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Yes, |
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you did come here for tech news, |
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but you'll leave with something even more precious. |
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This image in your mind. |
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Ah ha ha ha ha, please, no applause. |
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It's my pleasure. |
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Google's plans to control the web are running into a couple snags |
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from haters who are just mad they didn't start their own tech giant. |
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The company has responded to merciless criticism |
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of its proposed Web Environment Integrity API for Chrome, |
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deemed a DRM for websites, |
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and is shelving it in favor of the much different |
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Android WebView Media Integrity API, |
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which will apparently be much narrower in scope. |
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Of course, the reason it doesn't need to be broader |
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is because Android already has environmental attestation |
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and uses its Play Integrity API to scan users' phones for root privileges. |
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So what's a few more scans among friends? |
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The new API could be used to block malicious apps and malware, |
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but it could also prevent the rise of more apps like the now dead Vanced, |
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which gave regular YouTube users premium features like ad-free videos and a good time. |
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But Google's crusade against ad blockers might cause legal trouble in the EU. |
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Privacy experts like Alexander Hanf claim that |
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YouTube's anti-ad blocker measures violate Article 5.3 of EU's e-Privacy Directive, |
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meaning that after forcing Apple to change their whole closed ecosystem, shtick, |
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Europe might set its sights on Google next. |
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As if the tech giant hasn't had enough controversy, |
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they're also integrating generative AI into their advertiser tools |
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because spam art is what ads need more of, |
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and testing YouChat, |
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a YouTube chatbot that users can ask about the video they're watching, |
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because who has time to actually watch videos when there's all these AI toys to play with? |
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I mean, I always read the comments. |
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Basically the same thing. |
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YouTube is also considering an AI feature that summarizes large comment sections, |
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a handy feature for creators to figure out what their subscribers are talking about at a glance, |
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though judging by our comment section, |
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the overall effect will be like a supportive mom who's been possessed by a demon. |
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You're doing great, sweetie. |
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I hate your beard. |
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Take a shower. |
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Anyway, love you. |
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A judge recently unsealed an amended FTC privacy complaint against Kochava, |
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the world's largest mobile data broker, |
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revealing disturbing allegations |
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that the company has collected and sells a staggering amount of sensitive information |
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that is linked or easily linkable to specific individuals. |
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The original FTC lawsuit was blocked back in May |
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because the complaint didn't provide enough evidence, |
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but now apparently they're back with the goods and, ooh boy, |
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it is spicy. |
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Muy picante. |
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According to the FTC, |
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Cochava sells data including personal information |
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like names, addresses, phone numbers, |
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and precise geolocation within a few meters, |
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but also demographic information |
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like race, gender, annual income, political affiliation, religion, and... |
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pregnancy status. |
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I didn't have another finger. |
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Kochava customers, who are hopefully just advertisers, |
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could easily trace an individual's movements from their home to their work, |
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to a hospital, to a church, |
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or even to an emergency shelter. |
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Geez. |
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Allegedly, Cochava doesn't just collect information about what apps an individual uses, |
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but also what they do while inside them and how much money they spend. |
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You know, an easy rule of thumb of whether a product is dangerously invasive is asking yourself, |
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could a domestic abuser use this to find their estranged spouse simply by typing |
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pregnant female, Caucasian, Houston, candy crush, |
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green party into a search bar? |
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Maybe? |
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MyQ, best known for their smart garage door openers, |
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has apparently spent the last several months |
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repeatedly blocking unauthorized third-party smart home apps from access to their devices. |
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That might make sense, |
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but MyQ currently has very few authorized software partners |
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because they require partners to pay them for the right to interact with their devices. |
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Home Assistant recently announced that they will be deactivating their MyQ integration |
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since it isn't working anymore and because, |
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as an open-source project, |
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paying MyQ's fee simply isn't sustainable. |
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You know, like when you don't have money and everyone wants to go to McDonald's? |
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This has left MyQ customers in a situation |
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where the apps they use to manage all their other smart devices |
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simply can't interact with their garage doors. |
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You might wonder why a garage door opener company |
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would be trying to interfere with its customers' ability to open their garages. |
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But MyQ is probably trying to force customers to use its official app, |
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probably called Reddit, |
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which since October has been serving obnoxious ads that interfere with the functioning of the app. |
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Oh, it is Reddit. |
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Sometimes even pushing the open garage button off the screen. |
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While the iOS version of the app is still at 4.8 stars, |
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its Android counterpart recently dropped to 3.9 |
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due to all of those selfish customers |
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who think they shouldn't get ads on an app for a product they already paid for. |
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Like, what's your problem? |
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What, do you think that when you go to the restaurant, |
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you should just get food when you pay for it? |
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Like, bringing it back to McDonald's. |
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Quick Bits move at near relativistic speeds and thus experience significant time distortion. |
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With every Quick Bit, |
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I grow a fraction of a second further out of sync with the universe as you perceive it. |
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Did y'all know Kim and Kanye got divorced? |
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To the surprise of several Apple users, |
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when they received their brand new 14-inch M3 MacBook Pros, |
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the devices came installed not with a standard up-to-date operating system, |
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but with an unreleased build of macOS Ventura 13.5 |
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from back in July that couldn't be updated. |
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Apple has already released an update addressing the issue, |
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but this would seem to indicate that Apple's been stockpiling devices with M3 chips for the last four months. |
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Apple usually creates these separate incompatible versions of its OS |
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in order to keep potential leaks out of public betas, |
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but it's not clear how it wound up getting sent to consumers. |
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My theory? |
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Snake, you've created a time paradox! |
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Who's Pete Davidson? |
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You mean Skeet Davidson? |
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I heard he's dating Kim! |
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According to reliable leaker and my best friend, |
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Copite7Kimmy, please don't say that's not true, |
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expensive GPU lovers should expect Nvidia |
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to launch the RTX 40 Super Series |
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during the 2024 Consumer Electronics Show in January. |
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That would make sense considering that Nvidia reportedly |
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won't be releasing the RTX 50 Series until at least 2025, |
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and they tend to pair their gaming launches alongside big industry events. |
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Fellow leaker, MegasizeGPU, has also revealed images |
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of Nvidia's retail branding inserts for the series, |
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and apparently Nvidia has changed the stylized typeface |
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of the old Super logo with the same boring sans-serif font it uses for literally everything else. |
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Why can't at least the word Super be Super? |
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Only the prices, I guess. |
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The driving app Waze has launched a new safety feature |
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called Crash History Alerts. |
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Basically, using AI and reports from the app's community, |
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Waze will alert drivers if the road they're about to turn onto is prone to accidents. |
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However, the notifications are light on detail |
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so as not to distract drivers. |
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They won't tell you if the crashes are major versus minor, |
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or if they involved cars, pedestrians, and or cyclists. |
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Hypothetically, |
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you won't know if there's been a daily crash at an intersection for the last year, |
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or if a single car knocked over an entire bike race. |
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I said I'm sorry, okay? |
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I can still hear the squeals of all those men's Lycra rubbing together. |
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A team of researchers from the Universities of California and Sydney |
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have developed an artificial brain from a network of randomly arranged silver nanowires. |
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Dr. Frankenstein et al. |
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It's alive and strangely antibacterial. |
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Its structure pattern changes predictably with electrical stimulus |
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and can maintain that pattern when the stimulus is removed, |
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meaning the network can learn dynamically and more efficiently than traditional AI training |
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all in real time. |
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In the near future, these silver networks could become more popular than GPUs, |
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and maybe even grills. |
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What, you've got silver on your teeth? |
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I've got it in my brain, bro. |
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And a software engineer used an AI-powered service to apply for 5,000 jobs, |
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leading your mother to ask, |
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what's your excuse? |
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I hate you! |
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She's still possessed. |
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As Wired explains, the software engineer in question |
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used a service called JobGPT |
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from the accurately named Lazy Apply |
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and landed around 20 interviews out of the 5,000 applications, |
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compared to the other 20 interviews he got after manually applying to 200 to 300 jobs. |
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40 interviews and still unemployed. |
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I'm not sure the amount of applications is the problem. |
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Some recruiters quoted in the article are okay with the applicants using AI tools, |
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but others likened it to asking out every woman in the bar |
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regardless of who they are, |
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which is apparently a bad thing. |
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Oh, well, |
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sorry for being too nice, |
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my lady. |
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And it'd be nice if all you came back on Friday |
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for more tech news, no matter who you are, |
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unless you're Jeffrey Gardner from middle school. |
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F*** you, Jeff. |
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