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  1. @emilymbender

    Perhaps this is just publishing GammaGroup . Com's work, finally, since it's deployed in the 100's of millions of installs, currently, and this is just a cover up? /Cynical 🤔

    I have seen some cover stories from Google around this, less than a year ago, talking about ' proxy servers ', which this #StateSponsoredMalware, served FROM Google's & Apples app stores, install and manage via a #ForcedMDM, billed as ' a security product ', perhaps this rebranded but offices closed in Germany from FinFisher . Com in 2021, because of license issues selling this #malware to a country and getting prosecuted by German Prosecutors', also named ' The Enemy of the Internet, since 2012 ', which is #CALEAmalware.

    I've been following this for many years now in #infosec actually and publishing this #malware'w client side modules on this for Android10, Android11 & Android12, detailing this #malware on #VirusTotal.

    Probably getting around to Android 13 & Android 14 client modules this year sometime also. ☣️🔍🧐

  2. @emilymbender

    Perhaps this is just publishing GammaGroup . Com's work, finally, since it's deployed in the 100's of millions of installs, currently, and this is just a cover up? /Cynical 🤔

    I have seen some cover stories from Google around this, less than a year ago, talking about ' proxy servers ', which this #StateSponsoredMalware, served FROM Google's & Apples app stores, install and manage via a #ForcedMDM, billed as ' a security product ', perhaps this rebranded but offices closed in Germany from FinFisher . Com in 2021, because of license issues selling this #malware to a country and getting prosecuted by German Prosecutors', also named ' The Enemy of the Internet, since 2012 ', which is #CALEAmalware.

    I've been following this for many years now in #infosec actually and publishing this #malware'w client side modules on this for Android10, Android11 & Android12, detailing this #malware on #VirusTotal.

    Probably getting around to Android 13 & Android 14 client modules this year sometime also. ☣️🔍🧐

  3. @emilymbender

    Perhaps this is just publishing GammaGroup . Com's work, finally, since it's deployed in the 100's of millions of installs, currently, and this is just a cover up? /Cynical 🤔

    I have seen some cover stories from Google around this, less than a year ago, talking about ' proxy servers ', which this #StateSponsoredMalware, served FROM Google's & Apples app stores, install and manage via a #ForcedMDM, billed as ' a security product ', perhaps this rebranded but offices closed in Germany from FinFisher . Com in 2021, because of license issues selling this #malware to a country and getting prosecuted by German Prosecutors', also named ' The Enemy of the Internet, since 2012 ', which is #CALEAmalware.

    I've been following this for many years now in #infosec actually and publishing this #malware'w client side modules on this for Android10, Android11 & Android12, detailing this #malware on #VirusTotal.

    Probably getting around to Android 13 & Android 14 client modules this year sometime also. ☣️🔍🧐

  4. After some and a long time working on it, here is the promised blog post about my experiences, tips, tricks and troubles on HOW TO BUILD YOUR HOME LAB:

    From an over-engineered approach to a simplified .

    As usual, any is more than welcome.

    fernandocejas.com/blog/enginee

  5. At our company Tignum, we encourage a process that helps to get the best out of our time off. Here is a tiny exercise/framework before you take time for yourself.

    UNLOAD: your backpack, reflect and meditate over what you have done.

    RESET: relax your brain, recover yourself, forget.

    REFOCUS: 3-4 things I will focus when I'm back.

  6. Google I/O 2026 arranca hoy: cómo verlo en vivo y qué esperar del evento más importante de Google

    La conferencia de desarrolladores más grande de Google se celebra el 19 y 20 de mayo en el Shoreline Amphitheatre de Mountain View, California. El keynote principal ya comenzó y puede seguirse en vivo por YouTube de forma gratuita. Inteligencia artificial, Gemini 4, Android 17 y nuevas laptops Googlebook son los protagonistas esperados.

    Hoy es el día. Google I/O 2026 arranca este martes 19 de mayo con el keynote principal a las 10 a.m. PT / 1 p.m. ET, presentado por el CEO de Alphabet, Sundar Pichai, desde el Shoreline Amphitheatre en Mountain View, California. El evento se extiende durante dos jornadas y, como todos los años, marca el pulso tecnológico que Google le imprimirá a sus productos durante los próximos doce meses.

    Para quienes no pueden estar presentes, la buena noticia es que el acceso es universal y gratuito. El keynote se transmite en vivo a través del canal oficial de YouTube de Google y en su página dedicada io.google, con disponibilidad de un stream adicional en lenguaje de señas americano (ASL). Todos los keynotes y la mayoría de las sesiones técnicas también estarán disponibles en YouTube en tiempo real, por lo que se puede seguir todo desde casa sin necesidad de registro previo. Quien se lo pierda en vivo podrá acceder a las grabaciones en el canal de Google for Developers días después del evento.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vw73r_xaeX0

    En cuanto al contenido, este año la inteligencia artificial lo domina casi todo. Se esperan novedades sobre las actualizaciones de Google Search, un posible anuncio de Gemini 4 y las últimas novedades del modelo de generación de video Veo. También se anticipa una segunda presentación de Gemini Intelligence en modo agente, y la posible aparición de Gemini Remy, un asistente diseñado para operar en segundo plano las 24 horas del día ejecutando tareas de forma autónoma con mínima supervisión del usuario.

    En el frente de hardware y plataformas, se espera la presentación formal de las laptops Googlebook y del Google Home Speaker, ambos ya anticipados por Google pero aún sin fecha de lanzamiento confirmada. Además, podrían mostrarse dispositivos Android XR, incluyendo lentes inteligentes y posiblemente auriculares de realidad mixta. Android 17 también tendrá su momento, con foco en mayor rendimiento, mejoras en herramientas multimedia y soporte extendido para tablets y modos de uso tipo escritorio.

    Más tarde en el mismo día, a la 1:30 p.m. PT, arranca el Developer Keynote, donde Google profundizará en los temas técnicos del keynote principal, con especial atención al coding agéntico y las últimas actualizaciones de los modelos Gemini para desarrolladores. El segundo día del evento, 20 de mayo, estará dedicado a sesiones temáticas sobre Android, Chrome y Cloud, entre otras plataformas.

    El Google I/O 2026 se presenta como uno de los eventos más cargados de los últimos años, con Google apostando fuerte a consolidar su liderazgo en IA en todos los frentes al mismo tiempo.

    #Android17 #AndroidXR #arielmcorg #desarrolladores #gemini #GeminiIntelligence #google #Googlebook #GoogleIO2026 #GoogleSearch #IA #infosertec #InteligenciaArtificial #LentesInteligentes #PORTADA #SundarPichai #tecnologia #Veo
  7. Rysik zamiast długopisu. Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra bije rekordy w testach podpisu biometrycznego

    Firma XTENSION, twórca oprogramowania signaturiX, opublikowała wyniki testów urządzeń mobilnych sprawdzających możliwości sprzętu w zakresie rejestrowania odręcznego podpisu biometrycznego.

    Najwyższy wynik ze wszystkich dotychczas badanych urządzeń osiągnął smartfon Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra wyposażony w rysik S Pen.

    Dokładność mierzona w hercach

    Podpis biometryczny to znacznie więcej niż tylko graficzne odwzorowanie kreski na ekranie. Każde złożenie podpisu generuje szczegółowy strumień danych, obejmujący m.in.: współrzędne położenia rysika, siłę nacisku na ekran, kąt nachylenia, a także prędkość i dynamikę ruchu.

    Kluczowym parametrem decydującym o precyzji takiego zapisu jest częstotliwość próbkowania. Choć rynkowe minimum dla podpisu biometrycznego wynosi zazwyczaj 60 Hz, Galaxy S26 Ultra osiągnął w dedykowanej aplikacji średni wynik na poziomie 580 Hz. Najwyższy pojedynczy pomiar dla tego modelu wyniósł aż 591,22 Hz.

    Dla porównania, ubiegłoroczny Galaxy S25 Ultra notował średnio 579 Hz, natomiast tablet Galaxy Tab S6 Lite zaledwie 240 Hz.

    Aplikacja natywna kontra przeglądarka

    Badania ujawniły również ogromną przepaść wydajnościową między różnymi środowiskami oprogramowania. Złożenie podpisu przez przeglądarkę Chrome na modelu S26 Ultra skutkuje spadkiem częstotliwości próbkowania do około 120 Hz. Aplikacja mobilna zbiera niemal pięciokrotnie więcej próbek na sekundę, co zapewnia o wiele bardziej szczegółowy zapis cech biometrycznych.

    Warto zaznaczyć, że S26 Ultra był pierwszym urządzeniem testowanym przez XTENSION w środowisku systemu Android 16 – testy nie wykazały żadnych problemów z kompatybilnością.

    Certyfikowane bezpieczeństwo dla biznesu

    Wysoka precyzja pomiaru ma bezpośrednie przełożenie na wartość dowodową podpisu w sądzie. Wersja oprogramowania pod nazwą biocertiX posiada międzynarodowy certyfikat bezpieczeństwa Common Criteria na poziomie EAL2.

    Oznacza to, że produkt przeszedł niezależne, ustrukturyzowane testy bezpieczeństwa weryfikujące jego architekturę oraz odporność na ataki. Rozwiązanie to działa wyłącznie na certyfikowanych urządzeniach Samsung. Dodatkowo, aby zachować maksymalny poziom wiarygodności, klucze szyfrujące przechowywane są w zewnętrznym, zabezpieczonym module HSM (Hardware Security Module) dostarczanym przez Certum by Asseco, a nie w pamięci samego smartfona.

    Rok 1998 według Samsunga. Kiedy telefony ważyły 100 gramów, a muzyki słuchaliśmy z pierwszych empetrójek

    #Android16 #Bezpieczeństwo #Enterprise #GalaxyS26Ultra #iMagazine #podpisBiometryczny #SPen #Samsung #signaturiX
  8. GoogleWatchBlog: Android: Gemini Intelligence stellt hohe Anforderungen - startet wohl nicht auf Pixel 9-Smartphones (Specs)

    googlewatchblog.de/2026/05/and

    Wenn es auf meinem 8a nicht läuft, kann ich mit leben. Dann bleibe ich davon hoffentlich verschont. Und nein, ich hole mir kein überteuertes KI Spielzeug. Weil mein 8a noch lange gute Dienste tun wird und das Geld eh nicht hätte. Und selbst dann vermutlich nicht.

    #android17

  9. GoogleWatchBlog: Android: Gemini Intelligence stellt hohe Anforderungen - startet wohl nicht auf Pixel 9-Smartphones (Specs)

    googlewatchblog.de/2026/05/and

    Wenn es auf meinem 8a nicht läuft, kann ich mit leben. Dann bleibe ich davon hoffentlich verschont. Und nein, ich hole mir kein überteuertes KI Spielzeug. Weil mein 8a noch lange gute Dienste tun wird und das Geld eh nicht hätte. Und selbst dann vermutlich nicht.

    #android17

  10. GoogleWatchBlog: Android: Gemini Intelligence stellt hohe Anforderungen - startet wohl nicht auf Pixel 9-Smartphones (Specs)

    googlewatchblog.de/2026/05/and

    Wenn es auf meinem 8a nicht läuft, kann ich mit leben. Dann bleibe ich davon hoffentlich verschont. Und nein, ich hole mir kein überteuertes KI Spielzeug. Weil mein 8a noch lange gute Dienste tun wird und das Geld eh nicht hätte. Und selbst dann vermutlich nicht.

    #android17

  11. GoogleWatchBlog: Android: Gemini Intelligence stellt hohe Anforderungen - startet wohl nicht auf Pixel 9-Smartphones (Specs)

    googlewatchblog.de/2026/05/and

    Wenn es auf meinem 8a nicht läuft, kann ich mit leben. Dann bleibe ich davon hoffentlich verschont. Und nein, ich hole mir kein überteuertes KI Spielzeug. Weil mein 8a noch lange gute Dienste tun wird und das Geld eh nicht hätte. Und selbst dann vermutlich nicht.

    #android17

  12. Weekly output: WiFi hotspots, Android 17 + Gemini Intelligence, earning trust in AI, staying IRL in an AI world, AI image generation, photonics + data centers, Bill Gross on AI

    SAN JOSE, Calif.–I’m back on the West Coast only three days after returning from Web Summit Vancouver, and my excuse for yet another transcon flight involves two different events: TechEx North America at the convention center here, where I’m moderating two panels Monday, and then Google I/O a little up the peninsula in Mountain View Tuesday and Wednesday. This is my second year at the first event but will be my 12th in-person I/O.

    5/11/2026: The Best Wi-Fi Hotspot, Wirecutter

    This update to this guide was originally going to review the Franklin A70 hotspot that AT&T introduced last year, but as I was about to file my edits I learned that AT&T was discontinuing that model. So I took out all of the copy assessing the A70 and restored the discussion of older models, which still left plenty of new text covering, among other things, how most high-end smartphone plans now include more data than you get with hotspot-only plans.

    5/12/2026: In Android 17, ‘Gemini Intelligence’ Can Automate Tasks Across Apps, PCMag

    Google dumped an enormous amount of news one week before I/O, to the point that I needed almost 1,200 words to cover it without even getting into Googlebook laptops, since PCMag’s Michael Kan wrote up that part of Google’s news. I trust that Google left something else to announce onstage at I/O Tuesday.

    5/12/2026: Data done right: Earning consumer trust in an AI-first world. Web Summit

    This was the second year in a row I had a Web Summit Vancouver panel featuring Pamela Snively, chief data and trust officer with Telus Communications. Knowing my fellow speaker’s conversational style made this panel easy; the topic was also a good one to explore.

    5/12/2026: The Analog Renaissance, Why Human Connection and IRL Is the Most Radical Innovation, Frontier Collective

    I showed up 5 minutes late to this offsite panel hosted by a local tech group because my floatplane joyride ended almost 30 minutes later than scheduled, a timing failure that in retrospect seems like something I was asking for. I then had a fun discussion with my fellow speakers–Raven White, TED’s director of audience development and community; Heather Odendaal, WNORTH CEO and founder; and Johnny Rodgers, a founding principal engineer at Slack–but I feel bad about inflicting “where is Rob?” uncertainty on the organizers and forcing emcee Theodora Jean to field my position for the first few minutes.

    5/13/2026: What it actually takes to train frontier models, Web Summit

    This was a late addition to my schedule, leaving no time for a prep call beforehand with Black Forest Labs co-founder Tim Dockhorn. That, in turn, meant I only discovered on stage that he can answer questions exceedingly briefly–which required me to improv a bunch of new questions. This sort of thing has happened on panels before; this time, I didn’t feel like I was flailing around onstage quite so much.

    5/14/2026: Can Photonics Make the AI Data Center Boom More Palatable?, PCMag

    Since my research for this started at NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in mid April, I was happy I finally got this written–including quotes from my interview of the photonics firm Taara’s CEO at Web Summit Vancouver that helped this post be about more than just the expenses-comped NTT event. I was not so happy to discover that I left two errors into the copy, one about the distances that Taara’s silicon-photonics chipset can send data through the air and another about this firm’s spot in the extended Google corporate universe.

    5/15/2026: Bill Gross thinks AI companies are running out of ways to avoid paying creators, Fast Company

    This is the first time in a long time–maybe ever, actually–where I wrote a story from an interview as an edited transcript instead of writing a more-structured piece with selected quotes plugged in where I saw fit. I enjoyed the challenge of finding the most enlightening exchanges about the longtime Silicon Valley founder and investor’s new venture ProRata and the state of AI in general out of 6,000-plus words of AI-generated transcript from my phone’s Google Recorder app (which I then checked by playing back the original recording).

    #Android17 #BillGross #BlackForestLabs #FrontierCollective #GeminiIntelligence #GoogleIO #IOWN #MiFi #MountainView #NTTResearch #photonics #ProRata #SanJose #Taara #TechEx #Telus #Vancouver #WebSummitVancouver #WiFiHotspot #Wirecutter
  13. Weekly output: WiFi hotspots, Android 17 + Gemini Intelligence, earning trust in AI, staying IRL in an AI world, AI image generation, photonics + data centers, Bill Gross on AI

    SAN JOSE, Calif.–I’m back on the West Coast only three days after returning from Web Summit Vancouver, and my excuse for yet another transcon flight involves two different events: TechEx North America at the convention center here, where I’m moderating two panels Monday, and then Google I/O a little up the peninsula in Mountain View Tuesday and Wednesday. This is my second year at the first event but will be my 12th in-person I/O.

    5/11/2026: The Best Wi-Fi Hotspot, Wirecutter

    This update to this guide was originally going to review the Franklin A70 hotspot that AT&T introduced last year, but as I was about to file my edits I learned that AT&T was discontinuing that model. So I took out all of the copy assessing the A70 and restored the discussion of older models, which still left plenty of new text covering, among other things, how most high-end smartphone plans now include more data than you get with hotspot-only plans.

    5/12/2026: In Android 17, ‘Gemini Intelligence’ Can Automate Tasks Across Apps, PCMag

    Google dumped an enormous amount of news one week before I/O, to the point that I needed almost 1,200 words to cover it without even getting into Googlebook laptops, since PCMag’s Michael Kan wrote up that part of Google’s news. I trust that Google left something else to announce onstage at I/O Tuesday.

    5/12/2026: Data done right: Earning consumer trust in an AI-first world. Web Summit

    This was the second year in a row I had a Web Summit Vancouver panel featuring Pamela Snively, chief data and trust officer with Telus Communications. Knowing my fellow speaker’s conversational style made this panel easy; the topic was also a good one to explore.

    5/12/2026: The Analog Renaissance, Why Human Connection and IRL Is the Most Radical Innovation, Frontier Collective

    I showed up 5 minutes late to this offsite panel hosted by a local tech group because my floatplane joyride ended almost 30 minutes later than scheduled, a timing failure that in retrospect seems like something I was asking for. I then had a fun discussion with my fellow speakers–Raven White, TED’s director of audience development and community; Heather Odendaal, WNORTH CEO and founder; and Johnny Rodgers, a founding principal engineer at Slack–but I feel bad about inflicting “where is Rob?” uncertainty on the organizers and forcing emcee Theodora Jean to field my position for the first few minutes.

    5/13/2026: What it actually takes to train frontier models, Web Summit

    This was a late addition to my schedule, leaving no time for a prep call beforehand with Black Forest Labs co-founder Tim Dockhorn. That, in turn, meant I only discovered on stage that he can answer questions exceedingly briefly–which required me to improv a bunch of new questions. This sort of thing has happened on panels before; this time, I didn’t feel like I was flailing around onstage quite so much.

    5/14/2026: Can Photonics Make the AI Data Center Boom More Palatable?, PCMag

    Since my research for this started at NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in mid April, I was happy I finally got this written–including quotes from my interview of the photonics firm Taara’s CEO at Web Summit Vancouver that helped this post be about more than just the expenses-comped NTT event. I was not so happy to discover that I left two errors into the copy, one about the distances that Taara’s silicon-photonics chipset can send data through the air and another about this firm’s spot in the extended Google corporate universe.

    5/15/2026: Bill Gross thinks AI companies are running out of ways to avoid paying creators, Fast Company

    This is the first time in a long time–maybe ever, actually–where I wrote a story from an interview as an edited transcript instead of writing a more-structured piece with selected quotes plugged in where I saw fit. I enjoyed the challenge of finding the most enlightening exchanges about the longtime Silicon Valley founder and investor’s new venture ProRata and the state of AI in general out of 6,000-plus words of AI-generated transcript from my phone’s Google Recorder app (which I then checked by playing back the original recording).

    #Android17 #BillGross #BlackForestLabs #FrontierCollective #GeminiIntelligence #GoogleIO #IOWN #MiFi #MountainView #NTTResearch #photonics #ProRata #SanJose #Taara #TechEx #Telus #Vancouver #WebSummitVancouver #WiFiHotspot #Wirecutter
  14. Weekly output: WiFi hotspots, Android 17 + Gemini Intelligence, earning trust in AI, staying IRL in an AI world, AI image generation, photonics + data centers, Bill Gross on AI

    SAN JOSE, Calif.–I’m back on the West Coast only three days after returning from Web Summit Vancouver, and my excuse for yet another transcon flight involves two different events: TechEx North America at the convention center here, where I’m moderating two panels Monday, and then Google I/O a little up the peninsula in Mountain View Tuesday and Wednesday. This is my second year at the first event but will be my 12th in-person I/O.

    5/11/2026: The Best Wi-Fi Hotspot, Wirecutter

    This update to this guide was originally going to review the Franklin A70 hotspot that AT&T introduced last year, but as I was about to file my edits I learned that AT&T was discontinuing that model. So I took out all of the copy assessing the A70 and restored the discussion of older models, which still left plenty of new text covering, among other things, how most high-end smartphone plans now include more data than you get with hotspot-only plans.

    5/12/2026: In Android 17, ‘Gemini Intelligence’ Can Automate Tasks Across Apps, PCMag

    Google dumped an enormous amount of news one week before I/O, to the point that I needed almost 1,200 words to cover it without even getting into Googlebook laptops, since PCMag’s Michael Kan wrote up that part of Google’s news. I trust that Google left something else to announce onstage at I/O Tuesday.

    5/12/2026: Data done right: Earning consumer trust in an AI-first world. Web Summit

    This was the second year in a row I had a Web Summit Vancouver panel featuring Pamela Snively, chief data and trust officer with Telus Communications. Knowing my fellow speaker’s conversational style made this panel easy; the topic was also a good one to explore.

    5/12/2026: The Analog Renaissance, Why Human Connection and IRL Is the Most Radical Innovation, Frontier Collective

    I showed up 5 minutes late to this offsite panel hosted by a local tech group because my floatplane joyride ended almost 30 minutes later than scheduled, a timing failure that in retrospect seems like something I was asking for. I then had a fun discussion with my fellow speakers–Raven White, TED’s director of audience development and community; Heather Odendaal, WNORTH CEO and founder; and Johnny Rodgers, a founding principal engineer at Slack–but I feel bad about inflicting “where is Rob?” uncertainty on the organizers and forcing emcee Theodora Jean to field my position for the first few minutes.

    5/13/2026: What it actually takes to train frontier models, Web Summit

    This was a late addition to my schedule, leaving no time for a prep call beforehand with Black Forest Labs co-founder Tim Dockhorn. That, in turn, meant I only discovered on stage that he can answer questions exceedingly briefly–which required me to improv a bunch of new questions. This sort of thing has happened on panels before; this time, I didn’t feel like I was flailing around onstage quite so much.

    5/14/2026: Can Photonics Make the AI Data Center Boom More Palatable?, PCMag

    Since my research for this started at NTT Research’s Upgrade conference in mid April, I was happy I finally got this written–including quotes from my interview of the photonics firm Taara’s CEO at Web Summit Vancouver that helped this post be about more than just the expenses-comped NTT event. I was not so happy to discover that I left two errors into the copy, one about the distances that Taara’s silicon-photonics chipset can send data through the air and another about this firm’s spot in the extended Google corporate universe.

    5/15/2026: Bill Gross thinks AI companies are running out of ways to avoid paying creators, Fast Company

    This is the first time in a long time–maybe ever, actually–where I wrote a story from an interview as an edited transcript instead of writing a more-structured piece with selected quotes plugged in where I saw fit. I enjoyed the challenge of finding the most enlightening exchanges about the longtime Silicon Valley founder and investor’s new venture ProRata and the state of AI in general out of 6,000-plus words of AI-generated transcript from my phone’s Google Recorder app (which I then checked by playing back the original recording).

    #Android17 #BillGross #BlackForestLabs #FrontierCollective #GeminiIntelligence #GoogleIO #IOWN #MiFi #MountainView #NTTResearch #photonics #ProRata #SanJose #Taara #TechEx #Telus #Vancouver #WebSummitVancouver #WiFiHotspot #Wirecutter