Easy

Eric Schwarz, writing about the perspective that outsiders can have on the difficulty of skilled roles:

There seems to be a notion from those that are not technologically-inclined that anyone who works with technology can easily do anything, be it a desktop support technician, network engineer, database administrator, programmer, designer, etc. I’ve always taken it as a bit of a compliment that my skill set is valued and that I am seen as a resource, but increasingly the expectation of more impossible demands from outside parties has been coming across my desk.

I have definitely experienced this, and I’m sure people in a wide range of professions experience something similar.

World of Warcraft: Battle for Azeroth - Ads

For the upcoming release of World of Warcraft: Battle for Azeroth, Blizzard has released 4 short adverts, which seem very Apple-like.

If you’re not a World of Warcraft player, the only background knowledge you need is that at the heart of the game, there are two factions (Alliance and Horde) which you’re character has allegiance with. This expansion returns the game to the roots of the fight between the two factions.

Bus

Elevator

Kid’s Choice

Rainy Day

iOS is the Best Platform for Google Apps

Matt Birchler:

…if you want the best Google software, iOS is really the place to be.

That sounds crazy, and maybe for some people it is, but as someone who relies heavily on Google’s software in both my personal and professional life, iOS has been a great platform for getting everything done that I need to do. Not only that, but a shocking amount of Google apps are updated first on iOS or are totally exclusive to iOS for months before going to Android. And with new apps like Files and updates to Siri intents, Google’s apps can interact more closely with iOS than they could in earlier versions of iOS.

I can’t say I’m well versed in the Android ecosystem, but I am aware of it. I pay attention to Google I/O announcements, and of course, there’s an Android developer at work so I have at least some perspective.

The only, or at least the biggest issue I can determine, is the obvious levels of fragmentation. This used to be the argument of app design, and quality, where iPhones used to be just the one size, and Android already had loads of variety.

The fragmentation I think causes these problems is the multiple Android vendors and mobile networks, that introduce needless bottlenecks to the whole platform. Whether it’s a small update that will get ignored by certain manufacturers or a major release which will take extra time for a company like Samsung (just picking one at random) to add their software on top, before shipping it to consumers. I just don’t think the wide varieties of Android phones combine to make a stable ecosystem.

That’s a whole lot different with iOS though because there’s less device variety, a higher percentage of users are on the latest version of the OS, and the App Store is a widely known success. I think this is why Google do so well. Because they can leave the foundation work to Apple, and that leaves them with just the software. And I can admit they can make pretty good software.

Why You Should Never Pay For Podcast Hosting

Nir Zicherman, co-founder and CTO of Anchor:

Back in the day, you would have had to pay to host video online. But you would never do that today (thanks to services like YouTube, Vimeo, Twitch, and plenty of other free video hosting platforms). Back in the day, you would have had to pay to store your photos online. But that outdated business model has virtually disappeared thanks to platforms like Google Photos, Instagram, Imgur, and others. At Anchor, we believe the notion of charging creators to host their content online is antiquated and unfair. And above all else, it serves as a barrier that prevents the podcasting ecosystem from growing and becoming more diverse, because it limits it to only those voices who can afford to pay.

I must admit, the headline caused me to instantly question the article. But it completely turned me around. Anchor seem to be doing some great things in podcasting, and it’s very interesting to see the platform constantly growing.

PUBLIC BY DEFAULT - Visiblity Into How Much Data Venmo Make Public

You may or may not have heard about Venmo before, but in the simplest terms – they’re a payment provider that also lets you have an internal balance (quick fact – all payment processing is actually performed by PayPal). They’re one of many FinTech companies trying to do roughly the same thing.

They also have an API. From which you can check out individual transactions, the people that sent/received money, and even identifiable bits of information such as Facebook IDs.

But hang on, what was this I saw on the Venmo website:

Your personal and financial data is encrypted and protected on our secure servers to guard against unauthorized transactions.

You’d probably assume this meant your transactions as well. Turns out these are public by default.

That’s what allowed Hang Do Thi Duc to create PUBLIC BY DEFAULT. Her reasoning behind why she made it:

Many products that we use on a daily basis make it more difficult than it should be to protect our privacy, our most personal information. Many of these products share data (publicly) by default. Venmo is an example of one of these products.

And what an interesting example! One would think that when it comes to money, privacy by design is of greater importance and higher demand. One would be disappointed in this particular case.

I think it’s problematic that there is a public feed which includes real names, their profile links (to access past transactions), possibly their Facebook IDs and essentially their network of friends they spend time with. And all of this is so easy to access! I believe this could be designed better. Why include all this information, when essentially the only interesting part is the message? If you – as a company – actually care about your users and their privacy you would ask this kind of questions.

So, if companies don’t care, I think WE have to take action

The website is rather packed full with examples of the type of data you can extract from the API, and also how you can combine it to recreate stories of peoples lives.

I won’t list of everything, because honestly, I wouldn’t be able to, but there’s a cannabis retailer that had 920 incoming transactions, a few couples that have been having conversations via their transactions, and one young female that had 965 transactions for soft and alcoholic drinks, fast food, and sweets, in just 8 months.

All of this seemingly fun data, also comes packed with personally identifiable information. I’m wondering whether this is breaking GDPR rules.

I’d definitely recommend having a play around on the website, as it really brings to life what information can be realised, just by transactions.

Just to end on a scary note, based on the 207,984,218 public Venmo transactions from 2017, there were 18,429,464 people that had their transactions set to public visibility, 1,731,783 shared Facebook IDs, and 1,189,210 unique last names (from which a pretty cool graph was made).