Google’s Jigsaw open sources its anti-harassment tool to help protect journalists

Anyone can be harassed online, but it’s an inevitability for activists and journalists covering contentious topics and challenging their country’s authorities — especially if they’re women. Google’s Jigsaw unit has released the open source code for a web app called Harassment Manager that can help them review, sort and export the toxic comments they get on social media. Developers can build on the code to create their own version of the tool, but Jigsaw does have implementation partners, including Thomson Reuters Foundation that’s rolling out a functional web app for its journalists in June.

In its current form, Harassment Manager works on Twitter, which teamed up with Jigsaw for the project. It uses the unit’s Perspective API to detect comments that are most likely to be harmful and allows users to easily document and hide those responses, as well as to mute or block the accounts harassing them. Jigsaw has been training Perspective to detect online harassment since at least 2017 by feeding it comments identified as toxic by human reviewers. 

As The Verge reports, Perspective gives Harassment Manager the power to check the messages a user gets and to sort them into high, possible and unknown levels of harmfulness. The user can then process them in batches instead of dealing with them one by one, and they can blur toxic messages if they don’t want to read them.

According to Jigsaw’s research, 70 percent of female journalists receive threats online, and more than 40 percent of them stopped reporting their story as a result. The unit is hoping that the code can give developers what they need to be able to create a tool to protect people who “deal with disproportionately high toxicity online,” especially “female journalists, activists, politicians and other public figures.” Jigsaw says open sourcing the tool is just a step towards helping people who constantly deal with online harassment. It will continue working with NGOs in the journalism and human rights space to figure out how Harassment Manager’s technology can help keep their communities safe.

Google 為 Pixel 手機改進字幕、翻譯與 Duo

Pixel 6 原本應該在 12 月推出的定期更新,因為發生通話斷線問題延遲到了 1 月中才上線,所以感覺起來好像才剛更新沒多久,就又有新更新了。不過,這次的更新將會由 Pixel 3a 到 Pixel 5 的舊機種率先獲得,Pixel 6 和 6 Pro 還要等到本月稍晚。…

下午 4 時完結,HyperX 電競裝備最低 62 折入手

HyperX 這個品牌對有留意電競周邊產品的朋友應該都不陌生,它跟 Razer、SteelSeries 等品牌相似,推出不少高階電競耳機、鍵盤等。HyperX 現在於 Amazon 上正推出最高達 38% 的限時折扣,更有適合進行實況主使用的 HyperX QuadCast S 麥克風,可 75 折的優惠入手。…

Instagram pulls Boomerang and Hyperlapse from app stores

Instagram isn’t just waving goodbye to its IGTV app. As TechCrunchreports, social media consultant Matt Navarra and various Twitter users (including KenSchillinger and WFBrother) have all noticed that Instagram’s dedicated Boomerang and Hyperlapse apps have disappeared from the Apple and Google app stores. Boomerang was still available for Android on Google Play through a direct link as of this writing, but searches no longer produce results.

In a statement to Engadget, parent brand Meta said Instagram pulled the software to “better focus [its] efforts on the main app.” Apptopia data suggests Instagram pulled Boomerang and Hyperlapse from app stores after March 1st. Boomerang (the only one of the two available on both Android and iOS) was still relatively popular, according to Apptopia, with an average of 26,000 downloads per day before it left. Layout is still available if you want to create collages.

The removal isn’t exactly surprising. The launches of Hyperlapse in 2014 and Boomerang in 2015 offered stabilized timelapse and looping videos at a time when Instagram tried to keep its app relatively lean, particularly given the lesser performance of some phones at the time. In 2022, however, Instagram is content to include a flurry of features as it fends off rivals, ranging from Snapchat-like Stories through to TikTok-style Reels. Boomerang and Hyperlapse are now just camera options. Toss in faster smartphones and there’s little need for standalone apps revolving around single features.

The departures also make sense in the context of IGTV’s exit. At the time, Instagram said it wanted to improve the video experience for both creators and viewers. This latest move is just an extension of the earlier strategy — it wants to save you from juggling apps just to produce a clip.

Android 12L is coming to tablets and foldables ‘later this year’

When it announced the Android 12L beta in October, Google promised the software for larger screens would be ready early this year. Today, the company is officially introducing Android 12L, which it’s describing as “an update to Android 12 with features that will make tablets and foldables simpler and easier to use.” In a blog post sharing the news, Android’s vice president of engineering said 12L is coming later this year, “with planned updates from Samsung, Lenovo and Microsoft.” But the company did not get more specific about timing than that.

That could mean devices like the Galaxy Z Fold, Z Flip and Surface Duo would be getting the new interface, which is supposed to bring features like home and lock screens optimized for larger displays. There will also be a two-column notification shade, a new taskbar for easier multitasking and other tweaks that make better use of the greater space on tablets and foldables. 

As senior writer Sam Rutherford pointed out when he tested the Android 12L beta, though some of these additions are compelling, some, like the taskbar, have limitations. It can only contain five apps at once, for example, despite having plenty of room on either side for more icons. Based on a screenshot Google shared with today’s news, though, there are six icons on the taskbar, so that might be something the company has changed before 12L’s public release. 

A screenshot of the Settings in Android 12L in landscape mode, showing the
Google

Android has long faced criticism for being an unintuitive system for tablets, leading to a dearth in real competition for Apple’s iPads. Though we can’t say for certain yet whether 12L will make Android tablets substantively better, at least Google is trying to make it better so non-Apple users might have options to consider in future.

Google’s latest Pixel update improves captions, translation and Duo

While the Pixel 6 had a rocky finish to 2021 after its December software patch was pushed back to January, Google is looking to get back on track with the release of its 10th feature update for the company’s line of phones.

Rolling out today on the Pixel 3a to the Pixel 5 followed by another wave of updates for the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro later this month, Google’s newest feature drop includes new stickers for messaging in Gboard, Live Sharing in Google Duo, expanded support for Live Caption and Live Translation and more. 

For people who can't or dont want to speak on calls, you'll now be able to use Live Caption to convert text responses to speech.
Google

For mobile photography enthusiasts, Google is adding support for Night Sight directly in Snapchat. That means you’ll no longer need to switch between camera apps when trying to capture pics in low-light environments. 

Meanwhile, Pixel phones are also getting the ability to share their screen with others during video calls in Google Duo similar to Apple’s SharePlay in iOS 15. Previously, Live Sharing was an exclusive feature first introduced on Samsung’s Galaxy S22 phones, but now Google is opening up that functionality to Pixel devices as well.

A new feature in Gboard on Pixel phones will allow you to automatically convert text into colorful stickers.
Google

For messaging, Gboard has gotten an update allowing it to convert text (English only for now) into custom stickers on the fly, so your chats will look a bit more lively. Alternatively, for those who cannot or prefer not to speak during phone calls, the Pixel’s Live Caption feature will let you type a response that will be converted from text to speech for the recipient. 

On the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro, Live Translate is also getting an upgrade allowing you to activate Interpreter mode in three new languages: French, Spanish, and Italian. Furthermore, Google’s latest flagship phone will be able to automatically detect Spanish in videos and other media, allowing you to translate audio into English, French, Italian, German and Japanese (beta).  

Support for Live Translate in Spanish is coming to Pixel phones in Google's 10th feature drop.
Google

Other changes to language support on the Pixel 6 include the ability to transcribe Italian and Spanish in the Recorder app, along with new support for Assistant Quick Phrases in Spanish, French and Italian. 

The Pixel’s At a Glance feature is also getting an update thanks to new widgets that will display the battery levels of connected Bluetooth devices like wireless earbuds. Google says the feature will also surface helpful info such as alarm reminders, safety check countdowns, and even earthquake alerts more frequently on the phone’s home and lock screens when appropriate.

Finally, Google is adding a new line of curated wallpapers celebrating Internation Women’s Day from artist Manjit Thapp, while older Pixel phones (from the 3a and up) are also getting support for Direct My Call and Wait Time.

Google says the latest Chrome on Mac outperforms Safari

Google is determined to claim the browser performance crown, and not just on its own platform. The company claims Chrome 99 is significantly faster on macOS and Android, with some particularly large gains on Macs. Thanks to a speed-focused “build optimization technique” and refined graphics processing, Chrome is reportedly 7 percent faster overall than Safari, with 15 percent faster graphics — it even outperforms Safari in Apple’s own Speedometer benchmark on an M1 Max-equipped MacBook Pro, according to Google.

The internet pioneer added that Chrome is nearly 43 percent faster than it was when the first M1 Macs arrived in late 2020. One of the largest improvements came in late 2021, when Google introduced a new JavaScript compiler that offered particularly strong benefits for Apple Silicon.

Android users should see a meaningful upgrade, too. Chrome on Google’s mobile OS is 15 percent faster (in aggregated real-world data) thanks to optimized navigation that includes prioritizing “critical” interface moments. Performance isn’t directly comparable between this and Safari on iOS, of course, but it could still make a noticeable difference if you thrive on the mobile web.

The claimed speed-ups won’t always translate to your own experience. We also wouldn’t be surprised if Apple has a response before too long. There’s a historical back-and-forth as Apple and Google tweak their browser code to beat each other and win users. In that sense, the Chrome speed boost might be useful simply to spur competition.