Showing posts with label Smartphone App. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smartphone App. Show all posts
Thursday, October 3, 2019
Russian man sues Apple, claims iPhone app 'turned him gay'
MOSCOW - A Russian man has filed a lawsuit against Apple for moral harm claiming that an iPhone app had turned him gay, according to a copy of the complaint seen by AFP.
The man filed suit in a Moscow court asking for one million rubles ($15,000) after an incident this summer in which a cryptocurrency called "GayCoin" was delivered via a smartphone app, rather than the Bitcoin he had ordered.
His lawyer Sapizhat Gusnieva insisted the case was "serious," telling AFP that her client was "scared, he suffered".
The GayCoin cryptocurrency arrived with a note saying, "Don't judge until you try," according to the complaint.
"I thought, in truth, how can I judge something without trying? I decided to try same-sex relationships," the complainant wrote.
"Now I have a boyfriend and I do not know how to explain this to my parents... my life has been changed for the worse and will never become normal again," he added.
"Apple pushed me towards homosexuality through manipulation. The changes have caused me moral and mental harm."
Apple's representatives in Russia did not immediately respond to AFP's request for comment.
Gusnieva said the US technology giant "has a responsibility for their programs" despite the alleged exchange taking place on a third-party app.
The suit was filed on September 20 and the court will hear the complaint on October 17, according to information on its website.
Homophobia is widespread in Russia where reports of rights violations and attacks on LGBT people are common, though there are gay scenes in major cities.
Moscow in 2013 introduced a law against "gay propaganda", which officially bans the "promotion of non-traditional lifestyles to minors" but in effect outlaws LGBT activism.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Sunday, February 17, 2019
Saudi defends app allowing men to monitor women relatives
RIYADH - Saudi Arabia on Saturday defended a mobile app that allows men in the kingdom to track female relatives after rights groups and a US lawmaker criticized tech giants for offering it.
The Absher app provides services for "all members of the society... including women, the elderly, and people with special needs", the interior ministry said.
The free app is available on Android and Apple smartphones and allows users to renew passports, visas and eases a variety of other electronic services.
But critics have said the app enables abuse against women and girls by allowing men to track their movements.
Apple CEO Tim Cook told US National Public Radio earlier this week he had not heard of the app, but would "take a look at it".
US Senator Ron Wyden has called on both Apple and Google to remove the app, arguing on Twitter that it promotes "abusive practices against women".
Under Saudi law, women must have consent from a husband or immediate male relative to renew passports or leave the country.
The ministry criticized what it called a "systematic campaign aimed at questioning the purpose of the services".
It rejected what it described as "attempts to politicize" the tool.
This comes as Saudi Arabia faces intense scrutiny over the shocking murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi last year, which has renewed criticism of the kingdom's rights record.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has garnered international attention with his rapid rise to power and promise of social and economic reforms.
But the kingdom has detained a number of human rights and women campaigners, some of them accused of undermining national security, with scant public information about their whereabouts or the legal status of their cases.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Facebook simplifies Messenger app
SAN FRANCISCO -- Facebook on Tuesday announced an overhaul of its Messenger smartphone app in an effort to simplify the service for its 1.3 billion monthly global users.
The social network began rolling out a redesigned version featuring three tabs instead of nine, saying it was "going back to its roots" seven years after the standalone app's launch.
"We build one feature after another; they're piling up," Messenger chief Stan Chudnovsky said of the service, which has grown from a simple messaging app to one that lets users make video calls, send money and more.
The updated tabs allow users to navigate between their conversations under "Chats," stories and contacts at "People," and "Discovery," which is devoted to games and exchanges with businesses.
Facebook has positioned Messenger as a tool for businesses to efficiently handle customer questions or concerns.
Talking to customers via the app is free -- but businesses can also pay for Facebook ads that let customers start a conversation or visit their page with one click.
Messenger is part of Facebook's effort to expand outside the social network -- particularly when it comes to staying relevant to mobile lifestyles and younger people, who have been moving away from the service.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, November 30, 2017
Snapchat redesign keeps it personal
SAN FRANCISCO - Snapchat on Wednesday unveiled a redesign intended to rev up use of the image-sharing smartphone application by focusing on personal interests instead of what friends post.
Parent company Snap has promised the redesign in a bid to make Snapchat more user-friendly in the face of competition from rival messaging apps, especially those fielded by leading social networking Facebook.
Snap changes included separate streams for posts or messages from close friends versus digital content from publishers.
Snap co-founder and chief Evan Spiegel outlined the service's approach in an online post, arguing that social medial "fueled fake news" because content designed to spread was not necessarily accurate.
"The personalized newsfeed revolutionized the way people share and consume content," Spiegel said.
"But let's be honest: this came at a huge cost to facts, our minds and the entire media industry."
Snapchat's approach is to rely on computer algorithms based on individual users' interests, not what is buzzing at the service, according to Spiegel.
"We believe that the best path forward is disentangling the two by providing a personalized content feed based on what you want to watch, not what your friends post," Spiegel said.
"We think this helps guard against fake news and mindless scrambles for friends or unworthy distractions."
The change is also intended to help publishers make money from their stories, according to Snap.
Early this month, Snap reporting a widening loss and user numbers that fell short of market expectations.
Revenue at the California-based company rose but its loss more than tripled in the quarter that ended September 30, according to an earnings release.
The number of people using Snapchat daily rose to 178 million in a 17 percent increase from the same quarter last year, according to the company.
Snapchat became popular among young smartphone users for its disappearing messages, often photos or video, but analysts say it needs to show strong growth to keep pace in the rapidly evolving social media sector dominated by Facebook.
Although Snapchat is best known for its smartphone messaging, it has also developed partnerships with numerous media outlets eager to reach its audience with news, video and other content.
Snap said during an earnings call that priorities in the year ahead will include increasing the number of users along with the kinds of content on the platform, as well as investing in augmented reality and machine learning.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Saturday, October 8, 2016
Facebook launches smartphone app for event seekers
SAN FRANCISCO - Facebook on Friday released a mobile app for finding local happenings to enjoy with friends.
The Events app tailored for iPhones hit Apple's online shop, with a version "coming soon" for smartphones powered by Google-backed Android software, Facebook product manager Aditya Koolwal said in on online post.
Events is a stand-alone spin on a section at the leading online social network that lets people share plans for concerts, poetry slams, plays or other types of events they are interested in attending.
"When you open Events, you can quickly catch up on new events your friends are interested in, recently-announced events by the Pages you like, and updates from events you're already connected to," Koolwal said.
More than 100 million people daily use Facebook's events section to discover activities they can take part in with friends, according to Koolwal.
The Events app lets people browse for happenings based on factors such as location or interest, and to explore potential outing options with the help of interactive maps.
Plans made in Events are organized on a calendar and shared back to Facebook friends.
California-based Facebook has been building a family of mobile applications to stay tuned into modern lifestyles in which smartphones are used to quickly connect and share with friends or colleagues.
Facebook has a mobile app for the social network, as well as Messenger and WhatsApp messaging programs that each claim more than a billion users.
Facebook also owns photo and video sharing app Instagram, which reported earlier this year that it topped 500 million users.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, August 28, 2015
LOOK: Instagram images no longer just squares
SAN FRANCISCO - Instagram on Thursday broke its square mold with an update that adds portrait and landscape formats to the image-sharing smartphone application.
"Square format has been and always will be part of who we are," Instagram said in a blog post.
"That said, the visual story you're trying to tell should always come first, and we want to make it simple and fun for you to share moments just the way you want to."
Updated versions of Instagram tailored for mobile devices powered by Apple or Android software let users share photos or videos in portrait or landscape styles.
Approximately one out of every five posts to Instagram is in square format, according to the Facebook-owned company.
"We know that it hasn’t been easy to share this type of content on Instagram: friends get cut out of group shots, the subject of your video feels cramped and you can't capture the Golden Gate Bridge from end to end," Instagram said of being limited to square imagery.
"We’re especially excited about what this update means for video on Instagram, which in widescreen can be more cinematic than ever."
Facebook acquired the fast-growing Instagram in 2012 for $1 billion.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Group date? There are apps for that
Move over Tinder -- a crop of dating apps in smartphone-addicted Asia is offering to recruit friends for group dates or send along a chaperone to steer the course of romance.
While dating apps developed in the West encourage one-on-one, often no-strings-attached meetings, many in Asia are as much about old-school courtship or friendship in a region where meeting a stranger in a bar can still be a taboo.
"My upbringing was very close to my parents, religious, traditional and old-fashioned. You couldn't go on dates if your parents didn't know the guy," said Valenice Balace, who developed the Peekawoo service in the Philippines two years ago.
"I grew up with chaperoned dates and even when I was in college my kid sister was always with me on dates."
Too shy to make eye contact in bars as a singleton, the 26-year-old turned to apps similar to Tinder, which boasts tens of millions of active users, where photos of potential matches are instantly liked or rejected.
But after one man suggested he come to her house after their first online conversation, Balace realized the set-up was not for her.
And so the Filipina entrepreneur created an app which not only discouraged users from meeting one-on-one but also offered a chaperone service for those who requested it.
As Peekawoo expanded -– it now has around 7,000 members -– it was no longer practical for the small company to provide a chaperone for every couple who asked for one, and so Balace's team started organizing meetups instead.
It is a model shared by Hong Kong-based app Grouvly, which sets up groups of six people for dates.
'Hard to meet people'
"When I came to Asia, I realised it was hard to meet people," explains Colombian-born CEO Camilo Paredes.
"I also realized that most of the Asians were somewhat shy, they're not confrontational, they don't put themselves out there."
His solution was to mimic American Grouper, which matches two people according to the information on their Facebook profiles, then asks them to bring two friends with them to a bar for a six-person meet up.
While the majority of pairings are men meeting women, there is also the option of all-male or all-female dates.
"One-on-one can be super awkward. Two-on-two is still slightly awkward, but three-on-three is the magic number," says Paredes.
Alongside expats, Hong Kongers now make up 50 percent of Grouvly's users. In Singapore, most users are locals and there are plans to roll out the service to Japan, South Korea, Australia and China.
"For me, if somebody else likes the guy, they can have them," says Aly, a 24-year-old blogger from the UK and Grouvly regular.
"Ok, they're nice, but I've met them for what, two hours? I'm not going to cry about it."
Aly finds these apps can be as much about making friends as looking for love, with Peekawoo's founder saying this change of focus also allows women to take back control.
"There was one Peekawoo event where a Filipino-American guy offended a Filipina girl by asking her to go home with him," Balace remembered.
"I told her, 'I'm proud of you'. We told the guy what he did was wrong, and we never invited him again."
'Sign of promiscuity'
Even if the Singapore-based Paktor -- which claims 3.5 million registered users -- is less averse to hook ups, it has recently also added functions such as group chats.
"People either organise a group meeting or they reach out to one person in that chat to have a conversation with them," explains Joseph Phua, 31, co-founder of the app.
"It's true that people here tend to be more reserved, less direct," he added. "Asian society feels failure or rejection more strongly, it's just part of the fabric of society. That carries on into the dating space as well."
While apps are being created or tweaked to adapt to tamer local sensibilities, others like China's WeChat can lead to casual trysts with a location-based "Shake" function.
But meeting a partner online in a global hub like Hong Kong still remains less common than in the West -- despite 62.80 percent of people owning a smartphone, according to Google figures.
A 2011 survey led by Emil Ng Man-Lun of Hong Kong University's Family Institute found that just five percent of locals had met a partner online or via an app, compared to 22 percent of Americans, according to Stanford University research published that year.
"Our impression is that this is rising. But by how much it is rising, we are not sure yet," Ng says.
"People think they are a sign of promiscuity. They worry that they get into intimacy too early, without sufficient time for knowing each other. It seems, however, that these theories have not stopped people from using them."
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Filipino, 19 other languages added to Google Translate app
SAN FRANCISCO - Google announced Wednesday it was adding 20 new languages for its mobile translation application that reads text and instantly converts to another tongue.
The smartphone app now can read 27 languages and instantly convert the text without an Internet connection, the tech giant said.
Google also said it was making voice translation "faster and smoother" in the Translate app, which can interpret street signs, ingredient lists, instruction manuals and other texts.
The real-time text translation began with seven languages -- English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish.
The new ones added are Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Filipino, Finnish, Hungarian, Indonesian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Slovak, Swedish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
Additionally, one-way translations are available from English to Hindi and Thai.
Google's picture mode translation, which requires a snapshot of text, can operate in 37 languages.
The California group said the new features come from extensive research to develop so-called "convolutional neural networks," or using artificial intelligence to recognize letters and words and filter out backgrounds.
"We've still got lots of work to do," said product leader Barak Turovsky.
"More than half of the content on the Internet is in English, but only around 20 percent of the world's population speaks English.
"Today's updates knock down a few more language barriers, helping you communicate better and get the information you need."
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Microsoft, Real Madrid reveal new app for fans
Real Madrid, together with Microsoft, has unveiled a new smartphone app for its legions of fans worldwide.
Only 3% of Real's fans actually live in Madrid, and it has become increasingly important for the club to find ways to directly connect with supporters worldwide.
The app will give users to access the stadium, player, and club statistics in real time, and the ability to connect with friends and fans.
It will also feature multi-angle viewing and exclusive content. -- Mornings @ ANC, May 20, 2015.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Friday, November 21, 2014
Twitter boss launches global cash register service
Twitter's co-founder outlined plans to make cash registers a thing of the past on Thursday as he held a global launch for new software that he said would help small businesses grow.
Jack Dorsey, who is chairman of Twitter and chief executive of the mobile payments company Square, said the software would allow shopkeepers to track sales and provide digital receipts.
"We think it's a great replacement to any cash register," Dorsey said at a Financial Times conference in London.
"It means we're now a global company," he said.
The software, Square Register, was only available in Canada, Japan and the United States, where it tracked around four million sales a day.
It can now be downloaded for free everywhere else and supports 130 currencies, although it will not allow actual payments for the moment.
The company offered testimonials from businesses in Australia, Hungary, Mexico, Philippines and Vietnam and Dorsey said many had already begun using the software by getting around national controls.
Square teamed up with the smartphone app Snapchat earlier this week for a service that allows users in the United States to send money to friends by simply typing dollar amounts into new "Snapcash" messages.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Monday, September 22, 2014
New smartphone app gives sight to the blind
SAN FRANCISCO -- Jonathan Mosen, who has been blind since birth, spent his evening snapping photos of packages in the mail, his son's school report and labels on bottles in the fridge. In seconds, he was listening to audio of the printed words the camera captured, courtesy of a new app on his Apple Inc. iPhone.
"I couldn't believe how accurate it was," said Mosen, an assistive technology consultant from New Zealand.
The new app that allows blind people to listen to an audio readback of printed text is receiving rave reviews after its first day of availability and is being heralded as a life-changer by many people.
Blind people say the KNFB Reader app will enable a new level of engagement in everyday life, from reading menus in restaurants to browsing handouts in the classroom.
The $99 app is the result of a four decades-long relationship between the National Federation of the Blind and Ray Kurzweil, a well-known artificial-intelligence scientist and senior Google employee. According to its website, K-NFB Reading Technology Inc. and Sensotec NV, a Belgium-based company, led the technical development of the app.
Kurzweil, who demonstrated the app on stage at the NFB's annual convention in June, said it can replace a "sighted adviser."
Taking advantage of new pattern recognition and image- processing technology as well as new smartphone hardware, the app allows users to adjust or tilt the camera, and reads printed materials out loud. People with refreshable Braille displays can now snap pictures of print documents and display them in Braille near-instantaneously, said NFB spokesman Chris Danielsen.
The app has already given some people greater independence, users said on Thursday and Friday on social-media sites such as Twitter. One early adopter, Gordon Luke, tweeted that he was able to use the app to read his polling card for the Scottish Referendum.
The app will be available on Android in the coming months, Kurzweil told Reuters in an interview. He may also explore a version of the app for Google Glass, a postage stamp-sized computer screen that attaches to eyeglass frames and is capable of taking photos, recording video and playing sound.
"Google Glass makes sense because you direct the camera with your head," Kurzweil said.
Kurzweil started working on so-called "reading machines" in the early 1970s after chatting on a plane with a blind person who voiced frustrations with the lack of optical-recognition technology on the market.
A few years later, "Kurzweil burst into the National Federation of the Blind's offices in Washington, D.C., and said he had invented a reading machine," recalled Jim Gashel, a former NFB employee who currently heads business development at KNFB Reader. "It was phenomenal."
Kurzweil's first reading machine was the size of a washing machine and cost $50,000. The technology has continued to improve over the past few decades - the new smartphone app can recognize and translate print between different languages and scan PowerPoint slides up to 25 feet away - but it was not available on a mainstream mobile device until now.
Previously, it cost more than $1,000 to use the software with a Nokia cell phone and a camera.
The app's release comes at a time when the technology industry has faced criticism for being too focused on making what some deem frivolous products such as apps for sharing photos and video games, as well as for intruding into people's personal privacy.
In San Francisco, activists have blocked commuter buses operated by companies such as Google and Apple, and picketed the homes of some tech company executives for driving up the cost of living and not doing enough to help fix the city's problems.
San Francisco-based Bryan Bashin, executive director of the non-profit Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, said the KNFB app shows the positive and profound impact that technology can have.
"There are innumerable times in life that I'll have a bit of print and there will be nobody around who can help me out, and I'll just want to know something as simple as 'Is this packet decaf or caffeinated coffee?'" Bashin said.
"The ability to do this easily with something that fits in your pocket at lightning speed will certainly be a game changer."
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Swing Copters: More frustrating than Flappy Bird
MANILA - Swing Copters, the much-anticipated new game from Flappy Bird creator Dong Nguyen, is now available for download.
Much like its predecessor, the free-to-play app again dares you to navigate your way through a series of obstacles, while trying to score as many points as you can.
But rather than guiding a tiny bird sideways, you are now tasked to help a little brown sprite avoid a bunch of swinging hammers blocking its upward flight.
The bug-eyed thing, with a propeller for a hat, moves side-to-side automatically and you will need to tap on the screen to quickly change its direction.
The game is far more quick-paced and frustrating than Flappy Bird, but I personally think it is less addicting, as well. (My high score currently stands at 2)
One factor is the difficulty -- which is now extremely harder thanks to those addition of animated obstacles.
It might turn a lot of casual gamers -- those who play the game just to pass the time -- off the game, but the decision to tone the down the addictive quality may be intentional from Nguyen.
He earlier admitted that the reason he pulled Flappy Bird off app stores, despite reportedly earning him more than $50,000 in ad revenue, was because it was "too addictive."
As of writing, 'Swing Copters' currently sits in the top five most downloaded free app on the local iTunes Store.
It has already spawned quite a cult following on Twitter, with several players posting their high scores. Currently, the number stands at 82.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Monday, January 27, 2014
Banking apps on Android phones most at risk of virus -Kaspersky
JERUSALEM - Banking applications on Android phones are most vulnerable to cyber crime, the chief executive and co-founder of Russian anti-virus software maker Kaspersky Lab said on Monday.
Eugene Kaspersky said 99 percent of mobile attacks are towards Android-based phones, since Apple has strict controls and does not allow third-party applications.
The most disturbing trend in cyber attacks was a growing shift to mobile devices from computers and a major cyber attack using mobile phones was bound to happen since cellular users are not properly protected, he told Reuters.
"I expect something really bad to happen to change people's minds and awareness," he said, noting that it took the Chernobyl virus in 1998 for people to properly protect their computers.
"Cyber crime is moving to mobile but people are not aware. It's still not as big as computer crime but it's growing fast. The trend is a very dangerous situation," he said at a cyber-tech conference in Israel, where he wants to open a research and development lab.
Kaspersky makes one of the top-selling anti-virus programmes in the United States, where it has gained market share in recent years against products from Symantec Corp, Intel's McAfee and Trend Micro.
He said it was hard to determine where most cyber attacks are coming from geographically but cyber criminals typically speak Chinese, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
WeChat adds games in latest version
MANILA – China’s hot messaging app WeChat recently launched its newest version in the Philippines, which includes three games, more animated stickers and an expanded group chat feature.
WeChat 5.1 hopes to attract more casual gamers with the side-scrolling race game “Gunz Dash” and the puzzle games “2 Day’s Match” and “Craz3 Match,” which are all available for iOS, Android, Symbian, Windows Phone and BlackBerry users.
Steve Zheng, WeChat’s senior business development manager, noted that bulk of their users in the Philippines are university students and young professionals, who usually like playing games on their smartphones.
“University students are our biggest users here,” Zheng told ABS-CBNnews.com, not citing figures. “They like to share photos and they use our talk feature every day.”
“The university students and young professionals, they are happy to introduce WeChat to their friends so they can talk to each other,” he added. “WeChat has developed a lot of features such as animated stickers. We made a lot of new stickers to engage them so they can better express their emotions.”
WeChat 5.1 can now accommodate up to 100 users in its group chat service from the previous limit of 40.
Zheng said those who have downloaded the app can also “save” their favorite messages and photos, as well as share their experiences more creatively via an exclusive app called “StoryCam.”
“We’re more focused on how to improve the user experience,” he said.
WeChat has almost 500 million users as of July last year, with 100 million of them coming from China.
Citing Google Trends, Zheng said their app is one of the Top 3 searched apps in the Philippines.
“We have yet to expand to other countries,” he said, noting that they are now available in some parts of Southeast Asia.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Too busy to buy gifts? There's an app for that
MANILA – Have you been very busy that you haven’t had the time to shop gifts for your loved ones this Christmas?
Manila-based startup Scrambled Eggs Ltd. has a solution for that as it has come up with an application that will surely be helpful despite one’s hectic schedule.
Called Tinybox, the newly released application is available for iOS users where one can send a surprise photo gift to anyone you know through an SMS.
The application was developed Ben Wintle, who would always forget to do something sweet for his girlfriend.
Through Tinybox, any user can now pick a cute or funny digital gift box and upload personal photos to put inside.
The application also allows any user to add a personalized voice message and then schedule when the box should be sent.
Proving to be a much better solution than just receiving a simple message greeting, Tinybox offers users an opportunity to show their loved ones this Christmas how special they are.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
Sunday, December 22, 2013
Smartphone app firm Line opens online mall
TOKYO - Smartphone messaging company Line Corp. has opened an online mall to sell a range of products including cosmetics, clothing and general merchandise in a challenge to giant Internet retailers such as Rakuten Inc. and Amazon Japan K.K.
The mall, available through a dedicated application for Android smartphones since Friday, also offers a market where individuals can sell items by uploading photos of the products and indicating the prices at which they want to sell. If sold, 10 percent of the sales price will be collected by Line as a commission.
Line is planning to expand the mall by soliciting more shops next spring and make the app available for Apple Inc.'s iPhones sometime next year.
source: www.abs-cbnnews.com
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