Apple Pay scammers, Fitbitās $12M payout, silicon soulmate Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā Ķ ā Ā In partnership with NordPass | Hi, hey, hello, itās a great Sunday! Letās start with a tidbit thatāll make you look like the smartest person in the room. Have you ever noticed some USB ports are red? These are your power players. Most red USB ports are āalways-onā and pack a higher power output. Even if your PC goes to sleep, the red USB ports keep charging. Perfect for topping off your headphones or other gadgets overnight. Regular USB ports take a nap when your computer does. Now you know! āAre password managers safe to use?ā Youāre smart to ask, and itās the reason you need to be very choosy about what you trust. My pick, NordPass, has military-grade encryption, so no one is getting in. More below. On to the tech smarts! ā Kim š£ Donāt keep me a secret: Share the email with friends (or copy URL here) | TODAY'S TOP STORY Tech runs the show This past week, someone called me a āf***ing MAGA c***ā in the newsletter comments. That lovely reader didnāt leave a name (surprise) and clearly didnāt appreciate what I said about Stargate: ā[The] announcement by President Trump, along with the biggest tech CEOs, is the most consequential technical project of the century.ā First, letās address a question that lit up my inbox on Inauguration Day: āWhy are all the tech CEOs surrounding President Trump?ā Inauguration: A reflection of the times The presidential inauguration is a time capsule of who and what matters most in America. Seats go to the most powerful: Former presidents, military leaders, Supreme Court justices and others handpicked by the incoming president. On Trumpās guest list? Tech titans including Amazonās Jeff Bezos, Googleās Sundar Pichai, Metaās Mark Zuckerberg, Teslaās Elon Musk, Oracleās Larry Ellison, OpenAIās Sam Altman, SoftBankās Masayoshi Son and Appleās Tim Cook. Fun fact: Five of the top 10 richest people in the world were there, representing a combined net worth of over $900 billion. It wasnāt long ago steel magnates like Andrew Carnegie or automotive tycoons like Henry Ford were center stage. Today, itās tech CEOs. Why? Because government policies on data privacy, antitrust and AI shape entire industries. In other words, tech is driving our economy. Stargate is a moonshot This $500 billion investment, led by Larry Ellison, Sam Altman and Masayoshi Son, is the most ambitious AI project ever. Think of it as the tech worldās Apollo program, building a massive AI infrastructure and energy solutions to drive breakthroughs. Stargate is expected to create hundreds of thousands of jobs and revive U.S. chip production, which has fallen to just 12% of global manufacturing. Revolutionizing medicine and more Stargateās AI is going to change medicine, for starters. It will detect biomarkers and DNA mutations signaling diseases like cancer, Parkinsonās and Alzheimerās many years before symptoms appear. It will also revolutionize: Agriculture: Optimizing crop yields and robotics in farming. Education: Personalized learning for every student. Transportation: Self-driving cars, trains and faster air travel. Finance: Smarter investments by analyzing real-time market trends. Environment: Earlier warnings for hurricanes, wildfires and floods. Warfare: This is where it gets serious ā think autonomous drones that can fly into high-risk areas, reducing the danger for soldiers, or AI that analyzes satellite images to detect threats, deploy defensive systems in real time and even predict enemy movements. The global AI race China is investing $20 billion annually in AI to become the world leader by 2030. Let me tell you, the nation that dominates AI will define the future of geopolitics and economics. We need that nation to be us. Sure, AIās promise comes with risks. How do we ensure fairness in AI decision-making? Protect our privacy with a vast AI surveillance system? Address job displacement as automation grows? Letās not forget AI data centers require an enormous amount of electricity, sometimes as much as whatās used by entire cities. Despite the challenges, Iām hopeful. I want diseases to be a history lesson and innovation without bounds. Call me whatever names you want, but what I do on my national radio shows, podcasts and this newsletter isnāt and has never, ever been about politics. My mission is to share with you what matters in the tech world now and in the future. And weāll have some fun along the way, too! |
Store your passwords safely Weāre all guilty of storing our passwords in the wrong places. A sticky note under your keyboard or stuck on your computer screen isnāt going to cut it. Keeping passwords out in the open like that is just as dangerous as having weak logins hackers can crack in seconds. Thatās why you need a password manager. With NordPass, you can: š Check passwordsā strength: Find out if your passwords are weak, reused or outdated in seconds. š Generate healthy passwords: They create unique, uncrackable passwords every time. No more wondering if your try is good enough. š Sync across all devices: Keeps everything in sync and logs you into your favorite sites automatically. Ditch the Post-its, and keep all your passwords stored in one safe place with my password manager pick, NordPass. Only $1.43 a month with my exclusive offer! ā Please support our sponsors! |
MY TRUSTED ADVICE šļø Every weekend on my award-winning national radio show heard on over 420 stations, I talk with interesting folks like you. Catch these convos on a station near you, or find my weekend show as a podcast in your favorite podcast player. Casey in Los Angeles lost everything in the Palisades fire, including his dogs, Teeka and Oreo. He attached AirTags to them, but they were of no help. Luckily, he found the pups on his own. Robert in Annapolis, Maryland, wants to try crypto mining. Is he too late to cash in? Brian in Nashville gets dozens of political texts and emails every day. He wants the madness to end. Plus, Dee makes an AI business plan, Chris needs a kid-safe browser, Sam worries about credit card skimmers, Tom wants disaster data protection and so much more! š Letās talk about anything digital in your life, whether itās family matters or your business. Make an appointment to speak with me right here. |
WEB WATERCOOLER Makes you not want to be a Good Samaritan: A Chicago couple, Drew and Leilani, wanted to help two strangers outside a Target who asked for money to bury their brother. They wouldnāt accept cash and insisted on Apple Pay. A few swipes later, the couple was out $4,500 instead of $20. Drew ran after the guys and landed in the ER with a broken arm. Morals of this story: Never hand your phone to strangers, and donāt try to be a hero. This could have ended way worse. ā Watch out: Appleās Watch bands might be packed with āforever chemicalsā (PFAS) linked to cancer, birth defects and fertility issues. In a recent test, the toxic stuff turned up in 15 out of 22 bands. Apple insists theyāre safe. FYI, the highest concentrations were in the more expensive bands; all the under-$15 ones were cleared. Here are safe options for Apple Watch and Fitbit. Itās not just watches; next week in this newsletter, Iāll tell you about PFAS found in the tech we use every day. Silicon soulmate: Eliza Labs is bringing its AI chatbot, ElizaOS, into the real world. Eliza Wakes Up is a āproductivity partnerā that's part sexy librarian and part superhero. The bot is 5 feet, 10 inches tall; runs an eight-minute mile; and costs ā¦ wait for it ā¦ $420,000. Despite the pouty lips and exaggerated curves, the company says Elizaās not made for anything NSFW. Yeah, right. Burn notice: Fitbit is paying out a $12.25 million settlement after its Ionic smartwatches shipped with batteries that overheat. Apparently, Fitbit knew there was an issue in 2018 but waited four years to recall the watches. By then, 78 people were seriously burned, including some with fourth-degree burns. Submit your info for a refund, if you have one. If you drive a Subaru in reverse, UāRāA Bus: Researchers hacked a Subaru and got their hands on its location history and its driverās personal info, and they found they could lock and unlock its doors. Itās not just Subaru; a hacking competition paid almost $900,000 to folks who found 49 vulnerabilities in Android Auto, BlackBerry QNX, Teslaās Wall Connector and others. They fixed all the issues. We need more of these hacking competitions. šŖµ āStick Nationā: Itās a TikTok account with 2.9 million followers that ranks sticks found in nature, from wizard staffs to twisted twigs. It started as an inside joke between two buddies, Boone Hogg and Logan Jugler. Now, Stick Nation has 12.5 million likes, and even celebs like Lin-Manuel Miranda are in on it. This is incredible: Googleās new AI feature lets people control Chromebooks using only head and mouth movements. Itāll allow folks with motor impairments to move a cursor, select options and write emails via text-to-speech. See it in action. So cool. Do you bank on your phone? What about checking email and shopping? If you said āyesā to any of those, youāre a target. A keylogger captures everything you type, including your account numbers and passwords. Encrypt your keystrokes with EndpointLock. Hit this link for 10% off.* |
KIM KOMANDO TODAY Delete your name from the internet A guy found his private info online and became a target for romance scams. Only one thing worked to remove it. Listen on Komando.com ā |
TECH LIFE UPGRADES š«„ āTemporary chatā: Itās an option in ChatGPT thatās kinda like Incognito mode for your browser. Find it at the top, where you choose your AI model. The same rules as Incognito mode apply: Itās not private; it just means those chats won't appear in your history or impact what ChatGPT knows about you. āKim, help!ā Larry asked me how to track his camper. He considered an AirTag but doesnāt want a thief to get the āAirTag detected near youā notification. My pick? The Tracki Pro. Itās a GPS tracker thatās made in the USA, waterproof and easy to hide. It connects to phone and cell networks so you can always find it. Sweet! š² When your backyard needs a makeover: Super-smart idea spotted on Reddit: Use Google Maps to see your space from a different perspective. Sketch the rough outline, then take a photo on your phone. Now you have a template. Print copies and start sketching ideas. At least 10 of you will yell, āHeck yeah!ā On Windows, hold down the Windows key + Shift + S to activate the Snip & Sketch tool. Select a specific area of your screen to capture as a screenshot. On a Mac, the comparable keyboard shortcut for taking screenshots is Cmd + Shift + 4. Smile for the camera: The sweet spot to mount your video doorbell is 48 inches from the ground. Most doorbell cams have a wide scope, so you don't need to mount them any higher. If you do, you might get notifications every time the sun crosses your porch. š Itās fundamental, Watson! Project Gutenberg features 75,032 eābooks free for the taking. Donāt have a Kindle or eāreader? Put one on your phone and read instead of scrolling. Hereās āCrime and Punishment,ā if itās always been on your list. |
DEALS OF THE DAY No fuss, no muss šŖ Sometimes, the best solution is the simplest one. Scrubbing the shower is such a pain. Spray on this cleaner once a week, let it sit overnight, then wash away soap scum, grime and oil (20% off, $19.19). After a long day, put on Dr. Schollās warming foot booties. Theyāre like giving your tootsies an Epsom salt bath without filling the tub (3 pairs for 5% off, $12.35). Gals and guys, no one wants stringy, dry hair. This hair mask is affordable and so easy to use (22% off, $7.40). Wiring across the floor can be a tripping hazard. This floor cord-management kit is 24% off and hides everything nicely. Forget bed sheets folded and sets all mixed up. I love these sheet organizers (18% off) and have them stacked in the laundry room and bedroom closets. I just bought more: The Pink Stuff is a miracle cleaning paste you can use on just about anything. Grab some while itās on sale. |
UNTIL NEXT TIME ... Need help? Letās talk. Drop me a line if thereās something tech-related you want to know. The answer may end up here in The Current, or we can chat on my national radio show! One for the road with all this talk about AI today ā¦ The teacher asked her students, āWhat do you wish to do when youāre all grown up?ā Jason: āI want to be a pilot.ā Tommy: āI want to make robots.ā Danielle: āI just want to be a good mother.ā Austin: āI want to help Danielle.ā ā Less than 1 second: Thatās all it takes for hackers to crack a six-character password, even if youāre using a mix of upper- and lowercase letters and numbers. Stop risking it and upgrade to a password manager that creates and remembers long, strong passwords for you. Youāll be glad you did. See ya back here bright and early tomorrow, my friend! Have a wonderful day and stay awesome! š ā Kim | |
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