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Google Chrome’s uBlock Origin phaseout has begun

If you have uBlock Origin, you might notice Chrome automatically disabling the extension.

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“Automattic is completely out of line, and the potential damage to the open source world extends far beyond WordPress,”

writes David Heinemeier Hansson, the CTO at 37signals and creator of the open-source framework Ruby on Rails.

DHH says it “occasionally irks” him to see companies failing to contribute to Ruby on Rails, but that’s the rules:

None of the major licenses, however, say anything close to “it’s free but only until the project owners deem you too successful and then you’ll have to pay 8% of your revenues to support the project”. That’s a completely bonkers and arbitrary standard based in the rule of spite, not law.


The latest volley in the WordPress beef:

WordPress.org’s contributor login page now requires users to certify that they are “not affiliated with WP Engine in any way, financially or otherwise.” 404 Media spotted the new checkbox.


A screenshot of WordPress.org’s login page with a checkbox stating, “I am not affiliated with WP Engine in any way, financially or otherwise.”
Read more: The messy WordPress drama, explained.
Screenshot: The Verge
iCloud.com finally gets dark mode.

You can also set a background color, see pinned notes, and more. MacRumors has the full list of updates.


A screenshot of new features promoted on iCloud.com.
Screenshot by Jay Peters / The Verge
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The shortcut to AI-generated smartphone-style photos.

As a reminder that AI image generators’ training data tends to include peoples’ regular smartphone photos, try entering an iPhone-like picture file name into the prompt field for Flux1.1 Pro, as this person did.

I got some similar results when I tried prompts like “IMG_4001.JPG” with its predecessor, Flux.1, a model that drives xAI’s Grok-2 image generation.


The much simpler way to keep track of everything

Plus, in this week’s Installer: a great app for social cross-posting, a new Oura Ring, a new anime hit, a new way to use ChatGPT, and much more.

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Lego’s site was hacked to promote fake crypto.

An X post spotted by The Brick Fan flagged to the company yesterday that its online shop was displaying a “LEGO Coin” cryptocurrency banner.

Naturally, there is no such thing; Lego tells Engadget that the situation was quickly resolved and no user data was compromised.


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YouTube has almost reversed all the damage from a channel-deleting glitch.

After a bug “incorrectly flagged” some channels for spam and removed them, YouTube started working on getting the channels back. That’s done, the Team YouTube X account posted — now it’s just working to get the last few videos reinstated.


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Texas is suing TikTok for sharing minors’ personal data.

State Attorney General Ken Paxton alleges that TikTok has violated the Securing Children Online through Parental Empowerment Act by not giving parents control of their kids’ privacy and account settings, writes Reuters. TikTok denied the allegations in a statement to The Texas Tribune.

TikTok A federal judge blocked part of the act requiring large social networks to stop harmful content from reaching minors just prior to the law taking effect on September 1st.


Matt Mullenweg: ‘WordPress.org just belongs to me’

The lines between the WordPress open-source project, the nonprofit backing it, and the commercial arm owned by Automattic are blurring.

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Mozilla on the future of advertising and privacy.

In a blog post, Mozilla president Mark Surman writes about the organization’s plans to fix the “fundamentally broken” online advertising industry:

We have the beginnings of a theory on what fixing it might look like — a mix of different business practices, technology, products, and public policy engagements. And we have started to do work on all of these fronts.

You can read Mozilla’s full plan in the post linked below.


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This is kind of a genius bookmarking strategy.

I had no idea you could do this! Joseph Basquin points out that you can manage bookmarks by treating them like files. The drag-and-drop strategy doesn’t work everywhere, but is solid in Chrome and Safari.

If you’re a Spotlight / Alfred / Raycast user on the Mac or the Start menu search on Windows, this might be the fastest possible way to get to a website.


The messy WordPress drama, explained

WordPress cofounder Matt Mullenweg is going after a rival hosting firm he says is ‘strip-mining the WordPress ecosystem.’

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Meta appears to own Threads dot com now.

DomainInvesting spotted the Whois-listed change yesterday.

Last year, threads.com was just the website for a Slack-like app — you can imagine the traffic it got when Meta launched its Twitter alternative. Shopify bought Threads-the-company in June, though, perhaps clearing the way for Meta to scoop the domain for Threads-the-platform. And just in time for its Connect event, no less!


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Facebook will face a labor court in Kenya after abruptly laying off 185 content moderators.

Meta tried to settle, and it tried to appeal, but former moderators and the Kenyan courts have now rejected both attempts according to The Associated Press. In the US, Meta settled with content moderators for $52 million in 2020, after some were diagnosed with PTSD.

Last year, Kenya also ordered Meta to provide mental health care to moderators.


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Mozilla will shut down its Mastodon server on December 17th.

The company is ending its Mozilla.social Fediverse experiment in content moderation and will remove all content and accounts — but you still have time to move elsewhere:

At any point before Dec 17, 2024, you can migrate your account to another instance on Mastodon by following these instructions.

TechCrunch notes that Mozilla had about 270 active Mastodon users as of Tuesday. A tracker based on the Mastodon API reports about 8 million accounts and 1 million or so active users overall.


The great Evernote reboot

On The Vergecast: what happened to a once mega-popular productivity app, and where it’s headed now.

The fanciest game console you can buy

Plus, in this week’s Installer: Apple’s new AirPods, two new tech podcasts, the Goldeneye music, and more.