Pete Davidson Confirms Relationship With Kim Kardashian In Very On-Brand Way
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe “Saturday Night Live” star also has an interesting piece of Kardashian memorabilia in his bedroom.
The “Saturday Night Live” star also has an interesting piece of Kardashian memorabilia in his bedroom.
<img width="1280" height="720" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/9a36508c91672a493aca50856ab7d10b-1280×720.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Nintendo Switch OLED" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="711082" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/nintendo-direct-early-2022-revealed-how-to-watch-and-which-games-to-wait-for-08711070/9a36508c91672a493aca50856ab7d10b/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/9a36508c91672a493aca50856ab7d10b.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,810" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="9a36508c91672a493aca50856ab7d10b" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="
” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/9a36508c91672a493aca50856ab7d10b-1280×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/9a36508c91672a493aca50856ab7d10b-1280×720.jpg” />Nintendo has just announced that it will hold a Nintendo Direct event this week. This is the most exciting time for any Nintendo Switch gamer, as the company promises around 40 minutes of new game announcements, with the Switch console being the main focus. Nintendo is keeping pretty hush about which titles we can expect to see, but we do … Continue reading
Meta has “absolutely no desire to withdraw from Europe.” The company issued the statement in a blog post it published on Tuesday after some media outlets published reports claiming it had “threatened” to pull Facebook and Instagram from the continent amid uncertainty over whether the US and European Union would agree to replace a scrapped transatlantic privacy agreement.
The “threat” Meta made came in the form of a disclosure the company made in its latest earnings report. Published last week, the document said the company would “likely be unable to offer a number of our most significant products and services, including Facebook and Instagram, in Europe” if the US and European Union failed to ratify a new data transfer agreement and the company couldn’t depend on other existing mechanisms. Meta has issued similar warnings in the past, but it did so without naming Facebook and Instagram specifically.
At the center of Meta’s fears over its future on the European continent are the Safe Harbour Agreement and Privacy Shield, both of which were struck down by the European Court of Justice in recent years over fears of what happens to the data of EU citizens once it’s on servers in the US. As the company points out, it’s not the only business facing uncertainty over whether officials can agree to a substitute. It notes at least 70 other companies have voiced similar concerns.
“We want to see the fundamental rights of EU users protected, and we want the internet to continue to operate as it was intended: without friction, in compliance with applicable laws — but not confined by national borders,” the company said.
For the most part, European lawmakers seemed to welcome the prospect of Meta leaving the EU market. “I can confirm that life is very good without Facebook and that we would live very well without Facebook,” said French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire when asked to comment on the possibility of Meta pulling Facebook and Instagram. “Digital giants must understand that the European continent will resist and affirm its sovereignty.”
The university will pay $243.6 million to 203 women who said they were groped or otherwise abused by Dr. James Heaps over a 35-year career.
<img width="1280" height="720" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/marsflight-1280×720.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Mars Ascent Vehicle concept" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="711114" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/nasa-is-going-to-launch-a-rocket-from-another-planet-for-the-first-time-ever-08711095/marsflight/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/marsflight.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,810" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="marsflight" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="
” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/marsflight-1280×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/marsflight-1280×720.jpg” />NASA’s two Mars rovers, Perseverance and Curiosity, are currently exploring the red planet to learn more about its history and to search for evidence that there could once have been life there. But these are just the first stages in exploring Mars. To really learn about the make-up of the planet, and to confirm if there could be signs of … Continue reading
Just as many of the ugliest online fights begin these days, Brian “Box” Brown, an Eisner-winning illustrator and comic artist, sent a seemingly innocuous tweet. It read, in part, “my former regular freelance employer has let me know they’ll be…Embracing NFTs 🙃 so…we had to part ways.” The then unnamed business, Gumroad, shot back the next day with a now-pinned response denying it had plans to enter the controversial crypto-collecting space, and has since attacked detractors from its corporate account, provided conflicting information and alienated a growing portion of the artist community it serves. How did it get so bad?
Gumroad, for the unfamiliar, is a digital goods sales platform, which hosts anything from art to ebooks to self-help courses. It was built in 2011 by then-19-year-old CEO Sahil Lavinglia, who is perhaps the only consistent figure within the company. Following a period of growth Lavinglia had to lay off staff in 2016 after failing to raise more money. The company survived, but as it is presently structured, Gumroad is something of an anomaly. The number of full-time employees, according to one the CEO’s blog posts is “none. Not even me,” preferring to maintain a contractor workforce. It also espouses a version of radical transparency, choosing to make its product roadmap and board meetings public.
The image of an all-remote workplace free from deadlines or meetings belies a somewhat haphazard business. Some former workers seemingly signed no contracts beyond basic tax forms. Some contract work was compensated through Venmo. At least one of the contracts signed by Brown related to royalties and IP rights for book illustrations listed one Kun Wu Yu as the primary party, and the address as what appears to be a cancer research center in Taiwan. (When asked about this he first glibly replied that “cancer research is an important cause” and later stated he didn’t recall the contract.) To say Lavinglia is not an especially careful founder might be an understatement. According to a former contractor, who we granted anonymity for fear of retaliation, “it’s not the ideal work culture it appears to be.”
Brown by all indications was among the permalancers filling out the ranks of Gumroad, and a busy one at that. “There was never a time in the last two years where it even slowed down” he told Engadget from the “20 plus hours per week” he billed, which he estimates became a “large portion of my daily work” and contributed around $2000 to his monthly income. Then in January, he alleges, Lavingia ceased communication. In 15 years of freelancing, he said “I never experienced a situation where a regular gig for that long suddenly just disappeared without even an email being like, ‘we’re gonna let you go,’ you know what I mean?” He believes he was no longer assigned work because of his refusal to get involved with the company’s seeming NFT ambitions.
Once the differences in opinion between Lavinglia and Brown became open hostilities, that penchant for transparency turned into a cudgel. Both parties began posting screenshots from the company Slack (something which Brown claims to have since been removed from) which reflect uncharitably — though Gumroad has since deleted many of these tweets.
Not true. Just that it’s something we are exploring (as all tech companies should with new technologies). This is the entirety of the conversation. pic.twitter.com/oXnhFhGyHo
— Sahil Lavingia (@shl) February 5, 2022
In one, after Gumroad had ghosted him, Brown asks if there’s any available illustration work, to which Lavinglia states “the one idea I have is an NFT project, unfortunately 😔” — a possible commission to help make 7,777 generative art characters. “It sounds like you need someone who is into [NFTs] from here on out,” Brown says. “Yep, probably,” Lavinglia responds.
Lacking here is the context that the subject of NFTs had, according to Brown, come up repeatedly for the past six months. Each time Brown refused, though some more tactfully than others. (In another tweeted screenshot dating to September, Lavinglia pitches NFTs as an options, and Brown demurs by claimed involvement in such a scheme would cause his readership to “cancel” him.)
The aforementioned anonymous former contractor told Engadget that “my understanding is that Gumroad was going to get into NFTs at some point in 2022/2023.” Gumroad has been in the midst of a site redesign, for which it appears to have retained the services of high-powered brand manager and former Google design director Karin Soukup; in an email introducing Soukup to Brown, Lavinglia sent an email last October with the subject “Illustrations for Gumroad rebrand (+ NFTs…?).” (When asked via Twitter DM, Lavinglia wrote “Yeah, don’t recall. But the parens and ? seem pretty clear 😂.”
In his personal capacity, Lavinglia has been a minor booster for NFTs and crypto generally. He minted an NFT of his Twitter avatar and sold it on OpenSea, seemingly to Unacademy founder Guarav Munjal for the equivalent of around $3,000 USD — and pledging to split the proceeds 50/50 between himself and the artist (his own wife.) “NFT ownership is much more accessible than equity ownership,” he tweeted last September, a statement only made stranger by the knowledge that Gumroad is itself financed in part by equity crowdfunding.
It’s unclear how any of these screenshots lend credence to Lavinglia’s position that the company is not pursuing NFTs; conversely it seems evident that had Brown agreed to the project Gumroad most likely would be entering the crypto space. On his personal account he attempted to make a distinction between “doing an NFT collection” and “pivoting to NFTs” — later stating “we may do an NFT collection in the future, but no plans.”
While an abundance of evidence suggests Gumroad is not being entirely transparent about the degree to which it’s investing in some sort of NFT play, it’s also not entirely clear digital tulip mania is to blame for Brown’s loss of a steady gig. According to the same anonymous former contractor, there have been several similar cases in recent months. “Most of the marketing team got let go recently and it came as a surprise to all of us,” they wrote. Others confirmed they were no longer working for Gumroad but declined to go into detail as to the nature of their departures. It’s unclear why the company many be thinning its ranks yet again, and Lavinglia declined to comment on the matter. Gumroad’s jobs page states that the company is in a hiring freeze until April.
Employees aren’t the only ones leaving Gumroad — or at least trying to. Some of those who abhor NFTs, as well as bystanders who felt the company’s public spat with Brown was inappropriate, have pledged to leave the platform. However, a number of them — including Brown — found themselves unable to delete their accounts. “We found the bug around deletion, and are working to fix it now. The issue is that these users all have made money with Gumroad but haven’t been paid out yet (due to not connecting a bank account for example),” Lavinglia told Engadget, “working to allow them to delete if they wish to anyway.” The bug seems to be impacting at least one creator with no outstanding monetary balance on the platform.
Lavinglia has been about as tactful with irate users of his site as he has with his former illustrator — at one point, and in apparent contravention of California privacy laws, he cross-referenced an account’s email address against the site’s user information. “Never used Gumroad, never going to,” Jacob van Loon tweeted. Gumroad replied “According to your bio’s email address, you already have.” The response was hastily deleted. Van Loon maintains that no such account was ever created.
Backlash against crypto has been a recent source of strife for a number of companies. Creators of various stripes were incensed to learn Kickstarter was a drifting into blockchain technologies; comic artist Spike Trotman to recently launched her own crowdfunding initiative in order to avoid involvement in the crypto space. Chat app Discord walked back plans to NFT and crypto integration plans last November following user backlash while Electronic Arts softened its own bullish outlook on the technology for similar reasons. A growing number of artists have voiced concerns about NFTs, in general, as a vector for theft, while the entire market for these digital goods seems, at best, wildly inflated and riddled with bad actors. These incidents have also been an opportunity for some firms to win over to skeptical creators, such as unabashed indie game marketplace Itch.io:
A few have asked about our stance on NFTs:
NFTs are a scam. If you think they are legitimately useful for anything other than the exploitation of creators, financial scams, and the destruction of the planet the we ask that please reevaluate your life choices.
Peace ✌️
— itch.io (@itchio) February 6, 2022
But it’s not just customers who companies stand to lose by stepping into this space. While Brown maintains that working for Gumroad, until recently, was an excellent gig that paid well and afforded him plenty of freedom, when asked if he’d consider working for the company again in a non-NFT context he responded with an emphatic “hell no.” He considers the whole affair a breach of trust. “I’m married, I have two children, I have a mortgage, I have all kinds of bills […] and so I need to plan for that. I can’t just suddenly lose my regular gig and they don’t tell me. They lost all my trust there,” he said “And then when they lied online from their account on Twitter, you know, I would never work for them again, at this point. I just have no trust at all, with them. It’s irrelevant whether they actually make NFTs or not, because they already made an action on NFTs by making me leave the company because I didn’t want to work on that.”
Have you worked in some capacity for Gumroad? I’d like to hear from you. Download Signal messenger for iOS or Android and text me confidentially at 646 983 9846.
“Climate change is a clear and present threat to both national security and Americans,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Barbara Lee wrote alongside more than a dozen colleagues.
<img width="1280" height="720" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/IRS-facial-recognition-1280×720.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="IRS logo under magnifying glass" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="711163" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/irs-does-an-about-face-on-facial-recognition-plans-08711162/irs-facial-recognition/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/IRS-facial-recognition.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,810" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="IRS-facial-recognition" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="
Postmodern Studio/Shutterstock
” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/IRS-facial-recognition-1280×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/IRS-facial-recognition-1280×720.jpg” />The IRS is abandoning plans to require facial recognition to authenticate online access following criticism from politicians, privacy advocates, and tech experts, forcing the agency to look at other options to beef up security. The agency ignited a firestorm when it announced it was partnering with ID.me to use its facial recognition tech; the plan was to require it for … Continue reading
Apple’s iPhone supports contactless payments where you can tap an iPhone against a supported payment terminal to make payments using Apple Pay. However, receiving payment on an iPhone is a different story and typically retailers would need an extra device like those made by Square.
However, that will soon change because Apple has since announced a new iPhone feature called Tap to Pay on iPhone. This basically turns an iPhone into a payment terminal of its own where retailers can now accept payments using their iPhones where customers can tap on it using credit/debit cards, or other devices like an iPhone or Apple Watch that has Apple Pay setup.
This feature was initially reported towards the end of January where it was revealed that the feature could come in an upcoming update, and now it looks like Apple has made it official. The launch of this feature shouldn’t be too surprising because back in 2020, Apple actually acquired a company called Mobeewave that was working on the tech, so it looks like the acquisition has finally borne fruit.
That being said, Apple is going about this in an interesting way because Tap to Pay on iPhone won’t be a native iPhone feature. Instead, it’s more like an underlying framework that developers can use to develop apps to support it. This means that retailers will need to find a payment platform that supports the feature if they want to use it. Stripe is expected to be the first to support the feature this coming spring.
Apple Announces New iPhone Feature That Will Accept Contactless Payments
, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.
Do you like having your phone upright while you charge it? If you do, then you might be interested to learn that Mophie has launched a new stand for the iPhone that features MagSafe that is also compact and could actually make a great traveling companion save for one catch.
The stand itself can be folded down and measures 0.8-inches thick, so it’s actually rather compact and can be easily slipped into a backpack. It comes with metal hinges that allows users to adjust the viewing angle, and it also supports both portrait and landscape orientation so you can use the stand to watch videos or make video calls.
However, and here’s where we think it’s a bit of a wasted opportunity, is that despite the stand supporting MagSafe, it doesn’t actually charge your iPhone. Instead, the inclusion of the MagSafe magnets is simply meant to hold your iPhone in place. This means that if you need to charge your iPhone at the same time, you will need to do so using a cable.
Like we said, it’s a bit of a wasted opportunity, but if you’re more interested in having a stand rather than a charger, this will work just fine. It is priced at around $40 which is admittedly kind of pricey. Alternatively, if you are looking for a travel charger, Mophie did unveil a 3-in-1 MagSafe charger back in January that could also be worth taking a look at.
Mophie Launches New MagSafe iPhone Travel Stand
, original content from Ubergizmo. Read our Copyrights and terms of use.