Tech chiefs tell Trump to call off troops – will Firefox go ‘full AI’?

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Hello, and welcome to TechScape.I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, confounded by the ending of Bugonia and looking forward to seeing Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein.In this week’s newsletter: the head of Firefox talks AI-integrated browsers; the tech billionaires’ support of Trump and their successful request to defer national guard deployment to San Francisco; and the growing prevalence of face-scanning in online dating.Thank you for reading.Do you need an assistant for your online activities?Multiple major players in artificial intelligence are moving on from chatbots like ChatGPT and are now focusing their efforts on new browsers with deep AI integrations.

Those could take the form of an agent that shops for you or an omnipresent chatbot that follows you around and summarizes what you’re seeing, looks up related stuff, or answers related questions.Last week alone, OpenAI released the ChatGPT Atlas browser, and Microsoft showed off Edge’s new Copilot Mode, both of which heavily feature chatbots.At the start of October, Perplexity made its Comet browser free.In mid-September, Google rolled out Chrome With Gemini, integrating its AI assistant with the most popular browser in the world.In the wake of these releases, I phoned the general manager of Firefox, Anthony Enzor-DeMeo, for his thoughts on whether AI-first browsers will catch on, if his own browser will go full AI, and whether users maintain any expectation of privacy in this new era of personalized, agentic browsing.

Read my Q&A with the head of Firefox.‘I’m suddenly so angry!’ My strange, unnerving week with an AI ‘friend’US student handcuffed after AI system apparently mistook bag of chips for gunAI can help authors beat writer’s block, says Bloomsbury chiefLabor rules out giving tech giants free rein to mine copyright content to train AILast week, Donald Trump said he would not deploy the US national guard to San Francisco after proclaiming he would for weeks.What exempts SF from federal occupation but not Washington DC, Chicago or Los Angeles? The presence of tech billionaire donors, going by Trump’s Truth Social Post.“Great people like Jensen Huang, Marc Benioff, and others have called saying that the future of San Francisco is great.They want to give it a ‘shot.

’ Therefore, we will not surge San Francisco on Saturday,” Trump wrote on Thursday, referring to the threatened “surge” of national guard troops.Read more: Trump says tech chiefs convinced him to call off troop ‘surge’ to San FranciscoThe Illinois governor, JB Pritzker, who has protested against the deployment of the national guard to Chicago for weeks, is also a billionaire.He is also an avowed Democrat and no friend of Trump.One can surmise why his phone calls to the White House didn’t have the same result as Nvidia’s Jensen Huang’s did.Huang has traveled with the president to the United Arab Emirates to announce a gargantuan AI deal, agreed to pay the US government 15% of his company’s revenue from chip sales in China, and donated to Trump’s inauguration.

Marc Benioff has been at the center of the controversy from the start.The co-founder and CEO of Salesforce said in a controversial interview with the New York Times that Trump should make good on his threat and send in the troops.That was at the start of Salesforce’s major yearly conference, Dreamforce, which takes over downtown San Francisco like a homecoming reunion takes over a college town in the US.A few days of backlash later, Benioff walked back the remarks and rationalized them by saying he was only worried about conference security.Then he intervened with Trump to prevent the national guard’s deployment.

The image that emerges is a billionaire who wants to have his cake (be close to Trump) and eat it too (seem a savior to San Francisco).The tech billionaires are getting what they paid for when donating to Trump, a direct line and an exemption for their home turf from his capricious use of force.Around the same time Huang and Benioff were gabbing with Trump on the phone, the East Wing of the White House met the business end of a backhoe.Backing that demolition is a coalition of tech companies and billionaires gifting hundreds millions of dollars to Trump for his grand ballroom project.What special treatment will they request after paying for a direct line to the president?Donors for Trump’s $300m White House ballroom include Google, Apple and PalantirTrump pardons founder of Binance, world’s largest crypto exchangeMelania Trump’s meme coin architects accused of pump-and-dump fraud in lawsuitUS and China reach ‘final deal’ on TikTok sale, treasury secretary saysSign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionPut succinctly, it was a bug in a piece of automation software.

My colleague Josh Taylor reports on the cloud computing blackout that took everything from Signal to smart beds offline:In a lengthy outline of the cause of the outage, Amazon revealed a cascading set of events that brought down thousands of sites and applications that host their services with the company.AWS said customers were unable to connect to DynamoDB, an AWS database service that maintains hundreds of thousands of domain name system (DNS) records.It uses automation to monitor the system to ensure that records are updated frequently.The root cause of the issue, Amazon said, was an empty DNS record for the Virginia-based US-East-1 datacentre region.The bug failed to automatically repair and required manual operator intervention to correct.

Read more: Could the internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding the modern world togetheriPhone 17 review: the Apple smartphone to get this yearApple Watch Ultra 3 review: the biggest and best smartwatch for an iPhoneTinder made a face-scan a requirement for new users in the US last week,Match Group, the app’s parent company, had already mandated facial verification when signing up in California,The US requirement made headlines in the largely US-based tech press, but Match Group also rolled out its voluntary face check feature in Australia, Canada and India,In each of those markets, Tinder ranks among the most popular dating apps,Match, which also owns Hinge and a slew of dating websites, plans to roll out the face-scanning feature to its other dating apps soon, paving the way for facial verification to become a near-universal requisite for online dating.

Any pretense of anonymity on Tinder is gone,The change poses substantial questions of privacy but also promises significant safety benefits,If Tinder is hacked, facial scans can’t be changed like passwords,Biometric personal data is immutable,Or will law enforcement enjoin Match to hand over users’ faces en masse? On the other side of the coin, serial rapists have been able to use Tinder as a hunting ground, seemingly unhindered by the app’s safety features.

Victims’ families have blamed Match for failing to verify users,A face scan might have been a shocking requirement for a signup in 2012, when Tinder debuted,Apple’s Face ID didn’t launch until 2017, although Samsung phones featured facial recognition features as far back as 2011,Users’ expectations of privacy and their willingness to trade it for new, more personalized features evolve over time, as Firefox’s Enzor-DeMeo said,Read more: Rape under wraps: how Tinder, Hinge and their corporate owner chose profits over safetyMore than a million people every week show suicidal intent when chatting with ChatGPT, OpenAI estimatesAmazon plans to cut 30,000 corporate jobs in response to pandemic overhiringAmazon strategised about keeping its datacentres’ full water use secret, leaked document showsUltra-HD televisions not noticeably better for typical viewer, scientists say‘People thought I was a communist doing this as a non-profit’: is Wikipedia’s Jimmy Wales the last decent tech baron?Tesla reports steep drop in profits despite US rush to buy electric vehiclesGoogle hails breakthrough as quantum computer surpasses ability of supercomputers
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Pound sinks against euro and dollar as tax rises loom and growth slows

The threat of higher taxes in next month’s budget and concerns about slowing economic growth pushed the pound to its lowest level against the euro in more than two and a half years on Wednesday.Sterling also slumped against the dollar as traders digested news that Rachel Reeves will need to fill a larger hole in the public finances when she puts together her budget plan, after a bigger-than-expected downgrade to the UK’s productivity outlook.The pound fell to $1.32 against the dollar, hitting the lowest level since early August. The UK currency fared even worse against the euro, slumping to almost €1

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Fed cuts interest rates for second time this year amid economic uncertainty

The US Federal Reserve cut interest rates on Wednesday, the second rate cut this year amid economic turbulence from the federal government shutdown and Donald Trump’s tariffs.The decision to cut the Fed’s benchmark interest rate by a quarter point to a range of 3.75% to 4% comes at an extraordinary moment for the central bank. The Fed has been under immense pressure from Donald Trump to cut rates despite persistent inflation and no longer has access to key data thanks to the shutdown.The Fed chair, Jerome Powell, said on Wednesday that “there is no risk-free path” for the Fed to take with the labor market cooling and prices going up

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Nvidia becomes world’s first $5tn company amid stock market and AI boom

Nvidia has become the world’s first $5tn company as the artificial intelligence industry and wider US stock market boom. Just three months ago, the Silicon Valley chipmaker was the first to break through the barrier of $4tn in market value.In comparison, Nvidia’s value is greater than the GDP of India, Japan and the United Kingdom, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). It has far outgrown its competitors in the chip industry, gaining momentum as numerous tech stocks have surged in recent days.Shortly after US stock markets opened on Wednesday, Nvidia’s shares touched $207

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Character.AI bans users under 18 after being sued over child’s suicide

The chatbot company Character.AI will ban users 18 and under from conversing with its virtual companions beginning in late November after months of legal scrutiny.The announced change comes after the company, which enables its users to create characters with which they can have open-ended conversations, faced tough questions over how these AI companions can affect teen and general mental health, including a lawsuit over a child’s suicide and a proposed bill that would ban minors from conversing with AI companions.“We’re making these changes to our under-18 platform in light of the evolving landscape around AI and teens,” the company wrote in its announcement. “We have seen recent news reports raising questions, and have received questions from regulators, about the content teens may encounter when chatting with AI and about how open-ended AI chat in general might affect teens, even when content controls work perfectly

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Body image taboos holding girls back from playing sport, experts warn

Taboos around women’s bodies are holding girls back from pursuing sport into adulthood and preventing the creation of “a generation of fit and healthy women”, a parliamentary committee has heard.With surveys showing 64% of girls give up sport by the end of puberty, experts told the women and equalities committee that a complete sea change in understanding around the impact of sport on female bodies is required, but that such a change is possible and “if we get it right we’d be on a winning streak”.Speaking in front of the committee, Tanni Grey-Thompson framed the scale of the challenge after another year of great sporting success for women at the elite level. “The summer of sport has been amazing, there are always spikes in participation that follow but you have got to have more than just the inspirational moments, you have to have programmes behind it,” she said. “What’s really important is that we have a generation of fit and healthy women, and 80% are not fit enough to be healthy – and that’s because of all the barriers to participation we know about

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‘We’ve got to look at the future’: Edwards to turn to next generation after World Cup exit

The England head coach, Charlotte Edwards, has strongly hinted that she will be looking to a new generation of players to take England into the next World Cup cycle, after her side suffered a shock defeat in their semi-final against South Africa on Wednesday.“We won’t make too many rash decisions, but we’ve got to look at the future now,” Edwards told Sky Sports. “We’ve got some unbelievable talent coming through.”Of the current batters, openers Tammy Beaumont (34) and Amy Jones (32), former captain Heather Knight (34), and current captain Nat Sciver-Brunt (33) are all unlikely to play in another 50-over World Cup. A question mark also hangs over the 27-year-old Sophia Dunkley, whose highest score all tournament was 22