• Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT owners sue Sotheby’s, celebs, and parent company as prices plummet | TechSpot
    https://www.techspot.com/news/99834-bored-ape-yacht-club-nft-owners-sue-sotheby.html

    Facepalm: Buyer’s remorse can be something we all experience, especially when paying thousands or millions of dollars for a digital image of a simian. But that’s what the Bored Ape Yacht Club NFT craze was all about, and investors are suing parent company Yuga Labs, celebs, and now Sotheby’s auction house as they feel tricked into buying them.

    During the height of the crypto craze when non-fungible tokens were seen as sound investments and people were paying comical amounts of money for them, Sotheby’s sold a set of 101 Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs for $24.4 million. Ars Technica notes that the price was way above the $12 million to $18 million that pre-auction estimates predicted, and worked out at about $241,000 per image.

    Today, Bored Ape NFTs sell for a floor price of $48,672. We’ve seen plenty of stories about people who payed a fortune for an NFTs a couple of years ago, only to now sell them for a fraction of that original amount: Justin Bieber paid $1.2 million for a Bored Ape, but it was valued at $69,000 at the end of last year. It’s not just Bored Apes, either. The person who paid $2.9 million for an NFT of the first-ever tweet, from then-CEO Jack Dorsey, managed to attract a high bid of just $1,871 when trying to sell it in July.

    In December, a class-action lawsuit was filed against parent company Yuga Labs and its executives over claims it secretly paid celebrities to promote the NFTs, thereby artificially increasing the digital assets’ prices. Dozens of celebrities were named in the suit, including Justin Bieber, Snoop Dogg, Serena Williams, Madonna, The Weeknd, Kevin Hart, DJ Khaled, Gwyneth Paltrow, Paris Hilton, Jimmy Fallon, and Steph Curry.

    On August 4, an amended complaint was submitted to the suit that added Sotheby’s as a defendant. The amendment claims Yuga colluded with Sotheby’s “to run a deceptive auction.” Following the $24.4 million sale, a Sotheby’s representative described the winning bidder as a “traditional” collector. According to the lawsuit, the buyer turned out to be crypto exchange FTX. The same FTX that imploded and whose founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, is in jail awaiting trial.

    The lawsuit claims the sale was “rooted in deception” and lent the Bored Ape NFTs “an air of legitimacy” designed to generate hype and investor interest around the brand.

    Yuga Labs and Sotheby’s are accused of violating the California Unfair Competition Law, the California Corporate Securities Law, the US Securities Exchange Act, and the California Corporations Code.

    Sotheby’s told CNN that the “allegations in this suit are baseless, and Sotheby’s is prepared to vigorously defend itself.” Yuga Labs called the allegations “completely without merit or factual basis.”

    #NFT #Cryptocrash

  • Amazon’s Ring now has partnerships with over 2,000 police and fire departments
    https://www.techspot.com/news/88472-amazon-ring-now-has-partnerships-over-2000-police.html

    A hot potato : Amazon Ring’s partnerships with police and fire departments that allow them to request users’ security camera footage has brought plenty of controversies. But the company isn’t slowing down the program—quite the opposite. A new report reveals that 1,189 departments joined last year, bringing the total to 2,014. The Financial Times reports that the number of local police and fire departments added to Ring’s Neighbors Portal program in 2020 was more than double the 703 new (...)

    #Ring #Amazon #CCTV #Neighbor #sonnette #police #criminalité #vidéo-surveillance #voisinage (...)

    ##criminalité ##surveillance

  • Joe Biden llama a los desarrolladores de juegos «pequeños pelos de punta» que hacen títulos que «te enseñan a matar»
    https://www.techspot.com/news/83623-joe-biden-calls-game-developers-little-creeps-who.html
    Una papa caliente: los políticos rara vez tienen algo bueno que decir sobre los videojuegos, y el ex vicepresidente de EE. UU. Joe Biden no está particularmente impresionado por la industria, llamando a los desarrolladores que conoció en la Casa Blanca «escalofriantes» y «arrogantes» que hacen juegos que enseñan a la gente como matar

  • Les données financières d’employés de Facebook volées dans une voiture
    https://www.linformaticien.com/actualites/direct-afp/id/53478/les-donnees-financieres-d-employes-de-facebook-volees-dans-une-voitu

    Facebook a prévenu vendredi ses employés que les données personnelles et financières de 29.000 d’entre eux avaient été volées dans une voiture le mois dernier.

    « Nous n’avons constaté aucun abus et nous pensons qu’il s’agit d’un cambriolage et non pas d’une tentative de voler des informations sur les employés », a expliqué Facebook à l’AFP.

    Aucune donnée d’utilisateurs du réseau n’a été compromise.

    Les disques durs volés contenaient les noms, numéros de comptes en banque et d’autres données personnelles de 29.000 personnes qui étaient employées par Facebook aux Etats-Unis l’année dernière, a confirmé le géant de l’internet, après une dépêche de Bloomberg.

    Le conducteur de la voiture, un membre du service de paie du groupe, avait placé les disques durs dans un sac, laissé dans le véhicule, alors qu’ils n’auraient pas dû quitter le campus Facebook.

    « Par prudence, nous avons informé les employés passés et présents concernés, et nous mettons à leur dispositions les aides nécessaires en cas de vol d’identité », a précisé Facebook, qui coopère aussi avec l’enquête de la police.

  • Google reiterates exit from Project Maven — kind of - TechSpot
    https://www.techspot.com/news/79003-google-reiterates-exit-project-maven-kind.html

    Google’s controversial contract connected to Project Maven will expire in March 2019, and while Google has pledged to not renew it, an unnamed technology company will take up the work started by Google. Furthermore, Google will support the unnamed contractor with “basic” cloud services, rather than Google’s Cloud AI services. Google also appears to try and straddle the line between maintaining their early mantra of “don’t be evil” and pursuing lucrative defense contracts, like Microsoft and Amazon.

    Last year, when news broke that Google had been awarded a military contract to develop AI for Project Maven, it stirred up no shortage of controversy — some of which is still coming to light. This led to many employees questioning the ethical and moral implications of such work, spurring many to resign, and many more to protest. In the end, Google conceded to the demands of its employees and has grappled with something of an identity crisis since.

    Recently, in an email obtained by The Intercept, Google appeared to reiterate its commitment not to renew its contract with the Pentagon. The email was penned by Kent Walker, Google’s senior vice president for global affairs. “Last June, we announced we would not be renewing our image-recognition contract with the US Department of Defense connected with Project Maven,” Walker wrote.

    However, Walker added a caveat of sorts, in that an unnamed contractor will take up the work Google started and use “off-the-shelf Google Cloud Platform (basic compute service, rather than Cloud AI or other Cloud Services) to support some workloads.”

    It’s presently unclear what compensation Google will obtain, or what specific Project Maven workloads will be processed by Google’s Cloud services. The Intercept reached out for comment, but received no further clarification. Walker’s email also mentioned that the company was working closely with the Department of Defense to "make the transition in a way that is consistent with our AI Principles and contractual commitments.”

    Google’s Project Maven contract is set to expire next month, and while Google will not renew it, the company also won’t rule out future military work, as Walker notes in his email.

    We continue to explore work across the public sector, including the military, in a wide range of areas, such as cybersecurity, search and rescue, training and health care, in ways consistent with our AI Principles.

    #Google #USA #armement #intelligence_artificielle #project_maven