We’re Losing the Web
TechLinked
0:00 Here ye, here ye, the kingdom of TECH
0:03 DOTH BRING NEWS MOST urgent from the digital realm.
0:06 The trebushchets ARE LOADED.
0:07 THE ZUCKERBERG APPROACHES.
0:09 LOOSE THE NEWS.
0:11 23 major news outlets are blocking the internet archives
0:15 incredibly useful way back machine from crawling their sites because,
0:20 you know, we cannot in fact have nice things anymore.
0:23 USA Today just recently used the Wayback Machine to call out ICE for altering
0:27 detention stats and then immediately blocked
0:29 the archival tool from crawling their own site, which is frankly just rude.
0:34 The news outlets say this is necessary to stop AI crawlers
0:37 from treating their sites like an all you can scrape buffet.
0:41 But not all of them are blocking Wayback's crawler.
0:44 The Guardians director of business affairs said
0:46 that the Wayback Machine's API is a real AI risk,
0:49 so they are only going to be blocking that.
0:51 So maybe don't attack them on social media.
0:54 Wayback's director Mark Graham responded,
0:56 calling those AI fears unfounded and restating how much
1:00 effort they put into preventing possible abuses of the crawler.
1:04 Groups like Fight for the Future and Electronic Frontier
1:06 Foundation are rallying journalists to publicly back the archive,
1:10 and over 100 of them have signed a letter thanking the Internet
1:14 Archive and the Way Back Machine for being an essential and critical tool.
1:18 In other words, uh please don't die.
1:20 We kind of need you to fact check our bosses, please.
1:23 Google, Microsoft, and Meta are all tracking
1:26 users even when they opt out of cookies.
1:29 According to an independent privacy audit,
1:31 Web X-Ray, a privacy focused search engine,
1:34 which is founded by a former Google privacy engineer,
1:37 scanned over 7,000 popular California websites,
1:40 finding that 55% did set ad cookies even after users clicked reject.
1:47 Big tech isn't respecting people's privacy.
1:50 No way.
1:52 According to the report, Google, Microsoft,
1:54 and Meta failed to honor the opt outs 86, 50, and 69% of the time, respectively.
2:00 Nice.
2:01 Sorry, the number, not the situation.
2:03 Unsurprisingly, all three companies disputed the findings with Google
2:07 calling it a fundamental misunderstanding of the technology
2:11 with Microsoft complaining that a rejection of all
2:13 cookies would cause some websites to break.
2:15 According to Web X-Ray's founder,
2:17 the three companies have paid billions in privacy related fines already,
2:22 but that they see these payments as part of a cost of doing business.
2:26 You know what they say,
2:27 you can't make an omelette without breaking a a few billion eggs.
2:30 The FCC just granted Netgear a conditional exemption
2:33 from the US ban on importing new models of foreign routers,
2:37 making it the only company currently allowed
2:40 to import and sell foreignade consumer routers.
2:44 Neither the FCC nor Netgear have explained
2:46 why this special privilege has been granted.
2:48 The only possible explanation,
2:50 Netgear is FCC Chair Brendan Carr's illegitimate son.
2:54 Or maybe they just bought a load of Trump phones.
2:57 The whole thing is genuinely baffling,
3:00 especially since the FCC's original justification
3:02 for the ban was the Volt Typhoon hack,
3:05 which primarily targeted Cisco and guess what?
3:08 Netgear routers.
3:10 Even weirder, the FCC's approval process for the exemption
3:13 requires a detailed plan to expand US manufacturing,
3:17 which Netgear hasn't publicly committed to do.
3:21 Critics are also quick to flag that the approval
3:24 process asks zero questions about router security,
3:27 with the focus being entirely on where the routers are made,
3:31 which for the vast majority of consumer routers is not in the US.
3:35 Until other brands secure their own exemptions,
3:38 Netgear is going to be living a very privileged life.
3:40 That illegitimate Sun's theory sounding a little less crazy now, eh?
3:46 You know what's not crazy?
3:47 Our sponsor, Odo.
3:50 You know what the secret to success is, man?
3:53 Flow.
3:54 Everything's got to flow.
3:56 ODO helps you with all that flow, my guy.
3:59 by bringing all aspects of business management together into one platform.
4:04 Much like we are all part of one
4:06 consciousness within the mind OF MOTHER PROVIDES
4:10 a full suite of integrated apps and you only use the ones your business needs.
4:16 If you only need one, it's free like the breeze, baby.
4:21 Take the CRM.
4:22 I can send quotes for chakra alignments in a few clicks.
4:26 Drag and drop my whole pipeline and ODU automatically plans
4:29 the next activity based on my sales script and the general vibe.
4:33 With ODO, I don't chase leads.
4:36 The universe provides the leads.
4:38 The interface is userfriendly and customizable,
4:42 which is important because I don't read manuals.
4:44 They're a construct made by the man to disrupt your flow.
4:48 Use our link for a free 15-day trial.
4:50 No credit card required.
4:52 or book a demo with their expert team
4:54 to see how ODU could flow with your business.
4:57 Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got vibes to cultivate.
5:01 I'm gonna do a Batman thing.
5:05 And low, in our hour of greatest need, cometh our salvation.
5:09 Dominion in stature yet vicious.
5:12 RELEASE THE QUICK BITS.
5:13 WINDOWS Recall is facing fresh security
5:16 issues raised by researcher Alexander Heg.
5:18 Oh, wow.
5:19 I'm going to butcher that name.
5:20 Alexander H, whose work contributed to Microsoft
5:22 delaying the original version of the feature.
5:25 H's tool Total Recall Reloaded,
5:27 demonstrates how malware can ride along with Windows Recall,
5:32 getting a free pass to the PC's entire history,
5:35 which is precisely the scenario Microsoft's architecture should restrict.
5:41 Despite Alexander submitting a full report to Microsoft,
5:44 they denied that it was an issue,
5:45 saying that it falls within the current documented security design.
5:49 I guess that means it's not a bug,
5:51 but a feature if they put it in the manual, right?
5:53 Uh, really makes me recall why Windows gives me the ick.
5:57 See what I did there?
5:58 China has just tested a device that can
6:00 cut undersea cables at a depth of 3,500 m,
6:05 hailing it as a breakthrough in pipeline
6:07 repair and causing other governments to flip out.
6:10 The announcement comes amidst global tension
6:13 around a string of suspected sabotage
6:15 incidents in which undersea cables carrying
6:17 the world's internet communications were severed.
6:20 This prompted NATO to patrol the waters near these cables to protect them.
6:24 So, you better torrent your anime now, boys, if you ever want to find out if
6:27 Princess Monoke finally gets her glass slippers back.
6:32 Snap CEO Evan Spiegel announced plans to lay off 1,000 employees,
6:38 which is 16% of the workforce because AI has
6:41 the capability of being the company's hardest working intern.
6:45 Spiegel says AI productivity gains will let
6:47 smaller teams reduce repetitive work and increase velocity,
6:51 which tracks since Snapchat's product roadmap has historically been 90%
6:56 new filters and 10% wondering if anyone asked for them.
7:00 Nvidia paid out almost 900 million in warranty claims last year.
7:04 That is 10 times more than the previous year thanks
7:07 to the 16pin power connectors continuing to melt themselves into modern art.
7:12 Look what they did to my boy.
7:14 There is actually a silver lining in all of this though.
7:17 At least one Taiwanese RTX490 owner was
7:20 able to prevent a potential houseire last week.
7:23 It was after his cat started screaming when it smelled rayraced fumes.
7:29 I guess the most reliable thermal monitoring tool
7:31 in 2026 might in fact be a cat.
7:35 And Chinese automaker Sarah was just granted a patent for an invehicle toilet.
7:41 The good news is the toilet seat is not
7:43 permanently fixed and can be hidden under the seat.
7:46 Otherwise, your butt would get all, you know, sloshy and no one wants that.
7:51 Hopefully, the creator of the motorized toilet has had his invention patented.
7:54 Otherwise, there's going to be a serious legal battle.
7:57 I for one am on the side of THE MOTORIZED TOILET.
8:00 I WILL NOT STAND for big auto monopolizing the mobile bowel movement.
8:05 That's just ridiculous.
8:06 Ah, the siege is over.
8:08 The kingdom of tech has fallen.
8:10 But take heart, for now we rebuild.
8:13 Two days hence, on the 17th of April,
8:15 we shall gather arms once more and RAIN TECH NEWS UPON THE HEADS OF OUR ENEMIES.
8:21 This metaphor needs more work, but you kind of