it just kept going. Within 24 hours, her handle had been mentioned 20,179 times, an increase of 185,300%, according to screenshots provided by Truong.

Here’s what that looked like:

Note: This graphic is based on a BuzzFeed News analysis of 24,731 mentions of Truong’s twitter handle, @doristruong, starting roughly two days before false stories of her started circulating on the web and ending seven days after the incident.

Source: Twitter’s API

Source: Twitter’s API

“That initial moment of seeing the Twitter notifications was dumbfounding,” Truong wrote in an email to BuzzFeed News. “I was looking at the app on my cellphone, where '20+' is the readout even if an account has far more mentions. I had to scroll through dozens of screens of people saying ‘how dare you’ (and worse) to finally figure out what had caught their attention.”

Experiences like Truong’s are becoming more and more common. According to a recent study from Data & Society, 47% of internet users aged 15 and older have experienced online harassment or abuse at some point. Thirty-six percent of all respondents reported that they had been harassed directly, meaning they had been threatened, called abusive names, or stalked.

When a story goes viral, this experience is amplified.

“This idea of people coming together within specific affinity groups and behaving in ways that are really good for the ‘in’ group and terrible for members of the ‘out’ group [...] there’s nothing new about that,” said Whitney M. Phillips, a professor at Mercer University who has been studying how people talk online for close to 10 years and who has written a book about online trolling titled This Is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things. “But having different tools means we suddenly have new superpowers.”

Though online trolling has existed for years, experts like Phillips worry that the election of Donald Trump as president may embolden people who already harass others online. Trump has insulted politicians, media organizations, public figures, and private citizens on Twitter, which, in some cases, has incited his supporters to launch social media attacks on the people he singled out. He has spread and amplified skewed information and has tweeted falsehoods.

“What do you do when the president is doing the thing that you’re trying to get average citizens not to do anymore?” said Phillips.

Truong’s story became a battleground for different factions to debate their own views about the media and politics. While roughly 70% of the 100 most retweeted tweets about her contained insults against her, the media, and/or "liberals," a little less than a third of all the mentions from that same sample were trying to defend Truong (and a small percentage were not related to the story).

Those who believed the false story about Truong slung insults toward her. “Where is your integrity? Oh wait you work for WaPo don't you” or “Media is SCUM,” some wrote. A few also featured hashtags like #WashingtonCompost in their tweets. Others swooped in to defend her:

This factioning of responses mirrors how politically divided the nation is and just how important identity politics have become in the digital realm.

Participating in debates like this is “the digital equivalent of wearing a Make America Great Again hat and a pussy hat [...] It’s that idea that you’re signaling your affiliation with your group,” said Phillips. “If someone comes at you screaming, it’s very tempting to scream back at them.”

The most intense part of Truong’s experience lasted approximately three days. And though she told BuzzFeed News that she was “mildly concerned” about her safety, she wrote that she will continue to use social media platforms: “The whole episode is not going to drive me off social media, which provides a way for me to connect with people across the miles, including strangers, and to be exposed to a diversity of opinions — including ones I disagree with.”



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26 Ocak 2017 Perşembe

Ivanka Trump's Website Promotes A Russian App That Quietly Tracks Your Location

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Ivanka Trump’s fashion-and-lifestyle website is promoting an app, developed by a Russian company, that can track people’s location even when it is not running. The app, called SkyGuru, was featured in the latest edition of “Weekly Clicks,” a roundup of recipes, fashion tips and fitness trends that “#TeamIvanka clicked, read and loved.”

SkyGuru says it can calm anxious flyers by alerting them to turbulence and tracking their flights through the air. But the small print on the app’s download page reveals another feature: it continues to monitor users’ whereabouts after their flights land, regardless of whether they close the app.

SkyGuru says this feature is no different than other GPS-related apps, like Google Maps or Uber, and that users can switch off the function.

SkyGuru was developed by Taktik Labs, a team of coders and marketers in Russia that includes a man with ties to a state-run investment firm. Amidst questions regarding President Donald Trump’s relationship with Moscow, the coincidence of electronic surveillance and the Russian government brought Trump and SkyGuru a sharp rebuke on social media.

SkyGuru’s founder, Alex Gervash, says the app “does not contain any malicious code” and the company does not store the data it collects.

“It uses GPS data just like any other navigator,” Gervash said.

Taktik Labs has built a suite of apps, including KidRadar, which allows parents to monitor their children’s movements, and MoscowSecrets, which offers tips to travelers.

One member of the Taktik team is Andrey Lebedev, a consultant whose biography says he helped establish Rusnano Capital, a government-owned company that invests in things like energy projects and nanotechnology.

Lebedev reports on LinkedIn that he helped launch Rusnano in 2007 and was “awarded a thank you letter” from the deputy prime minister. Garvesh says Taktik has no connection to Rusnano and that Lebedev’s job is to find outside investors.

After Trump's website promoted the app, Russia Today, the premiere outlet of Russian state media, proudly announced that SkyGuru's downloads had tripled.

Gervash, a pilot with a degree in psychology, told BuzzFeed News in an email: “We are very happy that our app has created such a hype and so many discussions among our followers. Allow us to remind you that the main goal of SkyGuru is to explain to anxious passengers the ongoing processes during flight in order to help them cope with fear of flying.”

It was not clear who promoted SkyGuru from Trump’s website or Twitter account. Representatives of IvankaTrump.com did not return two messages seeking comment. SkyGuru said it has no ties to either Ivanka or President Donald Trump, but found a unique way to say thanks to both of them.



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President Trump's Official Twitter Account Was Registered To A Personal Gmail Address

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

Until Thursday afternoon, Donald Trump's official @POTUS Twitter was registered to a private, non-government email address, raising concerns about the security of the White House's primary social media account. The account registration was changed after journalists flagged the registration on Twitter.

The registration was first noticed by TV Guide Managing Editor, Alex Zalben:

Others have confirmed that the password reset link directs to what appears to be White House Social Media Director, Dan Scavino's personal Gmail account.

The White House press office has not yet responded to a request for comment. White House Director of Social Media, Dan Scavino has not yet responded to BuzzFeed News query asking if the account will be transferred to a different, government address in the future.

The registration to a personal account rekindles concerns about the security of the Trump administration's social media accounts, especially Trump's Twitter accounts, arguably the President's most important communications' tools. The account, which changed hands from the Obama administration just moments after Trump was sworn into office last Friday, has quickly amassed 14.3 million followers and is obsessively tracked by journalists and even financial trading algorithms. Though Trump has opted to use his personal, @realDonaldTrump account as his primary method of personal communication, the @POTUS account is largely seen as the official Twitter account of the administration.

This week a hacker who identifies himself as as WauchulaGhost told CNN that he had been able to easily find the emails associated with the @POTUS, @FLOTUS, and @VP accounts and suggested the White House update security settings. WauchulaGhost told CNN that the accounts, "haven't selected a basic security feature on Twitter that requires you to provide a phone number or email address to reset your password."

And just this morning, White House Press Secretary, Sean Spicer appeared to accidentally tweet out the password to one of his accounts. Some have suggested that Spicer was trying to log-in to his Twitter account using two-factor authentication, and accidentally copied in his password.

BuzzFeed News reported earlier this month that the @POTUS account has special security protocols. The security tools, according to the White House Communications Agency include multiple password layers as well as limiting the number of encrypted devices that can post to the official account.

“It’s a small handful of devices that are under significant security and handled with extreme care,” a former director of online engagement told BuzzFeed News this month about the account. The new registration under Scavino's email would suggest this protocol has changed when the account was transferred.




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Twitter Says Goodbye To The Moments Tab, And Hello to Explore

Twitter’s Moments tab is dead. Long live Moments.

In an effort to improve content discovery on its platform, Twitter is replacing its Moments tab with a new tab called Explore. Moments themselves will live on in the Explore tab, but they will take up decidedly less real estate. The Explore tab will also feature search, a list of trends, live video (at times), and shortcuts to get to Moments categories such as News, Sports, and Entertainment.

“Over the past year, we’ve been exploring different ways to make it simpler for people to find and use trends, Moments, and search,” the company said in a blog post. “During our research process, people told us that the new Explore tab helped them easily find news, what’s trending, and what’s popular right now.”

The tab could be especially useful home for Twitter’s premium live video efforts, which have included numerous sports games, the presidential debates, and the Trump inauguration. The videos have not been easy to find inside the Twitter app, which hasn’t had a dedicated tab to host them.

Twitter, used by 317 million people each month, has struggled to attract new users. The company has cited usability as an area it needs to improve upon. One of the key issues new users have is finding the best content inside Twitter, which is what Moments is supposed to address. Twitter still plans to publish the same volume of Moments, and the team working on the feature will not be reduced.

The new Explore tab rolls out globally on iOS today and Android in the coming weeks. If you find yourself longing for Moments in its absence, you can still access the tab on desktop, at least until it eventually switches over to Explore too.



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