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    Recommended Reading: The phone-monitoring 'shameware' apps used by churches

    The ungodly surveillance of anti-porn ‘shameware’ apps

    Dhruv Mehrotra, Wired

    Some churches ask congregants to install activity-tracking apps on their phones in the name of accountability. Many churchgoers aren't aware some software monitors a lot more than internet history. Some even take screenshots every minute before sending them to an "accountability partner." When asked about the apps, Google told Wired two of the most popular ones violate its policies. 

    Trump’s ‘big lie’ fueled a new generation of social media influencers

    Elizabeth Dwoskin and Jeremy B. Merrill, The Washington Post

    Following the 2020 election, a wave of new influencers burst on the scene, amassing big follower counts by echoing former President Donald Trump's claims of election fraud. 

    The dark side of frictionless technology

    Charlie Warzel, The Atlantic

    "There is a fundamental tension in the tech industry between the desire to build at all costs, because building is a universal virtue, and the less flashy value system of maintaining structures that already exist so that they may flourish," Warzel writes in his Galaxy Brain newsletter. 



    from Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics https://ift.tt/w42v9Ao
    Billy Steele

    The ungodly surveillance of anti-porn ‘shameware’ apps

    Dhruv Mehrotra, Wired

    Some churches ask congregants to install activity-tracking apps on their phones in the name of accountability. Many churchgoers aren't aware some software monitors a lot more than internet history. Some even take screenshots every minute before sending them to an "accountability partner." When asked about the apps, Google told Wired two of the most popular ones violate its policies. 

    Trump’s ‘big lie’ fueled a new generation of social media influencers

    Elizabeth Dwoskin and Jeremy B. Merrill, The Washington Post

    Following the 2020 election, a wave of new influencers burst on the scene, amassing big follower counts by echoing former President Donald Trump's claims of election fraud. 

    The dark side of frictionless technology

    Charlie Warzel, The Atlantic

    "There is a fundamental tension in the tech industry between the desire to build at all costs, because building is a universal virtue, and the less flashy value system of maintaining structures that already exist so that they may flourish," Warzel writes in his Galaxy Brain newsletter. 

    https://ift.tt/ifWynAT September 24, 2022 at 04:00PM

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