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  • FTC Finalizes $245M Fine Against Epic Games to Refund Fortnite Players

    FTC Finalizes $245M Fine Against Epic Games to Refund Fortnite Players

    The Federal Trade Commission finalized an order Tuesday requiring Fortnite developer Epic Games to pay $245 million in fines for using “dark patterns” to trick players into making unwanted or unauthorized charges.

    Fortnite employed “counterintuitive, inconsistent, and confusing button configuration” that duped players into making unwanted charges with the press of a single button, according to an FTC press release. Furthermore, there was no purchase authorization process, enabling minors — a large demographic of the popular battle royale game — to rack up charges without parental consent.

    Players who suspect they have been wrongfully charged for Fortnite purchases can visit FTC.gov/Fortnite for more information on the refund process. A representative from the FTC didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on when affected users can expect a refund.

    Epic Games didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

  • Google Updates Health Information, Search Features at ‘Check Up’ Event

    Google Updates Health Information, Search Features at ‘Check Up’ Event

    Google on Tuesday unveiled updates to Search that are designed to make it easier to find affordable health care. The announcement came as part of The Check Up, an annual event put on by the search giant’s health branch. The event also included news on other efforts, including advancements in artificial intelligenceprojects aimed at increasing health care access.

    Notably, Google said it’s looking to make it simpler to find re-enrollment information for Medicaid, a health insurance program for people with limited income, when users open Google to search. Requirements to re-enroll were put on pause during the pandemic, but that pause expires at the end of March. This means people with Medicaid will need to renew their information soon.

    Which state you live in determines when your health care coverage may be affected, as PBS reports, but you’ll need to confirm your personal information, eligibility requirements and other information to stay insured. Google said a Search update will help with that by making it easier to find renewal information and log in to your state portal.

    A Medicaid searchA Medicaid search
    Google

    Finding affordable health care online at free or low-cost clinics may be a little easier. The company promised you’ll soon be able to find and identify such providers when searching online, including community health clinics. Google also said it’s using Duplex, its conversational AI system, to contact health care providers and verify their information posted online.

    On the mental health front, Google said it’s increasing the number of crisis helplines that appear at the top of Google searches related to suicide, domestic violence and other crises. Through a partnership with ThroughLine, those crisis lines can be found in more countries and languages.

    Google also said it’s adding more medical partners to some of its AI projects, with the hope of increasing health equality by simplifying medical screenings and tools. One of these partnerships is with Jacaranda, a nonprofit in Kenya that’s trying to improve outcomes for pregnant women and their children by developing simplified ultrasounds with less expensive equipment through AI. Expensive ultrasound equipment and required training for specialists may be a health care barrier in some parts of the world with higher maternal mortality rates.

    Tapping AI further for medical diagnostics, Google said it’s partnering with the Mayo Clinic to develop an improved method of “contouring” for radiotherapy used in cancer treatment. Because radiotherapy uses a high dose of radiation to kill cancer cells, careful steps by the health care team must be taken to outline or “contour” the tumor to limit radiation in surrounding parts of the body. Google said it hopes its AI can save the care team time during this process.

    Other AI projects at Google include efforts to create a better tuberculosis-screening method and an ultrasound that can detect breast cancer — though there’s no timeline yet for when any of these projects will be available for patients beyond the research stage.

    Other health notes include Google’s update to Fitbit’s health metrics dashboard, as well as Google’s continued work on Med-PaLM, an AI tool designed to answer medical questions and, hopefully, provide reasoning. On Tuesday, Google said its improved version, the Med-PaLM 2, performed at an expert level when answering the types of questions you’d be asked on a medical licensing exam. In a blog post, Google added that more work is needed to “make sure this technology can work in real-world settings.”

  • Google Pixel Fold Rumored to Launch in June

    Google Pixel Fold Rumored to Launch in June

    Google may be getting ready to launch its first foldable phone. The rumored Google Pixel Fold is expected to go on sale in June, according to reports from 9to5Google and WinFuture on Tuesday.

    It’s possible the company introduces the Pixel Fold at its annual Google I/O event, scheduled this year for May 10. It will reportedly run on Google’s Tensor G2 chip and come in “carbon,” likely a shade of gray or black, and “porcelain” color options. The Pixel Fold will initially only be available in a 256GB model, according to WinFuture.

    Pricing information for the Pixel Fold wasn’t revealed in the reports, but previous rumors have suggested it’ll cost less than Samsung’s $1,800 Galaxy Z Fold 4. The rumored foldable may have a 5.79-inch outer cover display and 7.69-inch inner display when unfolded, according to earlier leaks.

    Google is also expected to launch the Pixel 7A in June, according to 9to5Google and WinFuture. The new Pixel phone will reportedly be available in three color options: carbon, cotton and arctic blue.

    Google didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

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  • AI Gets Smarter, Safer, More Visual With GPT-4 Release, OpenAI Says

    AI Gets Smarter, Safer, More Visual With GPT-4 Release, OpenAI Says

    The hottest AI technology foundation, OpenAI’s GPT, got a big upgrade Tuesday that’s now available in the premium version of the ChatGPT chatbot.

    The new GPT-4 can generate much longer strings of text and respond when people feed it images, and it’s designed to do a better job avoiding artificial intelligence pitfalls visible in the earlier GPT-3.5, OpenAI said Tuesday. For example, when taking bar exams that attorneys must pass to practice law, GPT-4 ranks in the top 10% of scores compared to the bottom 10% for GPT-3.5, the AI research company said.

    GPT stands for Generative Pretrained Transformer, a reference to the fact that it can generate text on its own and that it uses an AI technology called transformers that Google pioneered. It’s a type of AI called a large language model, or LLM, that’s trained on vast swaths of data harvested from the internet, learning mathematically to spot patterns and reproduce styles.

    OpenAI has made its GPT technology available to developers for years, but ChatGPT, which debuted in November, offered an easy interface that yielded an explosion of interest, experimentation and worry about the downsides of the technology. ChatGPT is free, but it falter when demand is high. In January, OpenAI began offering ChatGPT Plus for $20 per month with assured availability and, now, the GPT-4 foundation.

    GPT-4 advancements

    “In a casual conversation, the distinction between GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 can be subtle. The difference comes out when the complexity of the task reaches a sufficient threshold,” OpenAI said. “GPT-4 is more reliable, creative and able to handle much more nuanced instructions than GPT-3.5.”

    Another major advance in GPT-4 is the ability to accept input data that includes text and photos. OpenAI’s example is asking the chatbot to explain a joke showing a bulky decades-old computer cable plugged into a modern iPhone’s tiny Lightning port.

    Another is better performance avoiding AI problems like hallucinations — incorrectly fabricated responses, often offered with just as much seeming authority as answers the AI gets right. GPT-4 also is better at thwarting attempts to get it to say the wrong thing: “GPT-4 scores 40% higher than our latest GPT-3.5 on our internal adversarial factuality evaluations,” OpenAI said.

    GPT-4 also adds new “steerability” options. Users of large language models today often must engage in elaborate “prompt engineering,” learning how to embed specific cues in their prompts to get the right sort of responses. GPT-4 adds a system command option that lets users set a specific tone or style, for example programming code or a Socratic tutor: “You are a tutor that always responds in the Socratic style. You never give the student the answer, but always try to ask just the right question to help them learn to think for themselves.”

    “Stochastic parrots” and other problems

    OpenAI acknowledges significant shortcomings that persist with GPT-4, though it also touts progress avoiding them.

    “It can sometimes make simple reasoning errors … or be overly gullible in accepting obvious false statements from a user. And sometimes it can fail at hard problems the same way humans do, such as introducing security vulnerabilities into code it produces,” OpenAI said. In addition, “GPT-4 can also be confidently wrong in its predictions, not taking care to double-check work when it’s likely to make a mistake.”

    Large language models can deliver impressive results, seeming to understand huge amounts of subject matter and to converse in human-sounding if somewhat stilted language. Fundamentally, though, LLM AIs don’t really know anything. They’re just able to string words together in statistically very refined ways.

    This statistical but fundamentally somewhat hollow approach to knowledge led researchers, including former Google AI researchers Emily Bender and Timnit Gebru, to warn of the “dangers of stochastic parrots” that come with large language models. Language model AIs tend to encode biases, stereotypes and negative sentiment present in training data, and researchers and other people using these models tend “to mistake … performance gains for actual natural language understanding.”

    OpenAI, Microsoft and Nvidia partnership

    OpenAI got a big boost when Microsoft said in February it’s using GPT technology in its Bing search engine, including a chat features similar to ChatGPT. On Tuesday, Microsoft said it’s using GPT-4 for the Bing work. Together, OpenAI and Microsoft pose a major search threat to Google, but Google has its own large language model technology too, including a chatbot called Bard that Google is testing privately.

    Microsoft uses GPT technology both to evaluate the searches people type into Bing and, in some cases, to offer more elaborate, conversational responses. The results can be much more informative than those of earlier search engines, but the more conversational interface that can be invoked as an option has had problems that make it look unhinged.

    To train GPT, OpenAI used Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing service, including thousands of Nvidia’s A100 graphics processing units, or GPUs, yoked together. Azure now can use Nvidia’s new H100 processors, which include specific circuitry to accelerate AI transformer calculations.

  • Google’s New AI Tools for Gmail, Docs Can Write Drafts for You

    Google’s New AI Tools for Gmail, Docs Can Write Drafts for You

    Google plans to bring new AI-powered tools to its suite of Workspace apps. In a blog post on Tuesday, the search giant said it’s starting by testing generative AI writing features in Gmail and Docs that can help people get started on the writing process.

    “Simply type a topic you’d like to write about, and a draft will instantly be generated for you,” reads Google’s post. “With your collaborative AI partner you can continue to refine and edit, getting more suggestions as needed.”

    The tool, Google suggests, can be used to help create things like customized job descriptions or invitations for a kid’s birthday party. The company is also exploring ways to incorporate AI tools into Slides, Sheets, Meet and Chat.

    Google is one of a number of companies testing generative AI capabilities in its services after OpenAI’s ChatGPT kicked off an AI boom in late 2022. Earlier this year, Microsoft launched a new AI-powered Bing, and Meta is experimenting with AI-powered chat on WhatsApp and Messenger, while Grammarly is set to launch an AI feature designed to craft email messages, social media posts and more.

    The new AI tools for Google’s Workspace apps will initially be available to a “limited set of trusted testers” before becoming available to the public, Google said in the blog post. The features are expected to start rolling out to testers in the coming weeks.

    “When it comes to delivering the full potential of generative AI across Workspace, we’re just getting started,” Google said.

    Google also introduced new AI tools for developers and businesses on Tuesday, including an app builder that will help companies launch their own AI chatbots.

    Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to create some personal finance explainers that are edited and fact-checked by our editors. For more, see this post.

  • Save $250 on the OnePlus 10 Pro and Get a Great Phone at a Great Price

    Save $250 on the OnePlus 10 Pro and Get a Great Phone at a Great Price

    The smartphone market continues to grow, and big brands like Apple, Google and Samsung aren’t the only ones with something to offer anymore. OnePlus makes some of our favorite phones for those looking for a budget-friendly alternative that doesn’t sacrifice tons of power or features, and right now you can snag one at a serious discount. Amazon currently has the OnePlus 10 Pro on sale for as low as $550, which saves you $250 compared to the usual price. Without a set expiration, there’s no telling how long it will be available. Be sure to get your order in sooner rather than later if you don’t want to miss out on these savings.

    The 10 Pro is a bit older than the OnePlus 11 — the latest model in its flagship lineup — but still has tons to offer and costs over $150 less. It’s equipped with a first-gen Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 processor, and the 128GB model comes with 8GB of RAM. Or you can upgrade to the 256GB model which comes with 12GB of RAM and is on sale for $640 ($230 off). Plus it has 5G connectivity for speedy cellular performance.

    The screen is a 6.7-inch QHD with a 120Hz refresh rate, and it features an impressive 50MP camera co-developed by Hasselblad with a 150-degree field-of-view. It’s powered by the Android 12 operating system, but is compatible with Amazon Alexa for hands-free assistance. It also supports ultra-fast 65W charging, and has a 5,000-mAh battery that lasts all day. It’s also worth noting that the OnePlus 10T, which features small upgrades and slightly different specs, is on sale for $500 at the moment, which saves you $150.


    Get your next phone for the best price.

    Set price alerts on your favorite models with the CNET Shopping extension and get notified when prices drop.


  • AirPods Pro 2 Are Close to $50 Off at Various Retailers Right Now

    AirPods Pro 2 Are Close to $50 Off at Various Retailers Right Now

    Apple/CNET

    With improved ANC, intuitive touch controls and Find My support, Apple’s latest AirPods Pro are solid all-round earbuds — especially at close to $50 off.

    You’re receiving price alerts for Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen, White)

    Noise-canceling headphones are an essential accessory for anyone that commutes, works in a loud environment or just wants to shut out distractions and focus on the music. Apple’s AirPods Pro 2 are our favorite noise-canceling earbuds, and right now you can snag a set at a huge discount via Amazon. With $49 off versus the Apple Store price, the second-gen AirPods Pro are down to within $1 of their lowest price ever there. Best Buy and Target are matching the deal, too.

    The AirPods Pro 2 have active noise cancellation that’s twice as powerful as that of the first-gen model, adaptive transparency and personalized spatial audio with dynamic head tracking for immersive sound. They have four different-sized eartips and provide up to 6 hours of listening time, plus up to 24 hours extra listening time with the included case.

    Touch controls let you swipe to adjust volume, press to control media playback, answer or end calls and switch between listening modes. The earbuds and charging case are both sweat- and water-resistant, making them ideal workout earbuds, and the charging case is MagSafe-compatible with a lanyard loop to help you not lose them. Find My support is built-in if you do, though.

    Read more: Best AirPods Pro Accessories for 2023: Cases, Eartips, Wireless In-Flight Transmitters and Chargers

  • Sony InZone M3 Review: A Speedy Gaming Monitor for PS5 Plus PC Play

    Sony InZone M3 Review: A Speedy Gaming Monitor for PS5 Plus PC Play

    A cheaper, faster sibling of Sony’s $900 InZone M9 4K HDR gaming monitor, the 27-inch InZone M3 incorporates a solid 240Hz 1080p screen for its $530 ( 699) price tag. In addition to its unique design, the M3’s most notable novelty is PS5 support for Auto HDR, which maps SDR games to HDR, and Auto Genre picture mode, which switches profiles from game-optimized and low-latency to movie-optimized when you launch them. It also supports HDMI 2.1 which seems like overkill for a 1,920 x 1,080 (FHD), barely HDR screen, but future proofing is always welcome — provided it doesn’t add a lot of cost.

    Otherwise, the screen is comparable to models like the BenQ Mobiuz EX270M, Acer Nitro XV272, Acer Predator XB273 and a handful of others. They’re older models but slightly cheaper and lack the HDMI 2.1 and the PS5 automation. The M3 is discounted through early April to just below $500, which brings it more into line with the competition. (The M9 is also discounted over the same period, for $100 off its standard $900 price.)

    Sony InZone M3 (SDMF27M30)

    You’re receiving price alerts for Sony InZone M3 (SDMF27M30)

    Like

    • HDMI 2.1 with VRR support for PlayStation
    • Good sRGB accuracy

    Don’t Like

    • Looks good but the connection locations and cable management aren’t
    • Awkward stand that doesn’t swivel

    It has an identical design to the M9, which means it’s equally annoying. Striking, since it uses similar materials to the PS5 but with a more angular aesthetic common to PC gaming displays, but awkward. The metal rear legs of the stand don’t look substantial, though they are.

    Sony InZone M3 (SDMF27M30)

    Price $530
    Size (diagonal) 27 in. (69 cm)
    Panel and backlight IPS with LED edgelight
    Flat or curved Flat
    Resolution and pixel density 1,920 x 1,080 81.6ppi
    Aspect ratio 16:9
    Maximum gamut 99% sRGB
    Brightness (nits, peak/typical) 400/400
    HDR DisplayHDR 400
    Adaptive sync G-Sync
    Max vertical refresh rate 240Hz (DisplayPort and HDMI)
    Gray/gray response time (milliseconds) 1ms (overdrive)
    Connections 2 x HDMI 2.1, 1 x DisplayPort 1.4, 1 x USB-C (with DP)
    Audio 3.5mm out
    VESA mountable Yes, 100 x 100 mm
    Panel warranty 1 year
    Release date January 2023

    There’s a tiny plastic hook that can hang off one of the thin legs through which you’re supposed to feed your cables. It’s not large enough to accommodate a few thick ones though and really feels flimsy. And while setup is straightforward, it’s unnecessarily inelegant. You need a screwdriver and the included loose screws to attach the legs — at the very least make them captive — and it’s hard to insert the connections because they’re in a recess that requires some contortion to get them into, especially if you have stiff, thick cables.

    The Sony InZone M3 monitor, side view showing the forward slanted stand, on a wood surface with a purple wall in the backThe Sony InZone M3 monitor, side view showing the forward slanted stand, on a wood surface with a purple wall in the back

    That slanted leg is striking looking, but not very practical.

    Lori Grunin/CNET

    That unusual slanted foot also makes it notably difficult to get to the DisplayPort connection and prevents the screen from being able to tilt forward. Most stands let you tilt about 5 degrees toward you, which can come in handy if you’re trying to avert glare. The design also precludes swiveling, which is annoying in a multimonitor configuration and doesn’t allow for putting things on your desk beneath the screen, such as shoving your keyboard there.

    It really begs to be mounted on an arm, but at that point it looks pretty much the same as every other monitor out there.

    A close up of the connections recessed in the back of the monitorA close up of the connections recessed in the back of the monitor

    The connectors are in one of those traditional, hard-to-reach recesses in the back of the screen.

    Lori Grunin/CNET

    In addition to the dual HDMI 2.1 connections, it also supports USB-C for display. It’s got stereo two-watt speakers, which sound about as good as you’d expect; that is, if you expect them to sound tinny and low volume and only good for simple system sounds.

    I thought Sony would have fixed the small irritation in the onscreen display, where it defaults to one of the least-needed menu entries — DDC on/off, and a level down — which makes navigating through the menus tedious if you have to do it a lot. Thankfully, everything in the OSD is accessible via Sony’s pretty well designed InZone Hub software.

    Like the M9, the M3 has a built-in KVM switch, which means the USB ports depend upon the active input. That’s a perk if you’re connecting to two different systems or a PC and a console, and easy to set up in the software. The input scanning looking for an active connection seems to take a little longer than normal, though, and I got some unexpected resets (where it decides to recheck its connection) — such as between benchmark tests — that I’ve only seen with the Sonys.

    Performance

    The monitor performs well, with solid behavior at 240Hz and what seems like is the claimed 1ms gray-to-gray pixel refresh, and delivers excellent sRGB color accuracy in its Standard and Game 2 profiles but not in its default Game 1. (How we test monitors.)

    Color measurements

    Gamut (% of P3) White point Gamma Brightness (nits) Accuracy (DE2K average/max)
    Default (Game 1) 82 (111% sRGB) 7800K 2.3 245/360 (peak) 3.83/8.3
    sRGB (Standard) n/a (111% sRGB) 6300K 2.2 265 1.92/5.07
    Cinema 82 6300K 2.4 337 n/a
    HDR 87 6450K n/a 473 (10% and full screen) n/a

    It nominally supports high dynamic range — it’s DisplayHDR 400 certified — but that just means it has a little extra brightness headroom and can do the math needed to display HDR content or map SDR to HDR. It doesn’t make that much of a visual difference, partly because the black isn’t dark enough. The best contrast it could hit was about 2500:1, which is good in general but not great for HDR. On the bright side, I didn’t see any light bleed around the edge as is common with edgelit backlights.

    Game mode measurements

    White point Gamma Brightness Contrast (static)
    FPS 7850K 2.1 304 nits 861
    Game 2 6300K 2.2 267 nits 1185

    I’m not a huge fan of 27-inch 1080p screens for nongaming use because of their low-pixel density, only about 82 pixels per inch, because even my aging eyes object to the visible pixel grid. But it’s okay for gaming because there are rarely any single-pixel-wide lines. If you want something for long workdays as well as gaming, and you don’t need the 240Hz or HDMI 2.1 (you can still use it with a console), do your eyes and wallet a favor and get a 2,560 x 1,440 (1440p) 165Hz model.

    It’s a pretty good monitor, but the InZone M3’s screen doesn’t distinguish it from the small pack of 240Hz 1080p options and its stand doesn’t help make a case for it. Overall, it’s a solid choice, especially if you can find it for a more competitive price.

  • SpaceX Reportedly to Test Satellite-to-Cellular Service This Year

    SpaceX Reportedly to Test Satellite-to-Cellular Service This Year

    A SpaceX executive said Monday that the company will start testing satellite-to-cellular communications this year, which will reportedly include operating on T-Mobile’s network. T-Mobile announced in August that its mobile network dead zones would get coverage from SpaceX’s Starlink satellites, but it didn’t say when that would happen.

    At the Satellite Conference and Exhibition 2023, SpaceX VP of Starlink enterprise sales Jonathan Hofeller made the comment during a panel. The tests will include satellite-to-cellular service with T-Mobile, CNBC reported.

    While it’s still not clear when T-Mobile customers will be able to benefit from Starlink coverage, it’s the first update since the carrier debuted its SpaceX partnership. That could mean they have the lead, as it’s not clear when AT&T’s network will get augmented by satellite provider AST Mobile, and Verizon’s chosen partner — Amazon’s Project Kuiper — has yet to launch a satellite into orbit.

    The Satellite Conference’s panel attendants were reportedly optimistic about the growth of satellite-to-cellular communications despite how few consumers benefit from the technology. iPhone 14 users are some of the only smartphone owners who can use satellite communications using Apple’s Emergency SOS service. Samsung has its own solution in the works, though the phonemaker hasn’t announced which satellite network it will partner with.

    Starlink has grown to “well over a million users,” Hofeller said, and SpaceX is building six next-generation satellites a day to add to the company’s constellation of around 4,000 satellites currently orbiting the planet.

    Iridium CEO Matt Desch, who was also on the panel, touted the company’s partnership with Qualcomm for its upcoming Snapdragon Satellite service, as well as its “plan to evolve beyond just cell” to service computers and cars, CNBC reported.

    T-Mobile declined to comment on SpaceX’s Starlink testing and hasn’t given a timeline for when satellite coverage will be added to its mobile network. SpaceX didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.