 Oh, hello everybody. Just doing a little office hours today while I get prepared for the show. I'm gonna do the proofread. Oh, on this episode of DTNS, Mike Johnson, CISO at Rivian explains the difference between secure by default and secure by design. Plus, Apple pays for a study on end-to-end encryption study to promote. And to end encryption. Hashtags come to threads. Yay! UK's Competition Markets 30 has started asking interested parties if they think Microsoft's investment in open AI is essentially the same as a merger. In other words, does Microsoft have de facto control of open AI? Once the CMA received comments that will decide whether to open an investigation, USFDC is also making preliminary inquiries into Microsoft's open AI. Investments to determine whether a formal review is necessary. Hey, Coyote Brownish. Hello, Zoe brings bacon. Apple's plan to diversify its supply chain is starting to show progress. Nikkei ages the sources, say Apple is working with China's BYD to move some of its iPad assembly to Vietnam. Wall Street Journal sources say Foxconn will open an iPhone plant in southern India in April and will expand iPhone production to an existing plant in Chennai and has more new plants in development. India's Tata Group just bought a large iPhone man replection in India and Bloomberg reports it wants to take on more Apple business itself. Apple reportedly, that makes it sound like Bloomberg wants to take it on, and Bloomberg reports that Tata Face wants to take on more Apple business. Apple reportedly wants to make 50 to 60 million iPhones in India per year by 2026. The latest, that would be about 25%. These are illegal in British Columbia, Coyote Brownish. Pheronics reports that the latest release of a systems for Linux can generate a full screen error message like the dreaded Windows blue screen of death that will be used to log errors. In situations where Linux fails to boot, it'll generate a QR code as part of the error message that you can scan to get more information. Still an experimental feature, but it should stick. It will make it to distros next year. Google continues to dominate the AI news cycle after the introduction of Gemini, but not always in a positive way. Google published a video called Hands-On with Gemini, interacting with multimodal AI that demonstrated interaction with the model with text and voice and using images and text for input and output. And Gemini did generate all the responses in the video just not all at the same time. The video was edited to get rid of stops down and corrections in the process, which make the model look faster marketed than it is. Okay, that's the bad news. Google also continued to release new products, Project Tailwood and Rename Notebook Along. Now available in the US and starting to take advantage of Gemini Pro. And finally, there's a project inside Google that sounds both awesome and terrifying depending on how they use it. CNBC saw documents about Project Elman named after the biographer of the same name. I don't have to say of the same name, named after the biographer and can take photos and smartphone data. That can take photos and smartphone data to create a chatbot. G'day, Clinton. Previously, we mentioned that some Google Drive users noticed that their files went missing. Yesterday, we passed along Google's update for at least some users. It seemed like the issues had been rolled back to some time in May and all new files made sense. Then we're gone. Google said it was related to the company that's supposed to fix that involved entering a demugging mode. There's also Apple funded a repo report written independently by MIT Professor Stuart Madnick about the increasing frequency of cyber attacks. Madnick said that more ransomware attacks were reported in the first nine months of 2023 than in all of 2022. 98% of business and government groups work in some capacity with a government that's hit by an attack in the last year. 2.6 billion personal records were breached in 2021 and 2022. One in four people had their health records exposed in the first three quarters of this year. The report recommends limiting data collection to only what companies need and using end-to-end encryption when sharing data. Obviously, Apple has been in a years-long debate with governments about end-to-end encryption, so it shouldn't be a surprise that it funded something like this. Mike Johnson, how do you feel about this report? I'm nomming these reports, Coyote Brown. Threads started rolling out tags on the platform system-wide after testing the feature in Australia for a month. I'm not calling them hashtags because they work a little differently. On a Threads post, you do still use the pound symbol to add a tag, but you can only add one tag per post. But that single tag can have multiple word spaces and use special characters. Then it will show up as a clickable link at Threads post to steer you towards other uses of said tag. Head of Threads and Instagram Adam Osseri says that only having a single tag to choose is designed to minimize engagement hacking and tags can be reported. If one tag per post limit, you do kind of have to know who you're reaching. TechCrunch, Sarah Perez knows there are multiple tags for NBA posts, for example. Top five, kitchen gadgets. Recent cyber security incidents like the Fidelity National Financial ransomware attack has placed security on the top of everyone's minds. Ontarize, Mike. All right. Obviously illegal in BC. Obviously. Let's check the mailbag. I'm going to switch these because I have demons. Tell Sarah that I did it. Now it's time for barrier techsword. That's, that's funny. Okay. Len Peralta, Mike Johnson, riddle of the Sphinx. We're going to play riddle of the Sphinx. All right. I can put this back up now because now you won't be able to see the answers except when Roger is editing them. Okay, I think that's everything. Hello, Adam 12. Oh, hi. Oh, let's check the feeds. What's on the feeds? Grandfather's 799 YouTube premium rate going away. Yeah, they already told us. Clinton and I could have sworn they told us that like months ago and that it expires at the end of your billing cycle. So that feels like people not paying attention and then getting mad at not paying attention to me. Could be wrong. Could be wrong. You still paying 799 doesn't mean that they didn't tell you when that would end. Does that make sense? But also like, you know, the way I personally look at it is like, yeah, raise your prices, do whatever, charge me whatever you're going to charge me at a certain point. I'll decide whether it's worth paying or not anymore. So that's maybe I'm not the best person to ask about it. I don't know if I can do a hat tour in nine minutes. I don't want to feel rushed, you know, I want to, I want to do it right. Use wheat stocks hit seven year low. All right. That's just news stuff. Nothing crazy. Olivia Wilde to direct Christmas continuity with Margot Robbie's production company. Okay. Howdy, Clay. What's up in Texas? Quietly. That's one of my pet peeves. Did they raise it quietly or like, what are they supposed to do to raise it loudly? Like, I don't know. That's just, that's just a me thing. But it's like, oh, so they didn't call a press conference. That's quite quietly. They just did something. So if I just do something, that's me doing it quietly. I don't know. Bugs me. It's like, just say YouTube premium raises subscription prices. You can write in the article like, they did not send an announcement, an official announcement about it, but they raised their prices. And I think that's, yeah. Yeah, people got notification emails. Exactly. Somebody had Google's headquarters. I'm about to rent. We're supposed to do it quietly. Cost of the company's music premium service also is increasing from 999 to 99. Let's see. They didn't tell me the journalist. That's why. And Natalix, my engine video, they were in all lower case of Natalix. So yeah, very, very much. They didn't even apologize. I think that, I think that's that. Well, well, well. What else is going on? I did my exercise. I can take that off my to-do list. I have folded my laundry. Did not prep the cord killers line up yet. Oh, that's something I could do. It looks like Brian sent me, Brian sent me the archive.org. So he has me doing the posting on the blog on the RSS feed. I mean, for spoiler in time and cord killers. So I should probably post that. Actually, no, I don't want to add a copy. A post. That's, oh, wait, I'm changing the wrong one. View posts. No, that's right. Asteroid City was what we talked about on spoiler type, right? Let me just do that. Justin Robert Young joins us to talk about Asteroid City. Next week, West Wing season one. Well, just episode one. Get to the video. Voila. The spoiler in time video feed has been updated. Thank you very much. Oh, that should be 483. Oops, screwed that up. Sweet, sweet venom. Yes, Jason Howell will be a guest on DTNS a week from next Friday. So two weeks from today would be another way of putting that. It'll be Jason and Molly Wood. A little BOL reunion. So stick around for that. Jay Simmer, 22nd. He's also going to show up on Android Faithful for sure. All right. Thanks, everybody. I got to go do the production meeting. I'll see you later.