Episodes
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Bluesky, Threads, and Spill running the users up in social media, ESPN integrating an AI avatar into its sports coverage, Spotify changing the name of Spotify for Podcasters to Spotify for Creators, and US workers aren't really trying to tell their managers they use AI.
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In this episode of The Tech Jawn we discuss Black Project 2025, Message interactions from Android finally working in iOS, and, a bit later, Cierra Gross, founder, and CEO of Worklution stops by to talk about WrkReciepts, the first ever directâtoâconsumer HR AI SaaS product.
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Episodes manquant?
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In this episode of The Tech Jawn Amazon workers are appalled by AWS CEO Matt Garmin's return to office remarks and urge a policy reversal.
Meta intends to use a proprietary software tool it calls an âadult classifierâ to determine if users who say they are older than 18 might actually be children who are lying about their age.
Who would have thought that dating apps were designed to make money, not matches?
And, Microsoft Is struggling to retain Black, Latin, And Female Employees who seem to be leaving for more inclusive pastures.
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In this Just The Two of Us episode of The Tech Jawn, we discuss the release of Apple Intelligence, Apple and Goldman's Sachs having to pay $89 million for Apple Wallet issues, Google, and Microsoft, and Perplexity promoting scientific racism in AI search results, and Congress thinks digital price tags could be problematic.
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In this episode of The Tech Jawn, we discuss new guidelines on pulse oximeters, easy-to-cancel subscriptions, Passkeys replacing passwords, and using AI to ace job interviews.
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At Teslaâs We Robot event last week in Los Angeles company CEO Elon Musk unveiled the Optimus line of humanoid-looking robots, but, they didnât seem to be all that autonomous.
14 State Attorneys General sued TikTok claiming the social media platform was designed with the express intention of addicting young people to the app.
Matt Mulleweg, one of the creators of WordPress, and WP Engine, a WordPress-managed host, are going through it legally.
And we shine The Tech Jawn Spotlight on Dr. David Harold Blackwell, the first African American inducted into the National Academy of Sciences.
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Brothatech wants to get a new camera to look good on video. He wants something better than a webcam, but, without all the complexity of a DSLR.
Maybe we donât want ChatGPT speaking in ebonics after all because AI seems to make the same racist decisions based on dialect as humans do.
Police seldom disclose the use of facial recognition when used to identify suspects and often lie about its use in public-facing reports.
And when you put cameras in glasses, real-time facial recognition was bound to follow.
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Verizon experienced a nationwide outage on Monday. An outage any day is bad. Right after a hurricane is particularly bad timing.
Who knew that your interest in electric vehicles could depend on what side of the aisle you sit on politically? It seems like maybe auto manufacturer execs should have known.
ChatGPT can speak in ebonics. We do a live test during the show and the feature is surprisingly good.
A Common Sense Media Study shows that Black students are twice as likely to have their work flagged as AI-generated when indeed it is not.
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Some new hotness made its way to the Apple Store last Friday. BrothTech stopped by to pick up a new iPhone 16 Pro Max and the Apple Watch Ultra 2 and today he gives us his first impressions.
The government appears to be taking child online safety more seriously as the House Committee on Energy and Commerce forwards two bills on to the full House of Representatives.
Section 230 protects online platforms from liability for what users post, but, according to a three-judge panel, not from what platforms recommend.
And are you using a digital note-taking app on your smartphone? Chances are, you probably should be.
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iOS 18 has been released and is now available. We cover a few of the new features and ponder if you should go ahead and update now, or, wait until 18.1 comes next month with Apple Intelligence.
The Fearless Fund, which awarded $20,000 grants specifically to Black women-led businesses, shut its Striverâs grant as part of a settlement in its appeals case.
Oprah Winfrey did an ABC special on artificial intelligence, and OpenAIâs Sam Altman seemed to remove some of her skepticism about AI.
And Amazon orders all of its corporate employees back into the office 5 days per week starting in January.
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In this episode of The Tech Jawn, we are joined by Malcolm Coley, Chief Technology Officer at Futures First Gaming, who chops it up with us about all the things announced at Appleâs iPhone 16 âGlowtimeâ event before telling us a bit more about Futures First Gaming, a STEM.org Accredited Ed. Tech, Media, and Esports Entertainment company that convenes esports enthusiasts to engage in competitive and recreational gaming events, fosters a gaming community, and presents opportunities for participants to explore educational and career development pathways in science, technology, art, and relevant esports disciplines.
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Will Melody Hobsonâs $1.45 billion Project Black fund which plans to âminoritizeâ existing businesses help to narrow the wealth gap?
Spotify has invested less than 10% of the $100 million it pledged to its Creator Equity Fund during the Joe Rogan controversy, and it doesnât appear it ever took the pledge seriously from the jump.
Things just keep getting worse for Twitter as the social media giant issued a copyright takedown notice to GitHub after finding out parts of its source code had been posted online for months.
And Congress seems to be unified and serious about banning TikTok in the United States.
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French authorities arrested Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov over the weekend as part of an investigation related to charges of "complicity" in various crimes that happen on the cross-platform messaging service.
Apple lost its lead when it comes to podcast listening market share. The iPhone maker sits in third place with 12% solidly behind YouTube with 31% and Spotify with 21%.
The Justice Department is suing real estate startup RealPage whose software helps landlords price fix rental prices.
And Elon Muskâs $44 billion takeover of Twitter is the worst deal for banks since the financial crisis.
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Pittsburgh may be the latest major city to drop Shotspotter, the gunshot detection system that uses a network of microphones to alert police to gunfire incidents because the technology just doesnât work.
Former Google CEO and board chair Eric Schmidt walks back his comments about Google being behind startups like OpenAI because âwork-life balance was more important than winningâ.
The U.S. DOJ is considering a breakup of Google to address its monopoly on search.
And, everybody should check to see if their data was stolen in the NPD data breach. Sadly, the chances are that it probably was.
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group of users it knew skewed towards those under 18.
X sued the Global Alliance for Responsible Media for abusing its influence and prompting a boycott against advertising on X.
New York Cityâs drone warning system shouted incomprehensible Spanish to residents when delivering weather-related instructions.
And the number of Black podcast listeners is increasing in the United States with 46% of Black listeners listening for the first time within the last year.
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Don Lemon sued Elon Musk and the social media platform X for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of contract after Musk canceled a deal for the Don Lemon Show to appear on the platform.
After dragging its feet with a proprietary system for over a year, California is now preparing to launch support for adding your Driverâs License to Apple Wallet.
No smartphones in school seems to be a growing sentiment globally. The prestigious boarding school, Eton College in Great Britain is replacing 1st-year student's smartphones with Nokia feature phones.
And, the US Court for the District of Washington DC has ruled that Google is a monopoly.
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Immediately following the live recording of The Tech Jawn we host The After Party, a 30 minute-ish show exclusively for the patrons of The Tech Jawn. The show is unscripted, we talk about whatever, and patrons are welcome to join the conversation via the live chat.
We didn't do a live episode of The Tech Jawn this week, so, we are hitting everyone with our last After Party. If you enjoy it, think about becoming a patron where you will get access to The After Party every week.
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The European Union gives Meta until September 1st to come up with better membership options for Facebook and Instagram other than simply paying a fee not to be tracked or consenting to being tracked for free.
Artificial intelligence can detect prostate cancer at substantially higher rates than human doctors and AI-assisted predictions of cancer size were 45 more accurate than without AI.
Cybersecurity company Cloudstrikeâs Falcon Sensor software pushed out an update that caused Windows Blue Screens of Death on servers all over the world.
And the police are using robots to disable Internet of Things booby traps inside suspect's homes.
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CNN is shifting its business again. The Cable news network is laying off 100 employees, disbanding its Race Equity Team, and launching a digital platform similar to the shortlived CNN+ in 2024.
Yes, AI is screwing over Black folks, and, Latin X folks, and, lower middle-income white folks. Here are a few tips to protect yourself from the job-eliminating A.I. boom.
SIM Swap Attacks are on the rise. SMS related two-factor-authentication meant to keep your accounts safe, actually make them a target for social engineering.
And Nothingâs $200 CMF Phone is not bad for an entry-level Android Device.
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Multi-Purpose-Tap could make mobile NFC payments more useful and more complicated. The new concept could allow you to tap your phone, pay for alcohol, and get carded all at the same time.
Morehouse College launches 3D, AI, Teaching Assistants in its Metaversity. They probably donât need to be 3D, a chat interface would suffice, and we hope they donât displace real human TAs.
Middle school students in a Philly suburb cyberbully and defame 20 teachers to little to no consequence⊠At least thus far.
Microsoftâs AI CEO believes content on the internet is freeware unless specifically otherwise stated.
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