Instagram Live creators can now bring in moderators to handle trolls

Instagram is trying to tackle the problem of unsavory comments that pop up during Live streams with its latest feature. Starting today, Live users can assign someone to be a moderator for their broadcasts. Moderators can report comments, switch off comments from a particular user and boot troublesome viewers from the stream.

Creators can add a moderator by tapping the menu icon on the comment bar. They can search for a specific person or choose a user from a list suggested by Instagram.

Instagram is rolling out the feature to help broadcasters focus on engaging in positive discussions instead of spending time addressing unwanted interactions. It’s a welcome move that should help to cut down on toxic comments during Lives.

The app is following in the footsteps of Twitch, which has allowed streamers to have moderators for years. Having reliable, effective mods who can handle trolls and deal with distasteful comments or messages swiftly can foster a safer environment for both creators and their audiences.

Classic Dungeons & Dragons ‘Gold Box’ games are coming to Steam

If you played PC role-playing games in the previous century, there’s a good chance you have fond memories of SSI’s Dungeons & Dragons “Gold Box” titles — and now you’ll have an easy way to play many of them beyond sites like GOG. SNEG is bringing multiple Gold Box Classics collections to Steam on March 29th. Most are themed around their D&D franchises, and they all include a special game launcher, “enhanced” DOSBox emulator support and utilities to help you transfer parties, map dungeons and otherwise manage your RPGs.

There are three Forgotten Realms collections, including one for the Eye of the Beholder series, another for the Pool of Radiance and Savage Frontier titles and a third for Dungeon Hack and Menzoberranzan. DragonLance fans will find a bundle for the Krynn trilogy, while Dark Sun and Ravenloft enthusiasts have their own packs. Al-Qadim: The Genie’s Curse and D&D Stronghold: Kingdom Simulator are available individually.

This might not satisfy you if you’re a completist. The catalog doesn’t include DragonStrike, Spelljammer and other games that don’t fit neatly into the stereotypical Gold Box format. These aren’t remasters, either, so they’ll be just as low-resolution as you remember. Still, this might be appealing if you want a nostalgic computer RPG experience without the hassles of swapping floppy disks.

CNN+ will start streaming on March 29th

CNN has revealed exactly when its dedicated streaming service will debut. CNN+, which costs $6 per month or $60 per year, will arrive on March 29th. Those who sign up in the first four weeks and maintain their subscription will get 50 percent off the monthly plan for life (that works out to $36 per year for the foreseeable future).

The service will deliver live, on-demand and interactive news-driven programming. Subscribers of CNN’s linear service can watch cable broadcasts and on-demand content through the app too.

CNN hired away Chris Wallace from Fox News to host a CNN+ show. Other daily launch programming includes shows anchored by Wolf Blitzer, Kate Bolduan, Sara Sidner and Bianca Nobilo, as well as a weekday edition of Reliable Sources. Viewers can also expect Anderson Cooper Full Circle to be available on CNN+, as well as a book-focused show with Jake Tapper, a show from Christiane Amanpour and much more.

Cameo CEO favorably compares Web3 boom to the colonization of the Americas

Last Thursday to celebrate the closing of a new $400 million round, the venture capital firm M13 held an invite-only schmoozing opportunity in the former offices of Musical.ly, opening with a introductory chat on “the future of crypto, the decentralized web, and creators.” Curiously, one of the guests was Cameo’s Steven Galanis who, according to audio provided to Engadget by an attendee, took the opportunity to share a metaphor he apparently has deployed before: that the rampant speculation around Web3 is akin to the colonization of the Americas by Europeans. To be clear, he seems to think of both as good things.

Cameo, the service that hit unicorn status last May and allows anyone to book a short, custom video message from celebrities and pseudo-celebrities like Fran Drescher, Gilbert Gottfried or the guy who played Hagrid, is not a Web3 business in any sense — not that “Web3” itself is a particularly meaningful or well-defined piece of terminology. 

But Galanis seems to have become something of a booster for these loosely conjoined elements of emergent tech. His Twitter profile picture is of toga- and 3D glasses-wearing Bored Ape NFT, for which he seems to have paid 100 ETH — the equivalent of around $300,000 at the time. He steered Cameo toward minting its own set of NFTs (called “Cameo Pass”) last month with the promise that proceeds would be reinvested into, among other things,”exploration of further Web3 projects focused on fan/talent interactions.” 

Presumably this enthusiasm — a contrast to the oftenchilly reception towards NFTs at other tech companies — helped land Galanis on stage for M13’s shindig, along with Lightning Labs’s Liz Stark. But in the course of his enthusiastic boosterism he shared “the analogy that I like to give people” about Web3, which we’ve edited for clarity (emphasis ours):

“I actually think right now it’s like 1493. Columbus has just gotten back from the New World. And he’s going to the King of Spain and the Queen of Spain, Ferdinand and Isabella, and he’s like ‘there’s a whole world over there that like, there’s literally just gold coming out of rivers.’ And then the King of France hears about it, the Kingdom of England hears about it. And what does everybody decide? We need to start building boats. So right now we’re in this age where everybody’s building boats. Everybody’s trying to go to this New World. […] So everybody’s going over, there’s gonna mutinies on some boats. Somebody’s gonna hit an iceberg. […] But somebody is gonna end up on Manhattan, like in the digital world, and they’re gonna pull a bunch of beads out of their pocket, and they’re going to make the best real estate transaction of all time.”

It boggles the mind that anyone could be aware of the colonization and systematic genocide of native peoples, and conclude that the moral is to not miss out on the opportunity to kill, steal and swindle again for personal gain. Or that if someone were to sincerely believe something quite so awful, they would at least have the good sense not to share that opinion, apparently, on multiple occasions.

Beyond the blunt insensitivity of the remarks, Galanis seems to have little to no grasp of the events he references. “Everybody is building boats!!!? This is a sort of 20th [century] arms race point of view,” William Fowler, a professor emeritus of history at Northeastern, told Engadget via email. “England sent Cabot (1497) West, but that did not result in much. Not until Jamestown, 1607, did England, through a private company, establish a permanent colony in America. 

As for their naval power, England barely made it through the Armada, 1588, and did not have a first class navy until [the] mid 17th [century] … France sent Cartier (1534), but it would be almost one hundred years before they got serious in Canada.” All of this is to say nothing of the fact that Columbus was far from the first European to stumble onto the Americas (that distinction likely goes to the Vikings) or that he “went to his grave (1506) believing he had found a route to the Indies,” according to Fowler.

The tale of Manhattan’s land rights being bought out from under native people by the Dutch for baubles is, at best, highly exaggerated. Unlike Staten Island or other areas of land, the contract between the Dutch and native peoples for Manhattan is either lost or never existed, and according to the Gotham Center’s Richard Howe “the extant evidence for the Dutch purchase of Manhattan is scant, indirect and circumstantial.” 

While a letter claiming a transfer occurred, dated November 7 1626, does survive, it’s both inconclusive and in no way mentions “beads” — rather that the land had been purchased “for the value of 60 guilders” (which is something like $1,000 in today’s dollars.) Whether native tribes shared the same understanding of property, or could be said to have freely entered into these types of contracts is unresolved. Nor is it known if the people who allegedly signed over the deed were even the tribe primarily occupying Manhattan at the time.

Whatever the case, this “investment” was short-lived, and New Amsterdam was “taken easily by the British,” according to Fowler, in 1664, less than 20 years after the rights were supposedly sold for a song. Let’s not even get into how the metaphor fails on a structural level in that Web3 isn’t a valuable resource simply awaiting discovery and exploitation. Its illusion of riches shares more in common with El Dorado than the “New World.”

It might appear unfair to expect Galanis to have studied history, rather than basing offensive flights of fancy on colonialist myths. Then again, history was the man’s area of study at Duke. Engadget made several attempts to contact Cameo to allow Galanis to explain precisely what he might have meant by this analogy, and have yet to hear back. “Trying to apply 21st [century] criteria to ages past should be done with great care,” professor Fowler wrote, “[Galanis] may have something to say, but it is hard to dig through the rhetoric to get to his point, if he has any.”

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Feast your eyes on the new green iPhone 13 and 13 Pro

It’s Apple pre-order day, and not just for the M1-powered iPad Air or the latest iPhone SE. At its “Peek Performance” event this week, Apple unveiled new green versions of the iPhone 13 series, bringing the total number of colors for the non-Pro models to six. The iPhone 13 Pro and Pro Max are now available in five shades, and you can now pre-order this new “Alpine Green” version on Apple’s website.

While the iPhone 13 mini and iPhone 13’s new hues look earthier and closer to a leafy green, the Pro flagships come with a sort of frosted finish that helps them better reject smudges. It also makes the color a little paler and adds a metallic sheen.

There’s nothing else different about these new iPhones. They’re last year’s iPhone 13s, but green. Intrigued? Then take a look at these pictures I took of the new gadgets under different lighting conditions. 

I have included photos of the two new iPhone 13s alongside other green phones like the sage Pixel 5 and the Pixel 5a. The latter’s official color is called “Mostly Black,” but it definitely feels more like “Off Green.” My favorite is still the pastel green iPhone 12, which will reign in my heart as the best verdant gadget. At least, until someone comes up with a Matcha-colored (or flavored) phone. Or lime. Or pandan. You’re welcome for the color inspiration, phone makers.

iPhone 13|13 Proの新色グリーンを実機でチェック iOS 15.4のマスクありFace IDも試した(石野純也)

第3世代iPhone SEの予約受付が開始されましたが、忘れてはいけないのがiPhone 13シリーズの新色。iPhone 13、13 miniには「グリーン」が、iPhone 13 Pro、13 Pro Maxには「アルパイングリーン」が追加されます。…

Samsung’s Galaxy Watch 4 LTE falls to an all-time low price at Woot

Now’s a good moment to get a cellular Galaxy Watch 4. Woot is offering the 44m LTE version in green at an all-time low price of $225. That’s better than we saw in February, and a whopping $105 below the official sticker. It’s substantially less expensive than its non-cellular counterpart, in fact. Just remember that Woot’s return policy isn’t the same as its parent Amazon, and that inventory might run out.

Buy Galaxy Watch 4 (44m LTE) at Woot – $225

The Galaxy Watch 4 rejuvenated Samsung’s smartwatch lineup. The switch from Tizen to Wear OS gave it a more robust app ecosystem, and the improved health tracking (including continuous blood oxygen detection) will help with your fitness regimen. Add the attractive display, a newer processor and a touch-based rotating bezel and you’ll have a watch that should be appealing all day round, whether you’re working out or streaming from Spotify.

There are some limits. We found the battery life to be short, and the body mass scans weren’t consistent at review time. And unlike some Wear OS watches, it’s a no-go if you’re an iPhone user. Provided those aren’t obstacles, though, the Galaxy Watch 4 remains one of the best values in Android-friendly smartwatches — especially at this price.

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.

Engadget Podcast: Apple goes Super Ultra

This week, Cherlynn and Devindra dive into all of the news from Apple’s first 2022 event. What’s so great about the revamped iPhone SE? Is the new iPad Air better than the iPad Mini? And who really needs the Mac Studio anyway? Also, we chat about Android 12L and other Google news, the recently announced Magic Leap 2 and our fond memories of illicit filesharing services.

Listen above, or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you’ve got suggestions or topics you’d like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcasts, the Morning After and Engadget News!

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Topics

  • Apple announces iPhone SE (Gen 3) – 2:52

  • The iPad Air now has an M1 chip – 12:26

  • Apple’s next step in processing power, the M1 Ultra – 20:07

  • Mac Studio announcement – 25:43

  • Apple Studio Display – 29:05

  • Android 12L coming to larger screens later this year – 35:52

  • Google promises Chrome 99 will be faster on Android and Macs – 39:57

  • New Pixel update brings Samsung exclusives to Pixel – 41:18

  • Magic Leap 2 announced – 45:17

  • Limewire is now…an NFT marketplace?? – 50:51

  • Carl Pei’s Nothing to announce 2022 roadmap – 55:20

  • Working On – 57:06

  • Picks – 1:02:29

  • Interview with Upload creator Greg Daniels – 1:11:13

Video livestream

Credits
Hosts: Cherlynn Low and Devindra Hardawar
Producer: Ben Ellman
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien
Livestream producers: Julio Barrientos and Luke Brooks
Graphic artists: Luke Brooks and Brian Oh