Project Bletchley – Blockchain comes to Azure Marketplace

Only a couple weeks after our most recent update, I am pleased to be back to announce more great additions to our blockchain offering on Azure, in addition to new partner solutions.  We continue to expand on our blockchain infrastructural work to improve the services, tools, and best practices needed to design, build out, and manage complex consortium networks to develop new business applications.

This week we are excited to expand support of Bletchley v1 into the Azure Marketplace.  As you may recall, with the first phase of blockchain support on Azure, you can quickly and easily deploy a many-node consortium blockchain network.  With this release, you have all the same great functionality as with the original release in the Azure Quickstart templates, but with a more robust user experience directly integrated into the Azure portal.

Since we try to never release without new functionality, we have also added support for:

Dozen Consortium Members: You can now deploy a blockchain network that has a dozen consortium members.
Premium storage: To support low latency and high throughput applications, you can configure the nodes within the consortium network to leverage premium storage backed virtual machines.
Password or SSH key: To secure the nodes within your network, you can now specify an SSH key instead of a password.

For more information about the solution, you can visit our detailed walkthrough.

In addition to our solutions, we continue to grow our blockchain ecosystem on Azure.  We are excited to welcome many new exciting partner blockchain solutions in the Azure Marketplace, including:

​Chain: As announced last week, you can now deploy Chain&;s distributed ledger technology, Chain Core, on Azure.
Ethereum Studio: You can quickly set up ether.camp&039;s Ethereum stack, a full stack developer sandbox to develop and test Ethereum solutions, on Azure.

Try out all the latest blockchain releases and let us know if you have any question, feedback, or additional requests.  We are excited to continue on this journey with you.
Quelle: Azure

Twitter Doesn't Think This Attempt To Disenfranchise Voters Violates Its Rules

Yesterday, Robert McNees, a physics professor at Loyola University, was curiously scanning through the popular alt-right account @therickyvaughn when he came across a number of tweets apparently designed to spread misinformation about voting toward African American and Spanish-speaking citizens. The tweets told voters they could “avoid the line” and “vote from home” via text (which to be clear, they can&;t). They were photoshopped to look as if they&039;d been created by the Clinton campaign, down to the small-print “Paid for by Hillary for President 2016″ disclaimer at the bottom.

McNees told BuzzFeed News he reported the tweet — a clear attempt to impersonate a campaign and disenfranchise voters — to Twitter. This morning, the company told him that the tweets and the account were not in violation of Twitter&039;s rules.

The photoshopped campaign ads may violate FEC laws. They also appear to be in direct violation of Twitter&039;s policies, which state in part that “Twitter accounts portraying another person in a confusing or deceptive manner may be permanently suspended.”

These kinds of fake voter ads have appeared on Twitter from numerous Trump supporting accounts during the campaign; just last month, the Democratic National Committee condemned a similar fake voter ad tweet, sent out by. Trump advisor Roger Stone.

The Clinton campaign, for its part, appears to be actively combating the disinformation. When BuzzFeed News texted the number in the tweets, we received the following response:

Ellen Cushing

@TheRickyVaughn himself was been suspended from Twitter earlier this month after posting and retweeting anti-semitic and white nationalist content and images. The user has since created a new account — his bio now boasts he&039;s a “known white supremacist” who “regularly uses profanity and racial epithets while propagating conspiracy theories” — and has over 11,000 followers.

Twitter has not yet responded to a request for comment.

Quelle: <a href="Twitter Doesn&039;t Think This Attempt To Disenfranchise Voters Violates Its Rules“>BuzzFeed

Netflix May Soon Make Movies And Shows Downloadable So You Can Watch Offline

And people are beyond psyched.

2016 may not be so SOL after all. Ted Sarandos, the chief content officer for Netflix, just told CNBC the company is working on an offline feature so that TV shows and movies could be played without Wi-Fi.

2016 may not be so SOL after all. Ted Sarandos, the chief content officer for Netflix, just told CNBC the company is working on an offline feature so that TV shows and movies could be played without Wi-Fi.

CNBC

“I think as we get into more and more (of the) undeveloped world and developing countries that we want to find alternatives for people to use Netflix easily,” he said.

Sarandos added that the company is “looking at it now, so we&;ll see when.”

Americans likely wouldn&039;t be the first to get the feature, since it would be mainly aimed at other markets.


View Entire List ›

Quelle: <a href="Netflix May Soon Make Movies And Shows Downloadable So You Can Watch Offline“>BuzzFeed

With App Update, Uber Brings Eats, Yelp And Snapchat To Ride Hail

Uber

Uber already knows when and where its riders traveling. Now, it wants to know where they might be traveling next and what they might want to do when they arrive — be it tomorrow or a month from tomorrow.

A redesigned version of the ride-hail giant&;s mobile app will use data from passenger calendars to predict likely destinations and integrate services like UberEats, Yelp, and Snapchat into an “Uber Feed” intended to keep riders engaged and double down on the company’s convenience pitch.

“We want to know what you want before you want it.”

“We want to know what you want before you want it, so we can deliver a more elegant, more streamlined experience,” Uber Chief Executive Travis Kalanick explained. “Let&039;s say you normally go home from work at 7 p.m, and you open up the app at 7 p.m. We wanted to give you a button to quickly push that just takes you home.”

With that in mind, the new Uber app uses smartphone calendar information to pre-populate likely destinations. Passengers must opt into this service. Those who do will see calendar appointments appear as shortcuts in the Uber app. Opting in grants Uber access to the entirety of a user’s calendar information, though the company told BuzzFeed News that it will pull only event locations, times and titles. That said, users who opt in agree to share their information under the same terms and conditions outlined in Uber&039;s privacy policy, which allows the company to collect and store information, and to share it with third parties.

In the newly overhauled Uber app, contacts can be destinations. That means if you&039;re going to meet a friend who also uses Uber, you can simply enter that person&039;s name in the app instead of their address. Uber will then send a push notification to your friend requesting permission to use their current location as the destination point for your trip.

Kalanick said these new features are intended to streamline the pick-up process, typically the most fraught part of the Uber experience. The company expects to roll out calendar integration and its contacts-as-destinations feature some time in December. The first piece of Uber&039;s big app redesign – a reimagined home screen with a swipeable menu of ride options and associated fares – begins to roll out to users worldwide this week.

“Meet a taco at your doorstep is basically the feature.”

Beyond displaying expected arrival time and other ride information, the Uber Feed will also enable passengers to control music via Pandora and to order food from Uber eats and have it delivered to their destinations. “Meet a taco at your doorstep is basically the feature,” said Yuhki Yamashita, product manager for rider experience at Uber. A Snapchat integration will share ETAs with friends via selfies. And a another with Yelp will offer restaurant reviews and menus to passengers who are headed out to dinner. Uber expects to add more such features in the future and hopes to someday integrate transit information, such as subway, bus and train departure times.

The new version of the Uber app offers a swipeable menu of ride options. No more clicking back and forth to compare fares.

Uber

With Uber Feed, you can change music in the car through Pandora or order a meal with Uber Eats.

Uber

For Uber, this app overhaul is a bet that convenience will drive ridership, making it even easier for ride-hail to become a default mode of transportation for travelers who might otherwise use it as one option among many. If Uber already knows the location of my upcoming 6PM appointment and where I&039;m going for dinner afterwards, why bother taking the subway or hailing a cab?

“If we don’t start getting intelligent about what you want, you get 15 choices and you get the cognitive load of trying to decide. I call it the tyranny of choice,” Kalanick said. “From the moment you open up the app to when you’re in the car and even when you get out of the car, how can we make that a better experience and a more magical one?”

Quelle: <a href="With App Update, Uber Brings Eats, Yelp And Snapchat To Ride Hail“>BuzzFeed

Talkshow, A Public Messaging App, Is Shutting Down

Talkshow, a public messaging app that debuted in April, is shutting down at the end of this month.

“While we have enjoyed the conversations that have happened on Talkshow, and are grateful for the community that has formed around the product, we don’t see it getting big enough to have the impact we had hoped for,” the company said in an email. “We’re sorry, and we’re going to try to handle this transition in the right way.”

The app, developed by former Twitter product head Michael Sippey, displayed group messaging threads in public. The threads, ranging from sports talk to dating tips, were certainly intriguing.

But ultimately, Talkshow becomes yet another upstart social app to die, trying to compete for attention with Facebook and Snapchat, two giants that have seemingly sucked all the air out of the room in social. Word of Talkshow&;s shut down comes a week after Vine, a Twitter-owned video service, said it too would close.

BuzzFeed News has reached out to Talkshow for further comment and clarification.

Quelle: <a href="Talkshow, A Public Messaging App, Is Shutting Down“>BuzzFeed

Instagram Introduces New Shopping Feature To Get You To Buy More Stuff

Instagram is introducing new mini shops in an attempt to sparks sales of products in its feed.

The shops, which are debuting in a test with 20 partners next week, allow you to tap on items you see in pictures and explore them in more detail inside the Instagram feed. A “shop now” button is included within the mini shops, and hitting it will open a checkout web page for the product you’re looking at inside Instagram.

Warby Parker, Abercrombie & Fitch, Coach, JackThreads, and more are participating in the test, which will be live in the US only to start. The retailers won’t be able to promote the shops with advertising for now, though that will likely come down the road.

Instagram already sells ads that include a “shop” button, but the new mini shops are meant to bridge the gap between the moment you become aware of a product and when you decide to buy it. They also give you more information as you consider buying something, a step that naturally occurs when you shop offline.

“You can get inspired [online], and you can buy — it’s that in between state between the shop window and the cash register that doesn’t exist today,” Instagram’s director of market operations, Jim Squires, told BuzzFeed News.

Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, and Twitter have all introduced commerce to their platforms over the past two years, but so far the results have been less than spectacular. Twitter, for one, ceased development on its buy button and disbanded its commerce team. Retailers have also played down other platforms&; programs, and a study by the research firm GlobalWebIndex found that only 14% of people aged 16 to 64 want to see buy buttons on Instagram.

“There’s work to be done,” Squires said.

Still, Instagram has long been a place where people arrange transactions in comments underneath photos of items they like. And now, it&039;s trying to develop a product that captures the spirit of those conversations in an effort to generate even more sales.

Quelle: <a href="Instagram Introduces New Shopping Feature To Get You To Buy More Stuff“>BuzzFeed

If Trump Wins, He Can Keep Obama's Twitter Followers — But Not His Tweets

If Trump Wins, He Can Keep Obama's Twitter Followers — But Not His Tweets

Barack Obama was the first US president on Twitter, and he won&;t be the last. So what happens to the @POTUS Twitter handle after the election?

When Obama leaves office on January 20, 2017, Twitter will transfer his tweets to the new account @ POTUS44, which will contain all of his previous tweets, according to a statement from the White House. The 45th US president, whoever that will be, will then receive the handle @ POTUS, which will begin tabula rasa with no tweets on the timeline.

As for Instagram and Facebook, the incoming presidential administration will own the White House username, URL, and followers, and it will also begin its term with a blank timeline. The same is true of the Vice President and First Lady&039;s social media accounts.

If Hillary Clinton is elected, Bill Clinton will likely be referred to as the “First Gentleman of the United States.” The White House&039;s statement did not cover the account @ FGOTUS, though the account currently sports an “about me” stating “I&039;m obviously with her.”

The current accounts for the Vice President, First Lady, White House, and other associated accounts will become “VP44,” “FLOTUS44,” “WhiteHouse44,” and so on, the White House&039;s statement reads. The accounts with “44” appended will remain under the control of Joe Biden, Michelle Obama, and their staffers.

Obama was also the first president to use Snapchat, YouTube, and Facebook Live to engage with the public. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) will preserve the social media created by Obama&039;s administration in a publicly accessible archive.

NARA will also archive content from other digital arms of the Obama administration. The We the People petition platform and Obama&039;s version of WhiteHouse.gov will also be available in the NARA archives. You can follow the transition on @WHWeb.

Donald Trump (@ realDonaldTrump) and Hillary Clinton (@ HillaryClinton) have amassed 12.8 and 10.1 million followers, respectively, while @ POTUS has 11.1 million at the time of reporting. Trump has remarked in the past that he would “totally accept the election results if I win” and has made claims that the election is rigged, making it unclear how he would approach a digital transition of power.

Neither Hillary Clinton&039;s nor Donald Trump&039;s campaign responded immediately to requests for comment on how they would handle a digital transition of power or if they would keep posting from their existing accounts.

Here is an archive of all 317 of @POTUS&039; tweets scraped by BuzzFeed News.

Quelle: <a href="If Trump Wins, He Can Keep Obama&039;s Twitter Followers — But Not His Tweets“>BuzzFeed

Ex-Googler Raises $2 Million, Debuts Platform To Let You Build Your Own Pokémon Go

When Pokémon Go incited mass augmented reality hysteria this summer, one big question that emerged was whether the game’s success would usher in an era of AR applications, or whether enthusiasm for the genre would fizzle. Ex-Googler Dmitry Shapiro is betting that we’ve only seen the beginning of experiences that overlay the digital on the physical world. He&;s debuting an app that allows anyone to create Pokemon-Go style games within it, and he’s raised $2 million from the likes of former Disney CEO Michael Eisner and venture capitalists Greylock Partners to push it forward.

The platform, called Metaverse, can host an unlimited number of AR applications. Anyone can make games or other experiences inside it by using a builder to create Pokemon-style “experiences” and dropping them onto a map that hews to the real world. You can quickly build these worlds, and you don’t have to know how to code, though the creation of more elaborate uses will demand more effort.

Just like with Pokémon Go, you walk up to experiences inside the Metaverse and tap them to interact with them. But unlike Pokémon Go, the Metaverse won’t be limited to one “world.” Its founder, Shapiro, wants it to be a home for multitudes of user-generated scavenger hunts, interactive stories, and even AR worlds directing you to things like public bathrooms. Users can sort through and hop in and out of these worlds at will.

“YouTube made it trivially simple for people to publish video,” Shapiro told BuzzFeed News in an interview. “You could think of this as being a YouTube for interactive experiences.”

The point: Make it easy for anyone to build these experiences, freeing them from the effort needed to develop AR technology, and hopefully they’ll create stuff people want to explore.

Scene from a Metaverse scavenger hunt

GoMeta

According to Google Trends, interest in both augmented reality and Pokémon Go has steeply dropped off since the Pokemon craze hit its peak in July. So Metaverse might be fighting an uphill battle. But in a best-case scenario, it could create the framework from which many successes like Pokémon Go emerge. “The last great platform has dramatically changed what we see on our phones in front of us,” said Greylock VC Josh Elman, referring to mobile operating systems. “I believe the next great platforms can be to change what we see in the world around us.”

And Eisner, in an emailed statement, said he’s particularly excited about the interactive storytelling that can be done within the platform. “Metaverse is a new medium, potentially the invention of a new genre of interactive film, and I believe that incredible stories will be told on this platform.” he said. “The opportunities that exist for storytellers large and small are staggering.”

Metaverse already demonstrated how part of its app works with cash scavenger hunts in San Diego and the LA area this fall. And for Halloween, the app created a world overlaid with spooky experiences that you can walk up to and interact with. But Tuesday, the platform is opening up its key product, the one that allows anyone to build their own worlds, or “dimensions” as it calls them.

The dimension builder is fairly straightforward, allowing you to upload your own objects or pick from the app&039;s built-in set, which ranges from Donald Trump to an astronaut. Then you can set the objects to say certain things and offer multiple choice responses for users that tap on them. Shapiro said his niece and her friends are using the platform to drop characters on each other’s houses, which then relay messages when tapped. It’s an example of the wide array of uses that you can imagine for the platform.

Though it’s still an open question whether AR will take off, Shapiro is not shy about his ambitions. “I’m not trying to build a new Google Maps or Waze,” he said. “I’m trying to build a new fundamental platform that will dramatically increase the things that regular consumers can do with technology.”

Quelle: <a href="Ex-Googler Raises Million, Debuts Platform To Let You Build Your Own Pokémon Go“>BuzzFeed

Twitter May Have Accidentally Rolled Out A New Abuse-Prevention Tool

This weekend, some Twitter users noticed a new “muted words” feature appear inside their iOS apps, fueling speculation that the social network may be close to revealing new abuse prevention tools.

The feature was spotted Friday evening but appears to have been taken offline only minutes later. From the screenshots, the tool seems to allow you to mute keywords and hashtags so that they don&;t show up in your timeline. Instagram rolled out a similar feature this September, along with a “default” filter, which hides posts if they include offensive words from a preset list.

While a keyword filter could protect from spoilers or keep distracting events from your timeline, the tool&039;s primary focus would be to protect users from targeted abuse by allowing them to personally filter everything from racial slurs to personalized insults that traditional algorithms might not catch. In August, Bloomberg reported Twitter had been considering the implementation of a filtering feature for the better part of a year. Just last week, Twitter hinted that abuse and safety tools would be forthcoming, which has struggled to contain a rapidly growing harassment problem.

Twitter did not respond as to whether we&039;ll see a “muted words” feature soon. If implemented, the tool would be a meaningful step to give users the agency to protect themselves on the platform.

Some critics, though, see keyword filtering as only one half of the problem and urge that platforms like Twitter adopt more stringent abuse reporting and enforcement procedures, as well as pre-emptive filtering that doesn&039;t require users to do anything. Twitter has taken steps in this area — this year it rolled out a quality filter algorithm to weed potentially abusive tweets from users&039; timelines. But it still has a long way to go.

Quelle: <a href="Twitter May Have Accidentally Rolled Out A New Abuse-Prevention Tool“>BuzzFeed

Why Samsung Still Doesn't Know What's Causing Galaxy Note7 Explosions

A participant wearing a Samsung Galaxy Note7 costume walks in Kawasaki, Japan after a Halloween parade on October 30, 2016.

Kim Kyung-hoon / Reuters

Six weeks since Samsung first recalled its once-ballyhooed Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, and more than three weeks since it stopped selling them entirely, the company still doesn&;t know what, precisely, is causing its flagship phone to catch fire. For the Korean electronics giant, that has spelled disaster. The company stands to lose 17 billion dollars in revenue, even as its reputation plunges in key markets across the world.

An official accident report Samsung filed with the Korea Agency of Technology, which Buzzfeed News obtained, confirms the company still doesn&039;t know what led to 35 reported cases of battery-induced Note7 damage around the world. According to the document, despite an initial diagnosis of “marginal errors” during the battery cell manufacturing process that ultimately resulted in a heat-producing short circuit in Note7 phones, it&039;s unclear if this is the cause behind all the fires. Samsung confirmed the report is authentic, but declined to comment on its ongoing investigation.

In other words, one of the 20 richest companies in the world, a global conglomerate worth half a trillion dollars, can&039;t quickly figure out what&039;s causing one of its flagship products to reportedly set cars on fire. Even though Samsung is bleeding money and trust with each day it doesn&039;t have an answer, it very well may be months before the company has an explanation — and can try to assure consumers its next phones won&039;t have the same problem.

“If I was Samsung, I&039;d be gathering phones like crazy. Those have the best clues.”

None of this is surprising to Glen Stevick, a mechanical engineer, failure analyst, and the founder of Berkeley Engineering and Research, which has studied dozens of lithium ion fires. Stevick, who helped determine what made the Deepwater Horizon explode, said that getting to the bottom of a major consumer recall case like this takes time — six months to a year “to know everything.” That would, by certain standards, be quick: It took nearly two years after the first reports of problems with the lithium ion batteries in the Boeing 787 Dreamliner for the National Transportation Safety Board to release its official report.

That&039;s because, according to Stevick, these are huge undertakings, and not ones that just take place in a lab. Before Samsung&039;s engineers can start to analyze the exploding phones, the company has to collect them.

“If I was Samsung, I&039;d be gathering phones like crazy. Those have the best clues,” Stevick said.

That means not just the 35 phones that caught fire, but hundreds of other Note 7s in various states of use. Only then, said Stevick, can “you start slicing those batteries and putting them under an electron microscope. Gradually the issues will appear.”
What Samsung&039;s failure analysis team would be looking for, Stevick said, are dendrites: microscopic lithium fibers that can grow — vine-like — over time from the anode (negative pole) of the battery, across a thin separator, to the cathode (positive pole). When the two poles connect, watch out: You&039;ve got a short circuit and a potential fire.

The two main culprits behind out-of-control dendrite growth, charging too deeply and charging too fast, happen to be correlated with features consumers want: namely, better battery life and faster phone recharging. But it&039;s not as simple as blaming one or the other. Perhaps both are a problem. Perhaps the electrolyte separator — which keeps the anode and cathode apart – is too thin and therefore too easy for the lithium tendrils to bridge. Or perhaps the design of the battery case squished the battery too much, again making it easier for the two poles to connect.

Or maybe, as Samsung initially claimed, there were battery manufacturing issues, things like, as Stevick put it, “someone leaving a door open in the clean room,” allowing in dust that could lead to a short circuit. Maybe that was a one-time mistake, affecting only a limited set of batteries, that has since been solved. Or maybe not.

Ruling out all of the potential causes, and their permutations, simply takes time. And plotting these issues to a predictive curve is a major challenge, Stevick said, one that can take carefully analyzing hundreds and hundreds of phones.
“Those things can overlap on you,” Stevick said, “And you can be all over the place trying to fix it. It isn&039;t easy.”

Jihye Lee contributed to the reporting in this story.

Quelle: <a href="Why Samsung Still Doesn&039;t Know What&039;s Causing Galaxy Note7 Explosions“>BuzzFeed