A cute cat gets an ice cream brain freeze. How companies plan to make gobs of money by spying on you in your car. Big Tech CEOs get grilled by the US Congress.
| | | | Welcome to the Mozilla News Beat, a glance at the best and worst internet news of the week. We hope you enjoy it! |
| Brain Freeze Cat. Ice cream is awesome. The brain freeze that comes along with it, not so much. One super cute, unsuspecting kitty learned this lesson the hard way. It's LOL-level funny. | via Twitter | | BBC Mews. Heroes come in all shapes and sizes. Like the genius who created BBC Mews, a website that swaps out all the images on the BBC News website with pics of cats and replaces words like "virus" with "bathtime." Absolutely purrrfect! | via Gizmodo | | Quiet Time. Humans are the third biggest source of seismic noise. When we all went into lockdown in March for the global pandemic, scientists say it started the longest period of quiet in recorded human history, letting them hear Earth noises that usually get drowned out. | via MIT Technology Review | | I'm Every Woman. If you were on Instagram this week you probably saw celebrity (and regular) women sharing black-and-white selfies tagged #ChallengeAccepted. The action was designed to draw attention to violence against women in Turkey and around the world. Men, stop hurting women. | via BBC | | Masks On. Good news: wearing a mask to protect against coronavirus also protects from identification by facial recognition tech. Bad news: facial recognition tech is quickly learning how to identify people in masks and this could well make the tech stronger than before. | via Vox | | Your Car is Spying On You. Car companies are set to make huge profits off of some "safety" features they market to you, like in-car cameras and virtual assistants, by using them to monitor your every smile, cry, road-rage scream, and conversation while in your car and then sell that data. | via Vice | | Big Conundrum. A new survey found (again) that consumers are very concerned about their privacy online but aren't willing to take steps to protect themselves, like using two-factor authentication. Maybe asking consumers to shoulder the burden of protecting the data companies collect on them isn't working? | via Forbes | | Policing the Police. Thousands of videos of police brutality were shared on social media during the Black Lives Matter protests in the US. ProPublica is tracking what happened to those officers after evidence of excessive force was posted online. | via ProPublica | | Tech Exec Hot Seat. The biggest news in the tech world this week was the heads of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google getting grilled for five hours by the US Congress on their policies and actions. The BBC breaks down five key moments from the hearing. | via BBC | | Weird American Dream. At the hearing, the Big Tech CEOs painted their companies as the successful result of the American Dream. Some argue this message contradicts the reality of an exploitation of workers, an economy built on surveillance, and the rampant spread of divisiveness online. | via Vice & The Verge | | What Have We Done? Facebook employees are starting to publically question whether or not Facebook is "hurting people at scale," as one former employee put it. BuzzFeed News talked to a number of employees who struggle with the behemoth they helped build. | via BuzzFeed News | | Follow the Money. The hate, misinformation and outrage we see so much online is largely made possible by digital ad technology and the constant tracking of people's behaviors online. It is harming us all. Wired has started a series to better explain this serious issue. | via Wired |
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