LATEST NEWS ON SOCIAL TECH
How Facebook
May Be Reading
Your Private
Phone Messages
Facebook may be reading your messages
to better understand how you use their
platform to interact with other users and
loved ones
Facebook has been around for years now
and due to some security reasons is started
reading its user data and storing them for
them to analysis
This came about last year when something
or someone got into Facebook and they
claim no data was taken from them and
now you see how Facebook may be reading
your messages
I found out when updated my Facebook
messenger and it asked me for permission
to be able to read my messages so I hit
accept
A few days later when someone sends me
message onto my phone and my Facebook
messager would open up that message and
reads it out for me
Facebook just launched this feature to the
messenger app for Android users but I do
not know if it worked on iPhone
Mark is now taking security very serious
Facebook Message Data
Now Facebook now scans every message
you receive not just that but also your
phone messages via if you use the
Facebook messenger app
Think twice before you download the
Facebook messenger App onto your phone
Always decline the permission to be able
to read your phone messages
1. Facebook Now Scan For
Links
Whenever you get a link from any Facebook
user, Just before you receive the link it
would be scanned by Facebook bot just to
see if the is safe to visit
But if the link is safe it would be in blue
color and you can click on the link you
received and then visit the URL
If the link is a spam link then it would be
flagged red by Facebook and they would
warn you about visiting such webpage
2. Images You Recieve Will
Be Scanned By Facebook
Bots
Some random Facebook user send me an
image that was bad and Facebook flagged
that picture
Telling me the image is not safe to visit
and that I might lose my data after I visit
such sites and even the text messages that
you get on your phone is being read by
Facebook
Now you already know how Facebook may
be reading your messages
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Galaxy
Note 10: Samsung hopes to strike the right Note
Remember how outlandish the first Samsung
Galaxy Note looked when it was unveiled in 2011?
It was huge - a smartphone with a 5.3in (13cm)
screen and a stylus.
I remember standing on a Barcelona street with an
early version, embarrassed to put it to my ear and
make a call because I'd look like something out of
a Dom Joly sketch.
But it quickly won a sizeable fan base including the
kind of people who had owned Psion Organisers or
the Nokia Communicator.
They wanted a device that could do almost
everything a laptop could do.
Over the years, many smartphones have acquired
those kind of capabilities and just about all of them
have grown much bigger.
For Samsung, that presents a challenge - how can it
make each new model stand out from the crowd?
At its swish new exhibition space in London's Kings
Cross this week, Samsung invited technology
journalists to come and try out the latest Galaxy
Note.
Key difference
Set out on pine tables, the Note 10 and the Note
10+ looked... well, like any other smartphones -
shiny slabs of glass.
They were of course huge, quite a bit bigger than
the original humungous Note. The new Note 10 has
a 6.3in screen and the 6.8in Note 10+ is virtually
the size of a tablet.
But then again, Samsung's latest flagship Galaxy
S10+ has a 6.4in screen and the 5G version has a
6.7in screen.
The South Korean company's two most important
phone ranges - once easily distinguishable - now
overlap.
But Mark Holloway, Samsung Europe's senior
product manager, says there is one key difference.
Terrible handwriting
"The S-Pen is the key reason most European users
choose the Note," he says.
Over the years, the stylus has become ever more
sophisticated. In the Note 10, you can use it to
scribble a message and have your terrible
handwriting converted to text. It also works as a
remote control for the camera.
Once, the idea of using something the size of a
Note to take photos or shoot video was almost as
laughable as doing such a thing with an iPad.
But now it has become commonplace and, as with
any new phone, Samsung has a lot to say about its
new camera features.
Extreme sports
You can use augmented reality emojis to give
yourself a dinosaur's head. And there's a feature
called Live Focus Video that lets you focus on a
subject and blur the background in real time.
It also has a "zoom microphone" that gives
enhanced audio from whatever is in the centre of
frame, even from across a room.
And then there's Super Steady video stabilisation,
which Mr Holloway suggested might be used for
extreme sports. Although, to me, the idea of a
skydiver or downhill skier strapping on a Note 10
seems optimistic to say the least.
But it seems Samsung has concluded the Note now
has to be all things to all people - the business
users who will take advantage of the ability to
transfer content seamlessly between the phone and
their laptop, the Instagrammers using all the
camera's bells and whistles to make their Stories
more creative, even gamers wanting to play Call of
Duty on the move without draining the battery.
Plunging profits
And make no mistake, Samsung is in need of a hit.
The Galaxy S10 won great reviews but less than
stellar sales.
Last week, the South Korean giant reported plunging
profits. Much of the blame was put on its core
chip business but the lacklustre performance of the
mobile phone division did not help.
The global smartphone market has stuttered, with
the research company Gartner predicting a 2.5%
decline in worldwide sales this year compared with
2019. And despite Huawei's problems, Chinese
rivals offering very capable phones at lower prices
threaten to eat into Samsung's market share.
The radical new folding phone was meant to signal
the next phase of innovation but the new dawn has
been delayed by production problems. The
Samsung Fold is now due to go on sale in
September.
Even then, expensive folding phones are likely to
appeal to a small niche of early adopters at first.
Samsung will have to hope the rather larger crowd
that has been drawn to the Galaxy Note over the
years stays loyal to this latest version.
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