Episode Transcript
Mercedes lets you take video calls in your car.
Nest and Peacock are raising prices, Apple launches an emoji puzzle game.
Plus your tech questions answered.
What's going on?
I'm Rich Demiro and this is Rich on Tech.
This is the show where I talk about the tech stuff I think you should know about.
It's also the place right I answer your questions about technology.
I believe that tech should be interesting, useful, and fun.
Let's open up those phone lines at triple eight Rich one oh one.
That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one.
Give me a call if you have a question about technology.
Email is also open.
Just go to Rich on tech dot tv and hit contact Rich on tech dot TV hit contact there.
You can also find uh all the stuff I talk about on the show as well in the notes.
Guests.
This week we've we've got Adrian Ludwig, chief architect at Tools for Humanity.
They're gonna explain how World Network is building a more private and secure way to prove that you are human online and why that matters.
Then later in the show, we've got Logan Seacrest, fellow at the r.
Street Institute to discuss how AI is being used in police body cameras.
Well.
I hope you're having a fantastic weekend.
We are well into the summer, the kids are off from school.
In fact, I've got them right here with me, my kids joining me in the studio.
I guess they can't really say high because they're not can you say high?
Speaker 2Or the hello?
Speaker 1Oh there you go?
Okay, we've got Parker.
Go ahead, Tanner.
We've got Parker and Tanner in the studio.
Very exciting.
Tanner is actually in charge of this week's playlist, so direct all comments about the songs to him.
This week, I've been testing Samsung's new foldable phones, so I've been playing with the Flip seven and the Fold seven.
I also tried my first ever Wiener Schnitzel.
If you've ever heard of that.
It's a Southern California I guess they started in Southern California chain hot dog chain, and I did try the chili cheese dog there, and well there was a reason for it.
They're using AI at the drive through.
So that's why I was there, not just because I'm telling you that.
I also shot that on the Fold seven so you can see that picture.
I posted that picture to my Facebook not knowing you know, what people would think about it, and the thing like goes viral.
It's like just a hot dog.
Who would have thought.
Also, this week, I've been playing a lot with Gemini because Gemini is built into the Samsung phones.
So I will tell you I am very impressed with Gemini.
There is a lot that that AI can do, especially because of the Google integration.
But I will tell you at one point I did try to replace my old favorite CHATCHBT with Gemini for everything, and I'll be honest, I couldn't.
Chatchibt still feels faster and more intuitive, like just feels like a superhuman companion to me, whereas Gemini really shines with like tech, current news, and also pulling from your Gmail, your calendar, your drive, all of your Google services.
And I'll get into why that's so important in a moment.
But then my thoughts on these foldables from Samsung, so number one, the fold seven, like I said earlier, finally has a usable front screen, very practical.
But here's the thing.
I'm using this phone which opens up like a book, and it's great, but I just don't understand why I need a tablet in my pocket at all times.
Maybe I just don't have the use case scenario.
I love to read things on my phone.
I like to watch videos on my phone, But I'm not sure why I need to carry a phone that is not as good as a standard phone at all times.
Just for those couple of times when I need a tablet, I'd rather just carry a tablet.
Now, the Flip seven, this is the one that opens up like a clamshell, I will tell you is much more appealing.
And why because you can use the rear cameras for all of your photos and videos.
What does that mean?
You're always taking your photos and videos, including your selfies, with the best cameras on that device, because you can use the front screen as a monitor.
So right now we record the first ten minutes of the show to be played on KTLA plus, the streaming app, And right now I can actually see myself I'm waving in the front screen of the Flip seven, which is really cool, and so that makes it actually very useful.
It's perfect for content creators.
But here's my question.
Would that be enough for the average iPhone user to switch?
I'm not sure I'm just giving you a grab bag this morning.
You're getting a whole bunch of stuff.
I also watched a movie on Prime called Heads of State, which I started on my way back from London, and I finished it last night, and I got to tell you, if you have Prime Video, fun action packed way better than I expected.
And I got to say, Prime Video might be my favorite streaming service right now, just because I can load it up on as many apps and devices that I'm testing and it doesn't say sorry, you can't watch stuff like Netflix.
I don't even install my devices anymore because too many people in my family are using it and so I, the one who pays for it, can't use it.
Also, ironically, when I was in London, they had Marine one on the waterfront there and that was a promo for the Heads of State film, So I never even heard of it until I saw that, and that's what made me watch it all right.
So this week I got very obsessed with this idea of building an AI powered notebook, and because I was using Gemini, because I had Gemini on my wrist with the Samsung Watch, I was like, I wonder if I can capture ideas quote gift ideas, the funny things my kids say all in this notebook that could be searchable later, and I figured out through the magic of Gemini and Google Keep, you can do this and it's basically free.
So think about this.
You're out and about.
You want your phone to remember something, you want this notebook to remember something.
All you have to do is say to Gemini, you know, hey, Google, take a note that my locker code is twelve twenty five thirty two, and it will make a note in Google Keep and remember that.
And then later all you have to do is say, you know, hey Gemini or hey Google, check my notes for my locker code, and it will go into those notes and search and read it back to you and say, here's your locker code.
Now, think about the powerful nature of that.
You can use that to build a basically a memory system for anything that you're coming across in your week.
And I'm sure you probably already email yourself little notes or write down little notes in your phone, but to have it all voice activated is very powerful.
And the fact that it's AI makes it very useful because it doesn't have to be the perfect syntax like most of us with voice commands in the past, you had to know how to use them.
And with this, because it's AI, it can really understand and a whole lot of things.
So, for instance, I've got notes about people that I meet right like, I might say, remember that this person's name or this person's spouse's name is, you know whatever.
Remember that their kids are four and seven and one of them goes to this school and one of them likes this.
Oh, remember that I want to get a gift for that person for Christmas, and it's going to be this.
And so you can ask Gemini later, Hey, tell me everything I know about that person and say the person's name, and it will give you a synopsis of everything that you've put in your notes.
Now, I've done this with my kids with the little funny things they say.
And so I've got all these little quotes throughout the years that my kids have said, and I could just ask jem and I hate Gemini check my notes and tell me some of the funny things my kids have said over the years, and it will just rattle off a bunch of those things.
So again, this works with Google Calendar, Gmail photos, drive tasks, and the trick is if you okay, So here's the thing I've realized about this whole system with the AI, AI is always going to default to sort of like the whole world at large.
Like if you said, you know, what's the capital of Utah, it would just search the web and find that for you, or search it knowledge base.
But if you wanted your personal data, you have to preface it with check my calendar for when I'm going to Utah, or check my Gmail for information I have gotten about Utah, or check my photos for the best picture I've taken in Utah.
That's how you get it to look into your data.
It's a very important differentiation because if you just say what's my locker code, Gemini is not going to know.
You have to say, check my notes for my locker code.
And that's really the trick.
So my homework for you is to start adding a few notes to Google Keep, gift ideas, favorite places you've been, whatever you want, and then just start getting into the habit of asking Gemini to retrieve that information or see And by the way, you can paste information into Google Keep as well.
You don't have to use your voice to save it all.
You can actually go on on your computer.
Like the other day, I just dumped a whole bunch of notes into there so that I can retrieve them later.
And this is I feel like this is really powerful.
It kind of reminds me of what Apple promised us with Siri, because when Siri, the AI version of Siri, was supposed to come out this Apple Intelligence, Apple on stage promised us the ability to search in our email, to search in our calendar, to search in our notes, to use all of that rich data that's on our iPhone and have it at our fingertips, all indexed and searchable and available through AI.
That never came to fruition on the iPhone, and Apple has admitted that it's been tougher than they thought to do this, and it's probably going to be delayed in the next year or so.
But you can have this right now.
And so I'm just telling you Gemini plus all the Google stuff that you're already using.
And by the way, this works on the iPhone, this works on Android.
This is platform agnostic.
It's a little bit easier to access on Android because your power button calls up Gemini instantly, but on the iPhone, you can activate Gemini through the app, through a widget, or through the action button.
As well, so really really cool system.
I am loving it, and I feel like I am a little bit more superhuman because of what I've created here, and I'm just gonna keep this going.
All right, Let's take some of your calls eight eight eight rich one oh one eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one.
That's the phone line that'll get you into Kim.
We've got Parker, We've got Tanner, We've got Bobo.
We've got a full house here in the rich On Tech Studio, and we'll have some of your calls coming up next.
Welcome back to rich On Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology at triple eight rich one oh one.
That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one one.
You ever start watching a movie and just like can care less about it?
This has happened to me, Like last night, sit down, I watch this movie called Drop.
It's like it's literally a movie about air drop, like murdering someone like through air drop.
Like what I don't know.
I mean, maybe I should have given it more time, but I it's like when you're like forty minutes into a movie and you don't care about the people in the movie.
You don't care what happens in the movie.
It's like, you gotta give up on the movie.
I don't know how this is the number one movie right now on streaming.
I'm convinced that people stream whatever's on that top ten list, no matter how bad it is.
Although this does get eighty four percent of Rotten Tomatoes, so maybe I have to give it another chance.
But the whole movie takes place in one place and this girl is getting like air drops that are like threatening her life, and it's like, come on, really, it just it was so unrealistic there.
It's just I don't know.
I really I couldn't get into it.
But if you like it, let me know you can.
You can challenge me on the website.
Rich on Tech TV.
All right, let's go to our first caller line one, Tanner Brian.
You're on with Rich.
Speaker 3Hey, Rich, nice to hear you same.
Speaker 1What can I help you with?
Speaker 3I have Okay, let me give you a little background.
I have an iPhone sixteen E okay, and I have a new Abama phone.
The company is called Max West.
Speaker 4Okay, I cannot transfer.
Speaker 3I was able to transfer some of my information from the the iPhone to this phone.
But it won't do any photos.
I'm gonna lose my photos.
Speaker 1Okay, So you're trying to get the photos from the iPhone to this This is an Android phone, I'm guessing right.
Speaker 3Okay, yeah, it's a it's a newer version of the Obama phone.
Speaker 1Okay, what did you have a model number on it?
I'm just curious, shoot a model?
No it doesn't, I mean it doesn't.
I'm just curious.
I looked up the website Max West.
Okay, Max West.
It's the first I'm hearing of this brand.
Well, there are many How many pictures do you have on the iPhone that you want to transfer?
Speaker 2Like literally like ten?
Speaker 1Oh?
Okay, super super easy.
Can you install apps on the Max West Yes?
Speaker 4I can.
Speaker 1Okay.
So the app that you want to get is called Local Send l O C A L S E N D and Mobile Mobile Scent Local Send o Local okay, Local Scent.
And it works across everything.
It'll work on the iPhone, it'll work on Android, it'll work on your Mac computer, it'll work on Windows, it'll work on Linux if you like Linux.
Okay.
And basically, you install this app on your iPhone and you install it on the Android, you open it up.
As long as they are on the same Wi Fi network, they will find each other and you can transfer.
Speaker 3Yeah, that's how I did it.
Actually, I was able to link up.
I'm here in Brea, so I was able to link my phones up at the Bran mall.
Speaker 5Okay, but for some reason it just.
Speaker 3Didn't want to it didn't want to download the photos.
So you said it's called wet again.
Speaker 1Local send is the is the app local okay, localsend dot org.
Now, if you don't want to use local send, there's another way you can do it.
Uh, there's if you don't want to download software.
If that's too complicated, you can go to what's called pair drop P A I R D R O P pair drop dot net and that does not require a software download, same exact thing.
And so it's it's funny that I mentioned air drop and that movie drop, because that's basically what I'm talking about here.
These are all just versions of air drop that work across devices.
The big trick is that the devices have to be on the same network for them to work.
So the way that air drop and why that's so convenient on the iPhone is that it basically creates what's called an ad hawk network between those two phones, so every single iPhone that's near every other iPhone in the world can talk to each other without a cellular network.
And so what they do is they say, Oh, I see another iPhone over there, do you want to connect directly to that phone.
That's really what airdrop is doing.
And the way it's sort of parsing through those other phones is that you know, nowadays you have to be connected to that other phone.
It used to be a lot easier to sort of air drop other people.
That's why they change that setting.
If you go into your air drop settings, you'll notice that now it says everyone for ten minutes, whereas it used to just say everyone because people would get on an airplane and they would air drop random people, pictures and things like that, which I've done in the past just to be funny.
But now I wouldn't do that because too many security issues with that.
They've stopped.
They've like they've like turned planes around because of that antics.
You can't do that anymore.
But anyway, so these these apps they kind of do the same thing, except the problem is inherently iPhones do not speak to androids ad hoc So that means that iPhone may be able to see that there's an Android nearby, and Android can certainly see that there's an iPhone nearby, but there's not a good protocol for those two phones to connect and link up the way air drop does between iPhones.
Now, on Android, there is something called quick Share and that is the same exact thing as air drop, but that is just for androids.
So any Android can also connect to another Android without any additional software, with something called quick Share, and that is built into every modern Android phone.
The thing is, and I'll be honest, this is an Apple issue.
Apple does not want to open up air drop to androids.
Whereas Android would gladly open up quick Share to iPhone, Apple does not allow that.
That's really what's going on here is that Apple is very proprietary with their air drop system and they do not want to open it up, nor do they want to make it easy for androids to send things to the iPhone.
So that's how those two apps will get around it.
You gotta be on the same Wi Fi network local send and pair drop.
Check them out, all right?
Coming up, where ring cameras really hacked.
I'll explain what's going on there, plus more of your calls at eight eight eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one.
This is rich on Tech.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you talking technology at triple eight rich one oh one eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one, the website rich on Tech dot TV.
Hope you're having a great day.
I am getting into the summer here.
Summer's like halfway through, which I can't believe.
So one thing I love about you, know, being on TV, being on the radio, is that you are my eyes and ears.
Now I cover a lot of stuff.
I track a lot of stuff, but I can't see everything in real time all the time.
And that's where you come in.
And so when something happens, when there is something that's bubbling up, I call it a text message scam that's new, a viral video about something in the tech world, an email that people are getting.
When a lot of people get that, they turn to me and they forward that information to me or they message me and say, hey, rich what's the deal with this?
And sometimes it's really tough because I'm getting it so early that there's nothing about it.
So you can't search Google News for the information, you can't go anywhere for the information.
It's something that's brand new, and so I have to use my spidy sense to kind of just search it and figure it out and say, Okay, what's going on here.
I've gotten five emails about this.
Clearly this is happening to a lot of people.
Well, that's what happened the other day.
I woke up to a bunch of people saying, Rich, what's the deal with Ring being hacked?
Ring was hacked on May twenty eighth, and if you log into your account, you can see that a whole bunch of people logged in to these various accounts.
I said, wait, what that sounds a little weird.
And the reason it sounded weird because Ring has had two factor authentication now for four years.
They did have an issue many years ago where people were able to get into cameras because people were not setting very good passwords.
And so when your password is password one, two, three, guess what, the hackers are going to figure that out pretty quickly.
And so there was kind of a rash of nationwide people not necessarily scam artists, but they were just kind of having fun with people with their Ring cameras.
You know, they'd log in and they would talk to the people in their houses, and of course they could access things.
And so Ring tracked it down.
They said, these aren't really hacks per se, but people are just using really bad passwords that people are guessing or they're sharing them, or they're the same password online, and so people were using those to log in.
So Ring said, you know what, from here on out, everyone must have two factor authentication.
And if you're familiar with what that is, that means when you log into a website, it doesn't just log you in.
It says, okay, we've texted you a code or you've emailed you a code.
Now you have to enter that.
And so Ring made that the default, and that cracked down on all of that stuff because now the hacker would have to have your your silly password and access to your email, your text.
Well anyway, so that was in the back of my mind.
But this TikTok user and this you know, these things always start on TikTok.
Somehow, all the best reporters in the world are some random person talking to their phone in their basement on TikTok.
And that gets that gets spread.
This video had millions of views.
It was some person that was like, look, go to your Ring account, check your logins, check your authorized devices.
If you see a May twenty eighth login, someone's been watching your videos.
Now come on.
I was like, give me a break, but we'll hear her out.
And she also said she got weird creepy texts after people were watching her private conversations on her Ring camera.
That part I couldn't figure out.
I don't know where that came from.
But if you log into your Ring account and you go under the authorized devices, and you could probably try this.
If you open up your Ring app, go to the left hand side.
You've got those three lines that's your menu.
Tap that go to control center.
Oh, I tapped the wrong thing.
I tapped account settings.
Now I can't go back.
Okay, tap the three lines, tap control center, and then you'll see something that says authorized devices.
Okay, authorized client devices.
If I tap there, I've got a whole bunch of devices that seemingly logged in on May twenty eighth, and iPhone seven plus logged in on May twenty eighth, twenty twenty five.
Now I have not used an iPhone seven in about let's say ten years.
So how did that log in?
On May twenty eight, twenty twenty five.
So if you're just a regular person seeing that, after you watch the TikTok video, you go, oh, my gosh, Ring was hack.
Someone got into my account.
Okay, So what I did?
Instead of just spreading this information and you know, making everyone one scared about it, I emailed my contact at RING and I said, hey, can you give me the information about this?
Can you give me what's going on here?
And sure enough they got back to me within a couple hours and they said, here's the deal, and here is their statement.
We are aware of a bug that resulted in prior login dates for client devices to be incorrectly displayed as May twenty eighth, twenty twenty five, and device names to be incorrectly displayed as device name not found.
This was a result of a back end update not caused by unauthorized access to customer accounts.
So basically, the bug made old logins look new, confusing users into thinking they were hacked.
Okay, you can rest easy, but of course this is the Internet, and what do you think happens?
The conspiracy theorists start to chime in and say, oh, come on, Rich Ring is just covering this up.
If you think that millions of Ring cameras are being watched by someone right now, it's just not happening.
It's just not like this is This is a huge company with millions of people as customers.
Someone would to figure this out if this was really happening.
So my point is in all this, when you see stuff online that just seems crazy and outlandish, of course you should think about it and process it, but also think about the realistic nature of it.
Let me give you another example before I get to my conclusion on this.
I was, you know, I don't really scroll through a lot of TikTok, but sometimes I do.
It just angers me because it's just it's all so much nonsense and misinformation about especially tech things one privacy control you should really change.
And it's just like they're giving you these un based facts or you know, speculation and things that they want you to do without any actual knowledge.
Like when I tell you to change a setting, I give you the reason why.
I don't just say, oh, this looks like a bad setting on your phone, change it without explaining the why.
So one time I was scrolling through and there was a whole bunch of videos about how if you cut open an iPhone box there was a secret case for your iPhone in that box.
Now, I have been getting iPhone for the past, you know, since day one, two thousand and seven.
I don't remember there ever being a case included in the iPhone.
Now some manufacturers do actually include a case.
So what did I do After scrolling through about fifteen of these videos and seeing fifteen people open up an iPhone case with an Exacto knife and finding a plastic case in there, plastic you know, protector in there.
I went and got an old iPhone case out of my closet and I said, let me see what's happening here.
And I took an Exacto knife and I cut it open.
And I was sitting there laughing to myself, going, Rich this is this is not true.
I know this is not true, but maybe it is.
There is a little space inside the iPhone box that feels like it could have something in there, and I opened it up and sure enough, nothing in there.
So what were these people doing on TikTok?
They were literally making this up, like faking it and I just laughed and I said, Okay, this is why you can't believe anything you see anymore.
So anyway, my solution with this Ring stuff, it does seem to be a bug unless someone comes out and proves that it's not.
But I would say, you can go into your Ring Control center the list of authorized client devices, and you can go through and delete all the old devices that have access to your account, like if you've given you know, if you've changed phones, if you've switched logins, if you have a friend or family member that you gave access to, you can just delete those.
Now.
For me, as a tech reporter that has been covering phones for the past fifteen years, guess how many phones I have logged into my Ring account.
Probably over one hundred maybe more.
And so I started going through deleting some of these and it's just it just ten more pop up.
It's like a game of whack themle for me.
So that's just not going to happen.
But anyway, I made a video about this at rich on Tech on Instagram, you can check it out.
In fact, I made the video because of the Flip seven, because it's so easy to do videos on that phone and again, I was talking about the benefits of the foldable.
There has to be a benefit to a foldable phone for me to want to use it.
Now, the Flip seven, that is an actual benefit where because you can use those front facing cameras, doing a little video like that is super easy.
You're not using the selfie camera.
It's like the best camera.
So again, that is what I like about it.
Speaking of foldable phones, Google announced this week that they're made by Google Hardware.
Event has a date August twentieth in New York City.
They will stream it on YouTube.
The funny thing about this event is that it's at the very similar place to where Samsung just held their event in Brooklyn.
I don't know how that happened, but kind of weird.
So what are we gonna see there?
Pixel ten phones, maybe a new pixel watch, maybe new Pixel buds.
The Pixel ten pro fold might be their first dust resistant foldable.
So right now, these foldable phones, the Samsung's just got dust resistance.
The Pixel nine Pro fold did not, so hopefully it'll get dust resistance.
Let's see what else is interesting here.
You know, obviously there's gonna be the standard upgrades to the processor and the cameras pricing, there's leaked pricing.
I hate to get into that because who knows that will change Pixel four, the watch is expected to have a bigger battery, and what else.
I think that's about it for I mean, there's at this point there's not too many surprises at these events anymore, which is really sad.
There used to always be a surprise at these events.
But now, because of the leaks and because of you know, the iterative changes on all these smartphones, they've gotten to a place where they're already so good.
Nobody's sitting there waiting with baited breath saying, oh am, I gonna upgrade because of this change.
No, they're gonna upgrade when their phone breaks, or when their contract is up, or when they have the money to upgrade.
So it's become really tough for these phone makers to give us a reason to upgrade.
Apple tried with the whole you know AI stuff that didn't really work.
Google there goes, you know, the back catalog is so far that you don't really need to upgrade to get the AI on that stuff.
And then Samsung, I will give credit.
They do.
They do try a bunch of stuff to see what sticks all right eighty to eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one.
The website for the show rich on Tech dot TV.
Let's see coming up what I want to talk about here, Oh, Nest is raising prices and so is Peacock.
I'll give you details on that right here.
I'm rich on Tech.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology at triple eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one ero one.
Let's go to uh Herb and San Diego Herb, you're on with Rich.
Speaker 6Yeah, Rich, I have an older house and the wire for thee the telephone is the old fashioned uh telephone wires, and I it to get my home phone through the internet.
And now uh, the wiring has quit again.
And the phone company doesn't want to go up in Miami and try to do all that, so.
Speaker 7They have a deal where you put a cell phone next to your answering machine, and when somebody calls the cell phone answers it's a cellular cellular call anyway, and it talks through.
Speaker 6A to the answer machine through Bluetooth, and so the answer machine functions and I'm having a lot of problem with doing that, and I wonder if you know anything about that.
Somebody talked about an anthing machine that had the tip that allows it to be a straight cell phone answering machine.
Do you know anything about that?
Speaker 1I I'm a little confused.
So I'm trying to tell me what you're trying to do and maybe I can come up with a solution.
Speaker 6So you're trying to sorry, go ahead, Yeah.
Speaker 1So you have a you have a landline phone line, but it's now it's now voiceover IP, which means is coming through what your cable company or your phone company.
Speaker 6It was coming through the phone company, through the the internet.
Speaker 1Got my internet and what's the phone company?
I'm sorry, who's who's the provider?
Speaker 6Uh at?
Speaker 1Okay?
So they gave you a box that basically plugs into your internet connection and that provides you a phone line.
Is that right?
Speaker 6That's what That's what it was.
Now that has quit because part of.
Speaker 7It was old wiring to where the answering machine plugged into the ball.
Speaker 1And so you're trying to just have a landline with an answering machine.
Speaker 6I figure that's what I wanted as an answering machine.
Speaker 1And and and their system.
Their phone number that they give you doesn't include voicemail.
Speaker 6You know, I number got to that, but.
Speaker 2I don't know.
Speaker 1Okay, So what I would do is I would get in touch with AT and T.
I think that this phone line has built in voicemail.
I don't think you need an external machine to take a call anymore.
I think that this phone line should have voicemail built into it.
And that means that you will just basically pick up this phone line and somehow either press the number one, hold down the number one, and that should dial the voicemail that's built into this line.
If it's a standard AT and T, they call it VoIP, do they do?
They throw that out their voiceover IP.
Speaker 5Not really.
Speaker 1They might just call it a you know, digital, They might call it digital home phone service.
It looks like that.
But I'm looking at it.
Okay, I'm looking at this here.
Okay.
Twenty five features in yeah, okay, twenty five features including voicemail, caller ID call waiting, call forwarding, three way calling, call blocking, unlimited long distance in the US, Mexico, Canada, Digital phone call protect compatible with most alarm meta occult monitoring, and teletypewriter devices.
So I think that if I were you, how much you paying for this a month?
Speaker 6Well let's combine with my TV and everything else.
But I'm not sure it's about eighty bucks.
Speaker 1I think eighty bucks.
Okay, So what I would do is okay, so calling features.
So I'm looking at these calling features here.
There is a way to dial dial the voicemail on here.
Yeah, period is voicemail.
So voicemail, set up an info I'm looking at that set up voicemail for landline home phone.
Oh wow, there's even an app you can get.
Do you have a smartphone?
Yeah, okay, so look at that.
You can even you can even download an app to your smartphone that will that will give you access to your voicemail.
So how cool is that.
It's called the AT and T Voicemail Viewer app.
And so if you want to set up your voicemail number, one, let's see here dial Star nine to eight.
So on your phone you dial Star nine eight.
That will help you set up your voicemail and then you can listen to your voicemail by pressing Yeah, this Star nine eight will access your voicemail.
And then I would also download that app which is again called AT and T voicemail to text unified messaging.
But Herb, I think that it's funny when we think about these things, you know, these these systems.
Sometimes we have a frame of reference of the standard or the kind of previous way of doing things, and sometimes we don't even think about the fact that there's a new way to do things.
And so this line that you have ninety nine point nine percent sure has voicemail built in, you don't even need that answering machine at all.
And so I will put a link to this support article on my website rich on tech dot TV in the show notes this is episode let me see here.
I think it's one hundred and thirty.
So if you just go right to the website rich on tech TV, I'll have this link up here.
In a couple of minutes, set up that voicemail and download that app to your phone, and I think you'll be able to bring that answering machine to Goodwill and maybe someone else needs that.
But I remember, I mean the old days of answering machines.
Remember you'd be in the house, you can literally and thanks for the call, or appreciate that literally back in the day, do you remember, you would screen your calls by having the person leave a message.
There would be a tiny micro cassette in your answering machine.
You know, you'd everyone be in the house, the phone would ring, everyone freezes, and you'd all look at the answering machine and you'd wait for it to pick up, and you'd wait to see who this person was.
This was before call or ID.
This was the funny thing is before we started ignoring calls, we used to actually answer calls and give people excuses why we couldn't talk.
Like my parents would make me answer the phone.
And for every business person that ever called my dad sorry to put you on blast, Dad, it would always be like, oh, I'm sorry, he's in the shower.
I'm sorry, he's not like they would literally be like this, like they'd be looking at it and be like, do not, I am not here right now, like you'd be they'd be making this motion.
And nowadays, it's just it's just when you think about this stuff, it is so wild how far we've come.
Now we just ignore people.
Now we just literally don't answer the phone.
But back in the day, you'd pick up, you'd be like, oh, I'm sorry, you'd be looking at your mom.
I'm sorry, my mom is not available.
She's just not here right now.
My mom says she's not here.
My mom says she's not here, right You remember this, Bobo, I mean, of course not doing it.
Yeah, I mean this is just funny.
We take for granted how much has changed.
But anyway, bottom line, Oh yeah, people, Oh yeah, so many things, all right to eighty eight rich one O one eighty eight seven four to two four one ero one.
More rich on Tech coming your way right after this.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology at triple eight rich one oh one eight eight eight seven four two four one ero one.
Hop on the line.
If you have a question about technology, phone lines are open eight eight eight rich one oh one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
The website for the show is rich on Tech dot tv.
There you can get show notes to everything I mentioned, and if you want to follow me on social media at rich on Tech.
At rich on Tech is where you can find me there.
Uh in is family day here in the studio.
I've got my kids with me.
Parker Logan, Parker's here, Tanner.
Speaker 8Hello, park I mean Tanner here, So do.
Speaker 1You guys get to play with a lot of tech at home or what?
Speaker 9Yeah?
Speaker 10But I also like playing outside, but I haven't lately that much because I'm recovering from a toe injury.
Speaker 11But now it's over, so now I should go.
Speaker 1Back a toe injury.
What he like?
What is he like in the NBA and recovering from a toe injury?
Uh huh?
Speaker 8Okay, Tanner, I mean, I'm just gonna be serious mostly on my iPad, but I do like going outside and playing on my shoo.
Speaker 1I think my kids feel guilty about theirs.
Speaker 11I don't feel guilty.
Speaker 1That is funny, my kid Actually, Tanner downloaded one of the apps we talked about on the show.
A long time ago.
We interviewed the creator of an app called be Present, and it's like, basically this app that forces you to take a break from your iPad.
Tell me how you've used it.
It's like there's something called beast mode.
What happens when you turn on beast mode?
Speaker 8All right, So there's a pro in normal mode, and the beast mode makes it so you can't turn off a blocking session, so you can start a blocking session, and with normal you can always end it, and it blocks all of your apps, and it shows you your screen time.
And if you have pro mode, you can turn on beast Mode when you're about to start a blocking session, which will make well which will still block everything, but you can't turn it off.
Speaker 1You can't stop it.
I love it like this, So now I just say to my kid, I go, hey, why don't you start like an hour of beast Mode?
And he's like he pressed it, like he thinks it's a challenge.
So if you're struggling with your screen time, check out that be present app, and definitely the beast Mode, because you can't stop it.
Once you put it on, You're not able to stop the hour or whatever you set as your time.
Speaker 12So I just want to say, I wish everybody here can see the glowing on your face as your kids sit here and talk about tech.
I haven't seen you smile so hard the entire time we've worked together.
I just get such why I've always see you smile.
Boba has a great smile.
Speaker 1I always, you know, It's like seeing your kids, you know, come up in this world and kind of become their own people is really interesting.
There's only so much you can do, Like, there's only so much you can do.
You you have to guide them.
I tell them, I said, look, I can't do everything for you in the future, Like I'm giving you this base knowledge and these base skills and also the base kind of like way I think you should conduct yourselves.
Yeah, but at the end of the day, ninety nine point nine percent of decisions you make as an adult are solo.
Like you're not calling your parents and asking them.
Speaker 12I know, yeah, forget, little Bobo will be twenty one and October twin baby No, no, baby Bobo is here the next month, So I'm starting all the wait next month, I mean after number six.
Speaker 1Yeah, I didn't.
I didn't, Okay, I didn't know if I if the date was public.
No, day's public November six.
You already have a little a little website for a link tree for she already did.
Speaker 12She had the baby has an email, So does it really Brittany already made the baby email and has a registry and all the Oh my gosh, yeah, he's excited.
Speaker 1My kids had an email right right at birth.
Although I will tell you the second second kid syndrome Parker.
We signed up for freaking flyer account the day he was born, because he flew within like two weeks.
I think it was four.
I think you had to be four.
Tanner.
He's going on eleven and still no freaking flyer account, even though he's filling so many times in me.
But that's called the second kid.
You'll know what that means in the future.
Got a sign him up.
Yeah, So here's the deal.
I get a lot of emails from you.
You go to the website, you email me.
It's all day long.
And yes, I replied to a lot of them.
I don't get to every one of them, so sometimes I read them on the show.
Sometimes I don't.
Sometimes the combination.
But it's funny because every email I get.
Now, I've done technology for a long time, and so to me, I've got this knowledge base of information just bouncing around in my head.
And when someone emails me and I'm like, wait a second, is this a joke?
Like am I missing something?
Like sometimes the simplest explanation is the right one.
But it's really tough as a tech person because you're like that just seems too easy.
So, for instance, Darren wrote in and say, hey, Rich big fan and watcher slash listener, I volunteer for a nonprofit, and we're mentoring children in Uganda via Zoom.
The challenge is that English is their second language.
They speak softly, and they don't always speak directly into the mic, so it could be hard to understand them.
Is there any tech that could transcribe what they're saying in real time, like subtitles just English to English.
That would be amazing and really help us continue our our mission mentoring kids in Africa, Mexico, Iran, and here in the US.
And I wrote back, and I said, what about just live transcription that's built into Zoom.
It literally just listens to what you're saying and transcribes what the person's saying.
And English to English is super easy.
Of course you can probably have it in other languages.
That's like what AI has enabled on all these video chat apps, is you know, live translation in real time.
And I just got a reply from Darren.
He said, Rich, that's amazing.
I never even knew that existed.
You should let your listeners know about this feature.
I'm listening to the show.
Awesome as always, I mean, super simple solution, but it's like I'm sitting there racking my brain, going this can't be like, maybe am I missing something?
Does he want to do something?
And I don't understand, but it just sounds like he just wants live transcriptions, which is something that's built into oom.
Anyway, Should we take a call?
Do we have time to take a call?
You think?
Okay, let's go to Oh, Tanner wanted to touch the button here, I'll put the caller back on hold.
All right, go ahead, Tanner, let's go to Oh.
Now we just now I think we just hung up on them.
Are you there?
Okay?
Whoops?
We just me Oh, who's this?
Speaker 4This is Dave and Littleton?
Speaker 1Okay, Dave, I think you might have been on with Kim, but I guess we're just gonna take you live.
Who knows what?
Speaker 4Well, that's fine, No, Rich, you and I talked a while back on my Stubbornly Young podcast.
But I have a tech question for you.
Speaker 1Okay, wait, what podcasts do we talk on?
Speaker 4You were on Stubbornly Young?
Oh?
Speaker 1Yes, I remember this?
Yes you do that podcast?
Speaker 13Yeah?
Speaker 1Yeah?
Did anyone listen?
Speaker 2Oh?
Speaker 4I hope so I think so?
Yeah?
I mean there were downloads.
So yeah, good.
Speaker 1I like that.
I like to hear that.
I you know, I'm always like, Okay, people are going to care about what I have to say.
Anyway, what can I help you with, Dave, Yes, I do.
Speaker 4Excuse me, Rich, I've got about a four year old PC.
I don't do a lot on it.
Oh, I do a lot on it, but I don't require a lot of functionality.
But I do some audacity editing and some other things.
But anyway, it seems like it's full.
And I have gone back back and forth.
I've tried to, like I actually stripped it down to original mode and everything else.
But by the time I get all my apps loaded on it, I've got like a half the gig hard drive by the time I get everything up, and I know and by the time I get it going everything now when I look at it and Mike, you know, it says I've got like one percent left, one percent left.
So I was thinking about just replacing it.
But is there something I can do to clean that thing up?
Speaker 1Yes, I mean you can try and see if it helps.
But I mean, if you're this is this is what happens when I set up an Android phone that's only got one hundred and twenty eight gigabytes of storage.
By the time I get everything installed on there, it's got nothing left.
I'm like, well, I can't even use this thing.
So that's kind of what's happening to your computer.
How big is the hard drive on this thing?
Speaker 4Well, it's it's a half a gig I'm sorry, yeah, half a half a gig hard drive, but it's of course partitioned into the C and D drive.
Speaker 1Half a gig doesn't sound right, that would be right?
Speaker 4Oh fived?
Speaker 1Sorry, five to twelve path a terribiye five twelve okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, that's a decent amount.
Speaker 4It should be.
And and I actually restored it to factory settings once and about and everything was back up and running and wonderful.
And then about a month later by the time and I've deleted you know, stuff from cash, I've deleted stuff from download, but man, it just keeps catching up to me.
And I'm thinking it's probably just time to give up and get another one.
But am I wrong?
Speaker 1Well, is the computer still working?
Yeah, then there's no need to get so here's what we need to do.
Speaker 4I mean it chokes a lot.
Speaker 1Oh well, because it's probably the drive is so full that it doesn't really have a lot to work with there.
But here's what I would do.
Number one, the easiest thing is this a desktop or a laptop?
Speaker 4Desktop?
Desktop?
Speaker 1So well, okay, so super easy for if you still want to use this computer, you know, that's number one.
You have to decide you want to use it.
I would I would go through and try these programs like number one.
Disc clean Up is built into Windows.
Have you done that?
Speaker 4Done that?
Speaker 1What about Storage Sense?
Speaker 2Yep?
Speaker 6Done that?
Speaker 1Okay, Well then what about bleach bit?
Have you tried that one?
No bleach bleach bit like bleach like, you know, cleaning something, so bleach bit now, Dave, I think you're a little bit more advanced than the average person, it sounds like.
So this is not something that I would recommend.
This is not something i'd recommend for everyone to just install in their computer and run because you kind of have to know what you're doing a little bit.
But this can free up your cash, cookies, internet history, temporary fly files, all the junk that's on your system that you don't really need.
It can do.
And so that is probably the last ditch effort, is to try running this on your system, see if it finds anything that you can get rid of and if it doesn't, you know, then you might want to look into a new computer.
But before you get a new computer, you can also put all the files that you're using onto an extra in a hard drive and see if that helps, because I don't know how much is stored on your computer besides the actual apps and things like that, the programs that you want.
Speaker 4You know, it's I've done that everything.
I push all my files that are not software related onto the D drive and it's the C drive that is like choked, which is where you know, as you know, everything gets installed right right, So well, I don't want to mess with repartitioning and all that.
Speaker 1That's I guess I could.
I mean you could if you wanted to save this computer and just put it all into one.
But that that's what I'd recommend.
I try the bleach bet see if that can free up some space.
It sounds like you just don't really have much to work with on this computer once all of your standard programs that you're using are installed.
So it sounds like, you know, if you get a new computer, obviously you want to get something that has at least a terabyte of space.
At this point, at least sixteen gigs of memory and a good decent processor.
In fact, I always recommend when you go to Costco if you're a Costo member, to get what they have there.
And I was in Costco last weekend and I was looking at the computers.
They have Lenovo all in one twenty seven inch touchscreen for nine hundred dollars with an AMD rise in five sixteen gigs a RAM one terabyte drive.
It looks like it's built in graphics on that one.
Then they had another computer I saw six ninety nine for an HP desktop, thirty two gigs of storage arise in seven and a terabyte.
I mean, that's incredible for seven hundred bucks.
So that's where I'd recommend you look for those computers if you have a Costco membership.
But good to hear from you, Dave over there in Little Tin Glad.
We did the podcast and felt like yesterday, even though it was probably longer than that.
Coming up more of your calls.
Eighty to eight rich one O one eighty eight seven four to two four to one zero one.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich Demiro here hanging out with you talking technology at Triple eight.
Rich one O one eight eight eight seven four two four to one ero.
One couple of price price hikes to know about.
Number one nest Aware.
This is Google's subscription service for their cameras and doorbells.
They're increasing the price starting August fifteenth.
The standard plan nest Aware goes from ten dollars up goes to ten dollars a month up from eight, or one hundred dollars a year up from eighty.
Then nest Aware Plus goes to twenty dollars a month or two hundred dollars a year, up from fifteen or one hundred and fifty.
So all users are gonna get those price hikes starting with your first bill after August fifteenth.
Google says the hike is needed to keep up with market shifts, inflation, and local tax updates.
So yeah, we're seeing the prices go up on that.
It's kind of in line with what Ring charges for their cameras to monitor multiple cameras.
A lot of people don't realize, like the nest cameras are just live streaming and sort of the Ring cameras.
Basically, if you don't pay for these subscriptions, that save it in the cloud.
Peacock also raising prices Peacock Premium with ADS is going from eight dollars a month to eleven dollars a month starting July twenty third for new users August twenty second for existing users.
Peacock Premium Plus, which apparently has fewer ads, okay, goes from fourteen dollars a month to seventeen dollars a month.
So NBC says the price hike reflects that Peacock was quote underpriced compared to competitors.
And they are testing a select here for eight dollars a month, which just has a couple of things on there.
But here's the deal.
I've talked about this on this show.
Peacock is the sleeper streaming service because it's NBC Universal.
They get so many of the best movies.
I think that movie that I was talking about earlier Drop, I think that was on Peacock.
So actually I'm canceling, just kidding.
Let's go to Barbara in Oh my gosh, Okay, I keep pressing the wrong button here.
Okay, let's see if this is Barbara and passing a Barbara You're on with rich Hi.
Speaker 14First of all, it was a pleasure to talk with your son Tanner, who provided a wonderful apology.
What a pleasure, all right, and a pleasure to speak with you.
I'm currently I am book the US Mobile.
Should I buy a new phone before I transfer?
Or answer?
And if you have time to answer, I was Android before iPhone and use a MacBook primarily.
Is it crazy to go back to Android?
Speaker 1Okay, let me get that straight.
So you've got AT and T you're going to switch to US Mobile?
Is that right?
Speaker 4Correct?
Speaker 1Okay?
And you also have an Android, but you're thinking of going to an iPhone?
Speaker 4No.
Speaker 14I had an Android back in the day, okay, and then I moved to the iPhone family and need to upgrade from A twelve or I want to?
And is it crazy to go back to an aproid?
Speaker 1I don't think it's crazy at all.
I mean I love Android, so I would of course recommend that.
But it depends what you want out of your phone.
Are you a big I message person?
Speaker 9Like?
Speaker 1Do you love I message?
Speaker 14I love messaging.
I don't care who how I do it.
Speaker 1You're not like a green bubble snob?
Speaker 14No?
Speaker 1Okay?
Well, I mean, look there's there's two there, and it does work with your with your MacBook.
You said you have a MacBook.
So the iPhone does work really well with the MacBook.
So if you are transferring files or you like to text from your MacBook, those kind of things do work really nicely.
Or if you have a subscription to any of the Apple you know iCloud services, those all kind of work together.
They call it the halo effect.
So if you're if you're happy with your iPhone and you like the way it works, I would just upgrade to a new iPhone.
And unless you're a pro photographer, I think the iPhone sixteen E is an excellent upgrade for you.
And that's going to be about six hundred dollars.
You might be able to get it for a little bit cheaper, depending on if it goes on sale or any promotions.
US Mobile is excellent.
We're actually going to have the CEO of us Mobile on in an upcoming show.
I subscribe to US Mobile.
I really enjoy what they do.
How did you hear about them?
Speaker 14From you?
But also from Park Powers?
Speaker 1Oh okay, interesting, who's that?
Speaker 7Now?
Speaker 1It's kidding?
No, I love Clark Howard.
So yeah, US Mobile is really good.
And so you're trying to figure out if you should upgrade before you do the switch.
Speaker 14Yeah, should I buy the new phone first or should I switch first?
Speaker 1You know, I don't really think it matters.
I would actually, since you're doing you know, it's kind of like these big life changes, I would say I would do the switch first, get settled in, make sure everything works, and then upgrade your phone, and then you can switch the number easily to that new phone.
Speaker 14All right, that's donny.
Any particular I transferring to US Mobile.
Speaker 1M Well, you know, if you're on AT and T, they're gonna basically try to keep you on there, so you do have to get what's called a port out authorization number.
Usually are you are you logged into AT and T on your account and all that good stuff like do you know like how to access it online?
Oh, we got it, we gotta we gotta run.
But it should be pretty painless and they can walk you through their customer services.
Great.
Thanks for the call, Barbara.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you talking technology at Triple eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four two four one ero one.
The website rich on Tech dot TV show notes are live there there.
Uh, and now we've got a guest Adrian Ludwig, chief architect at Tools for Humanity, working with a World Network to build a private, insecure way to prove that you are human online and welcome to the show.
Speaker 15Thanks Rich, happy to be here.
Speaker 1This is fascinating to me.
So first off, explain what world.
So I was actually long story shorter or probably longer.
I was in South Korea when you guys originally launched like the first ORB.
I believe it was like there right where you like scan your irises or something.
Speaker 15So the ORB is a camera that takes a picture of your face in order to confirm that you are real human and give you a identity that you can use to connect to online services.
But yeah, I've also been to the ORB in South Korea.
Speaker 1Oh you have Okay, So I was there.
This was like I think it was two summers ago, and so I was like very like, this is really interesting.
This is really different.
So the World Network, Like, what are you building at world?
What does that mean exactly?
Speaker 15So a couple of almost a decade ago, the founding team Sam Altman and Alex Blania and a few others were beginning to think about what what the world would look like once AI became prevalent and capable, which we're now in that world where we're seeing very capable AI.
And one of the things they realized is there wasn't a way to differentiate real people from a capable AI on an online context.
And so world is a protocol to make it possible for any service to future proof its application in the future.
Speaker 1So the idea is, I go to this physical device, I get scanned as a human, It confirms it I'm a human, somehow saves some of my biometrics in its database.
And then when I'm online, let's say I sign up for a dating app, I would use that to let's say, like confirm that I am a human versus just a bot that's sitting there chatting with a whole bunch of people.
Speaker 15The way I think about it is it's a little bit like you go to the DMV and it takes a picture, it gives you a credential, which is your driver's license, and then you can go around and drive and use it whenever you want.
But if there's a need for you to present it in order to confirm that you are a licensed driver, you can do that.
Now it's very different because we don't need to keep any information at world, so it's quite different from other technologies in that regard.
We've built it from the ground up to think about privacy and make sure that the data is being held by the user.
Speaker 1But that's really what.
Speaker 15It's doing, is giving you what sometimes we'll call a passport for being able to access online services and do so in a private way.
Speaker 1Okay, So you've got these orbs set up in different places?
How many?
I mean, I know there's one in Los Angeles.
Where else are they?
I mean, you have to name every city if there's a whole bunch, But there's a whole bunch.
Speaker 15So we've got over fifteen hundred orbs that are currently in use around the world.
In the United States, we have a couple hundred Okay, listen, yep, the big ones San Francisco, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Austin, Texas, and we're continuing to expand.
We have a partnership with a company called Razor that has a large number of retail stores around the United States as well, and they're beginning to deploy orbs in their storefronts.
Speaker 1So you go in there, you get scanned, and then what.
Speaker 15Then you have a world ID and you can use that to connect to any service that wants to improve the quality of their application.
So you mentioned online dating.
Speaker 16We have a.
Speaker 15Partnership with the match group.
They make Hinder, and they're really concerned about making sure that people only build one dating profile and that the information that's presented there is reasonably accurate.
They have a little fledge here and there is fine, but reasonably accurate.
And so what World does is allow them to have a safer place for people to meet their match online.
In the gaming space, I mentioned Razor earlier, there's a big concern about bots being used to replace human gamers and that's just something that the gamers don't like and it makes it much less fun for everybody.
And so that's another area where there's a lot of interest in having confirmation that the people you're playing with are real humans.
Speaker 1Are shaking their heads saying, yeah, that is a big problem.
So it's like like if I'm playing Mario Kart and you know you've got all the like I mean, I know this is simple explanation, but like sometimes you want to play against you know, bots because they're just populating the screen.
But if you're in like a competitive gaming landscape.
You don't want these AI super gamers to have the advantage over the humans, So you can say only humans with this world ID are allowed into this game to play like this round.
Speaker 15Yep, you could do that.
You could have a tournament where you have to have a world ID.
There're a variety of different approaches that could be taken.
There was something that cracked me up just a couple of days ago.
I guess there's a movie coming out called The Odyssey.
Uh, And I got a posting saying that every ticket has been sold already for its opening, which is about a year from now.
And I was like, who, I hadn't even heard that this movie was coming out.
Who's bought all these tickets?
And then right after that I read, oh, I see scalpers buy the tickets, right so they know that this is going to be a big hit, so they buy the tickets literally the day they become available in a movie that has come out yet, and then they're going to try to resell them.
So that's another use case that people are pretty excited about.
Is a world ID allows you to say one person is allowed to buy a limited number of tickets, and that same person has to be the one who then goes to the movie.
Speaker 1Oh wait, that's huge, that's actually like really really interesting.
So with all these like Taylor Swift concerts, like the you know where there's such a problem with like in you know, just scalping and this and that you can have it where ticket master whoever selling the ticket says no, you have to have this ID.
And by the way, when you go to the door, it has to link up with you.
How would you confirm it's that person at the door.
Speaker 15Well, you actually don't need to know who the person is.
You just need to know that the person to whom the ticket was issued is the same one.
And that's that's one of the interesting things about our privacy model is our goal is not to have you say that you know, Adrian Ludwig went to this concert.
Our goal is to give you the same anonymity that you have for a transaction right now, where you walk up to a ticket booth, you pay cash, you get a ticket, and then you walk into the movie and nobody knows who it was.
But to be able to do that in a trustworthy way online and so that's what World gives you is you can have an anonymous transaction where you make a purchase and then that same person who performed that purchase is the one that has to present the ticket later and they can confirm that as you're going through the gate.
We're working on deploying that technology for a concert service and a ticket service in Korea right now actually, and we're open to conversations with anybody that wants to do it anywhere else in the world.
Speaker 1Wow, that's really fascinating.
So how many people have scanned yet and explained this scan because you said it was private and it's not necessarily or irish, like, explain what's getting scanned?
Speaker 15Yeah, so there are thirteen million people and they actually are people that have gone to an ORB around the world and been verified as human.
The way that that happens the ORB is I like to think of it as just a weird shaped camera.
It's about the size of a bowling ball.
It is a sphere and inside of it are a few different things.
There's several different cameras.
One that is taking a picture of the entire face, one that is taking a picture of the individual eye.
And when we're taking those pictures, the images are being taken in both visible light and in infrared light.
Infrared light is really interesting because it gives you the ability to see the sort of the bumps in a way that you can't see invisible light.
So the shape of your skin is very different in infrared light.
And similarly, the eye, while it looks very smooth in visible light, turns out to be very bumpy in infrared light.
And so what we're looking at is effectively the fingerprint of each of the two irises that is the front of your eye, and then using that to create a unique code, and then confirming that this person has never signed up previously.
And so once that's done, they now have a verified World ID and they can go use it with any service that wants to have a World ID.
Speaker 1Is World keeping a database of all these pictures or do they get deleted after they come up with the number or what?
Speaker 9Now?
Speaker 15The pictures are taken on the ORB, The ORB analyzes them to make sure that it's a real person.
If it is, then those pictures are actually given to the person of whom they're taken, right, so they're transferred to your phone and they're held on the user's phone.
World doesn't retain the images, doesn't have a reason to keep them, we confirm that they're unique, and then at that point the key the world idea that the user has registered is allowed to be used, but there's no need for World to retain any information.
That's one of the things that I think is most exciting is we've been focused on privacy from the very beginning, which is different for frankly, how most technologies are.
Speaker 1Like almost any any database is built on, you know, keeping that those identifying characteristics in a database that if it's hacked, it's like game over.
So I know this sounds funny and it's it's gonna sound silly, but like in the future, and I know that everyone's that's walking up.
All these thirteen million people that you've quote unquote verified, they've all been real humans.
But there is a time in the future when we may have walking robots that try to confirm themselves as human and trick the system.
I mean, I know it sounds silly, but is that Like, have you guys thought about that in the future, like this system can't be tricked.
Speaker 15It's definitely something we've thought about.
We've had people try to verify their dogs so far that hasn't been successful.
We are also aware that there are people who are trying to produce multiple identities, and they'll do that by manipulating their face, whether it be makeup or a mask.
They might try to use contact lenses that make the eye look a little bit different, and so there's a lot of analysis that's going on on the ORB to confirm that it is an unmanipulated image of a single person and then go from there.
Undoubtedly it's gonna be what they call a cat and mouse game.
All right, It's gonna get more and more difficult over time, and we're gonna have to invest more in making sure that the ORB is detecting those types of attempts.
But that's that's something that we're thinking about him.
Speaker 1We've got less than a minute.
I'm just curious, who do you think should go get scanned?
Like, what's the biggest reason to get scanned right now?
Speaker 15So, one thing that people are really nervous about is other people using their identity, and so we're focusing a lot on making it possible for you to confirm who it is that you're interacting with, like in a conference, like a video conference or an audio conference.
So if you're concerned about that, definitely go get scanned, go have your image taken of the ORB and become a verified user world ID.
In general, if you want to contribute to an Internet in the future where there's more and more opportunities for people as opposed to bots and automation, then I think you're a good candidate as well.
Speaker 1And at some point you were giving people like a little coin or something if they did this.
Is that still happening yep.
Speaker 15So there are lots of different offers that are made by applications.
It might be access to a premium tier of their service.
One of them is you know, the network itself.
The world network has value, uh, and there is a token that reflects that value, and every person who becomes verified has the opportunity if they want to to own a part of the network.
Speaker 1Okay, and the website is World dot org.
Is that correct?
That's correct?
All right, World dot Org.
Adrian Ludwig, thanks so much for joining me today.
Fascinating stuff World dot Org.
Check it out if you want to get your human verification more.
Rich on Tech come your way right after this.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich Demiro here hanging out with you talking technology at Triple eight.
Rich one O one eight eight eight seven four two four one zero one.
Let's go to Kenneth in Hollywood, California.
Kenneth, you're on with Rich Hi?
Speaker 5Rich, Hi, how are you?
My question?
My question is I have a I'm an electrical contractor and I have an electric contracting company.
So I have a Google a Google phone number that for my business, and then I also have my personal cell phone number that I've had for years, and they both come to my cell phone and I'm trying to figure out a way if there's a way to differentiate the two so that I could know how if it's a business call coming in through my business Google business phone number versus my personal phone number.
Speaker 1Ah.
Okay, so you're using the same phone, but you've got to two phone numbers funneled to that device.
Is that what I'm understanding correct?
And is the phone is that?
Is this a Google Voice number or is it a what?
What kind of phone numbers?
Speaker 5Okay, it's a Google Voice number that I pay monthly for.
Speaker 1Oh?
Interesting, So you pay monthly for that?
What what do you but the benefit of paying monthly?
What do you get for that?
Because I have Google Voice but it's free.
Speaker 5I guess it's for a business line.
I to be honest, I haven't even been paying attention.
Speaker 1Okay, interesting, it's just.
Speaker 5Been it's been this, you know, funneling out of my accounts.
But yeah, but I'm trying to figure I'm trying to like consolidate and you know, structure my business a little better than the way I've been running it.
So I have my personal cell phone phone number and then I honestly have my electual contracting phone number.
So but when they when I get calls, it doesn't say any there's no It.
Speaker 1Just shows the person's number, shows the person who's calling call a ready.
Okay, Well there is a setting in the consumer version of Google Voice, and you have to check to see if it's in the business version that will display your Google Voice number when someone calls instead of their phone number.
So would that work?
Speaker 13Yeah, I didn't know.
Speaker 5That's awesome.
I didn't know there was upsetting.
I'll look into that.
Or my next option was just to get another phone, and then, well you.
Speaker 1Can do that, but if you can use the same phone.
So basically, there's a setting inside Google Voice if you go into the settings that says, how do you want to display the phone number.
Do you want to display the caller's number or do you want do you want to display the Google Voice number?
And so when you display the Google Voice number, when you see that number, you know that it is exactly so that is and the option is called show my Google Voice number as caller ID when forwarding calls.
And you know this is these are smart people at Google that have thought about what you're talking about, and they're like, okay, well, how would this person know if it's a business call or not?
Now?
The only the only downside to that system is that if you were using it, you know a lot of contractors like to text back people that you know, call them and things like that, like that would be a little bit tricky because you would not have their phone number in your phone.
So that's the only downside to that.
But if you're answering your phone and they leave a message or whatever, it's it all worked the same, So you just won't have access to that ability of you know, sometimes when I call a contractor, they'll just you know, they'll text me back information or something right through.
They'll be like, yeah, just text me at this number.
So you wouldn't have access to that, So that would be the only downside I can think of.
Speaker 5Do you have any recommendations as to being able to say that, like still have that phone.
Speaker 1Number and then.
Speaker 5Have like a complete different system, like go to a because I don't think I can go to a T Mobile or Rise in store and then have them put that phone number on their service.
Speaker 1Yeah, you usually can.
You can ask for a second number.
Do you have a Do you have an iPhone or Android iPhone?
Oh you can.
You can literally go right now online to Tello or US Mobile, or you can go to your Verizon eighteen ten.
They will literally add a second line to your phone now.
Speaker 5But I'm trying.
I'm trying to keep that same phone number because I'll I have so much client.
Speaker 1Tell that the Google.
Yeah, they can transfer that.
They can, they can take it.
They can pour it in.
It's called but here.
Speaker 5Who doesn't Google doesn't own the phone number, so they they'll just give up.
Speaker 1Okay, Yeah, they will poured it.
It's called a it's called a poort in.
But here's the deal.
I would try this for the you know, I mean, you're already paying ten dollars a month.
It looks like minimum.
So but you're gonna have to the thing is you don't want to be paying for a whole another line of like ninety dollars a month.
That's the thing you want to do.
So you could either do something like there's like apps out there that are virtual numbers and some of the let's see if Grasshopper.
There's like there's like virtual phone systems like Grasshopper.
I would check out grasshopper dot com.
And there's a bunch of services like that will actually put a virtual number on your phone as an app.
You can go that route, or you can actually get a secondary sim like an e SIM with a phone number, and you can just use like a US Mobile or something to get a very inexpensive phone line or a visible or a cricket and that you can physically have that number.
I believe Verizon specifically will give you a second line.
I think for like another ten dollars a month.
I think T Mobile does that.
Eighteen team may do it.
Just inquire at your carrier first, which one's your carrier, by the way, I Mobile, okay, I think they do a second line for like you can call them up and see if they will do a second line that's connected to your primary line.
That does not cost the full like ninety dollars a month.
But that was and then what if?
Speaker 5What if I wanted an option to when UH customer calls and.
Speaker 1Then for it to stay hang on, hang on, I gotta I gotta run to break hold on.
One second, I'll put you on the line.
You're on personal hold on more rich on Tech coming your way right after this.
Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology.
Welcome to another hour of rich on Tech.
Phone lines are open eighty to eight rich one on one eighty eight seven four to four, one ero one.
The website is rich on Tech dot tv.
And I'm also on social media at rich on Tech, So if you have a phone, you're on Instagram.
Find me there, follow me.
I often post a lot of cool stuff throughout the week and some silly stuff as well.
We had a caller asking about Google Voice and their business, and we talked about that.
I got a message from Rod he said, Rich, I also use Google Voice for my business, and I have the app installed it rings my regular phone, but I set up call screening in Google Voice, so it asks the caller for their name or reason for calling.
Then I can choose to accept or reject the call right from my phone.
It's been a great way to manage contacts and avoid scam spam.
So that's another way to use it.
Yeah, Google Voice has been great.
I actually I signed up for Google Voice on day one.
Let's see if I can find the date grant it used to be called Grand Central.
Let's see, let's see what date that was Grand Central March eleventh, two thousand and nine.
That's oh no, okay, nope, sorry, that's when.
That's when Google relaunched it as as a Google Voice.
Wow, March eleventh, two thousand and nine, So when did Grand Central launch.
Let's see, Now I can't find it.
It's really tough to search something like Grand Central launch because there's too many things called Grand Central.
But anyway, I was working at CeNAT at the time.
This was Grand Central was what Google Voice was called before Google Voice.
And this was back in the day when you had a phone line at work, a phone, a cell phone which were just kind of coming up, and then a phone line at home.
And so the idea behind Grand Central was that you would give people this one phone number and it would ring all three of those lines at the same time, and then you would pick up the one that you were near.
And of course Google bought them almost instantly rebranded them as Google Voice, and the rest is history.
Let's go to Wayne in your Belinda.
Wayne, you're on with Rich.
Speaker 13All right, Rich, quick question, h I have both Androy and iPhone, but most of that andoy, I've tried to find the apps where some something can while I'm driving, have the the text message anyway, they can read it over to me, voice out to me.
Speaker 1Okay, so you want your phone to read your text to you while you're driving, correct, yes, and your apps read well.
We just tested one for Android that is it does exactly what you want.
I don't know how good it is over the time, over long term, but uh, what's I got my kid here?
We tested it.
What's it called Tanner?
Oh?
Here you go.
Speaker 8It's called Read My Text Messages.
It has like ads every time you open it, but it it does the job.
Speaker 1Well, it does the job.
So Wayne, It's not pretty, but it is simple.
And so you install this app on your phone on Android.
It's called Read My Text Messages and you toggle it on and it reads your messages and then you can also there's one.
There's only two simple toggles read messages and then repeat messages.
So if you want it to read it out twice, it will do that.
The only thing is you have to give it permission to access your text.
And the other annoying thing is the ads, but you can remove them.
Let's see how much it is to remove them.
It is a dollar ninety nine, so well well worth the dollar ninety nine to remove those ads.
Do you not Do you not have Android Auto on your phone?
Speaker 4Yeah?
Speaker 1I do, yes, So when you get a text, can't you just have Android Auto read it to you?
Speaker 13Oh, I never picked it out.
I never know they have the function.
Speaker 1Yeah, so Android Auto, when you get the text, you should be able to tap the text again and it will just speak it to you.
If there's not a little play button.
It's been a while since I used Android Auto, but there's typic.
If you tap the text again, it'll read it to you, or you can just press play, or you can use your Hey, Google, read me that last text will It will do that, So that's another way of doing it.
And same thing in the iPhone.
You should be able to ask it Siri to read your last text and it should work.
I haven't tested that right here, but I have no reason to believe it wouldn't work.
But those are two ways to do it.
Whane, I'm glad you're trying to keep your eyes on the road, your hands on the wheel, and you know, I say at the end of every show, do not text while driving.
Please do not text while driving.
I see it.
It's an epidemic.
It's an epidemic of distracted drivers, and it is really bad.
It's causing accidents.
People run into each other.
Almost every single accident I see on the side of the road, I say, that's guaranteed that was because of distracted driving, because people are bumping into each other.
They're just literally bumping into each other.
How does that happen?
That happens when you are not looking at the car in front of you, because you're looking down.
And I see it every day.
People are sitting there and believe me, I look, I am not holier than thou here.
Believe me.
I want to text my entire drive like we're all getting texts, right, and I really do I text while drive.
Don't be honest, No, you don't.
Speaker 2Uh.
Speaker 8Whenever you get a text message, Uh, you don't even look at your phone.
You literally just focus.
But another thing I want to say is that I see people literally looking at their phones when they're crossing the road at a crosswalk, and like, I'm just thinking, what if someone ran that light and they got hurt?
Speaker 1Like, yeah, well that's why that's called survival of the fittest.
Speaker 8Like, what's the point of looking at your phone?
Like your life could be at state?
Speaker 1Oh, I mean, I'm not kidding.
Speaker 6We are.
Speaker 1We are building a world of ombies.
You're you've seen the ombie movies, right, and it looks scary the blood coming out of their mouth and stuff.
No, we already are here.
We are the ombies.
We are literally beholden to these tiny screens that we hold and we look at them.
We fall into fountains, we fall off cliffs.
I mean, I'm not kidding.
These are all things that have happened.
Cars run into us because we are so unaware as humans with this thing in front of us, and we can't get enough of it.
And it's just like now we get the watch, so the watch goes off, you get that ping.
I mean soon they're just gonna pop it right in your brain and you'll just get that little bizz right when you need it.
Speaking of phones, Apple launched an emoji game this week and Apple News Plus.
It's called Emoji Game, and you are challenged to fill in the blanks of three short phrases using emojis, and some of them are actually generated by Apple's ai called gen Mooji.
Each puzzle has a bunch of clues you can reveal, but the whole point of this is to figure this out in the least amount of moves total.
So you can just drag all the emojis to the words, but that's gonna cost you your turns.
So if you like emojis and you like these puzzle games, this could be fun.
I tried playing it.
I mean, maybe I'll give it another chance.
I'm not a big emoji guy, Like I just don't really care that much about them, and so I I don't know, It's like, it doesn't really appeal to me per se.
But it's fun and it's different, and if you're looking for kind of like that brain challenge, that is that is nice.
So again, if you're a you do have to be an Apple Newsplus subscriber for this to work, so you have to be paying for Apple News Plus.
But if you are, by the way, you have access to a whole bunch of games and things inside Apple News Plus.
Speaker 8Yes, Like, my dad plays crosswords at a lot of places when he's bored, and I think Apple Newsplus is worth it.
Speaker 1Oh you think it's worth something?
You're not paying for what?
No?
I mean, I don't know.
Speaker 8I just think it's good to challenge your brain.
Speaker 1Like, I agree.
Speaker 8Like I like a good brain teaser, or like those crossword games.
Speaker 1I agree.
Uh, let's go to Stan Stands in uh Granada Hills.
You're on with Rich and my kids.
Speaker 4Hey, Rich, that's how you doing.
Speaker 1I'm doing great.
What's up Stan?
You don't text and drive, do you?
Speaker 4Of course I drive.
Speaker 2I don't text when I drive back.
I I'm just beginning to learn how to text.
Speaker 1Oh well good, then don't don't learn how to text with one hand on the wheel.
Don't don't get that.
Speaker 2No, no, no, I use the voice the type of text thing perfect the microphone.
But I'm an analog person.
I've been doing that for many, many years.
I repair and resurrect old turntables, record players.
Speaker 1Oh that's cool, Yeah it is.
Speaker 4I like it.
Speaker 2I've been doing it since nineteen fifty nine.
Speaker 1Oh my gosh.
So people bring in like an old school like a what like a photograph kind of thing?
Speaker 2Exactly right?
Speaker 1And huh, how do you get the parts for these things?
Speaker 2Well, there's still some parts available.
Sometimes we have to work around whatever we can.
And sometimes I take parts off of an old turntable and you know, whatever is there if I and the left and go from there.
Speaker 1Wow, okay, that's cool.
What's your favorite album all time?
Speaker 2Wow?
I have so many of them.
Right off.
The first one comes to mind is the Four Seasons by Vivaldi.
Speaker 1The also Four Seasons by Vivaldi.
Speaker 2Yeah, yeah, well it's a oh.
Speaker 1I got it, got it violent stuff.
Okay, all right, Bobo's rushing me along here.
We got to get to break.
So what's what's the question you said you have?
Speaker 2Well, my question is I'm I'm trying to get learn a little bit more about computers.
And I have an iPhone seven, which is a very old It's been upgraded by Apple, I say, because I needed a new battery, so they upgraded it.
But I need more storage for my pictures.
And then whatever comes up it says it's been disabled.
Speaker 1Yeah, I have.
Speaker 2An iPad that was given to me as a gift, and I don't know how to connect them together to my phone, and I just have so many questions.
Speaker 1Well, we have a whole nother hour.
We may have to go to break Well while I'm explaining, but what what do you want to do?
Do you want a new phone?
Do you want a new laptop?
Do you want a new iPad?
Do you want to just connect them?
What do you what are you trying to do?
Speaker 2I want to I would love to connect the iPad to my phone, and I would love to get more out of my phone, more use out of my phone.
Speaker 1Well, I'll be honest, and iPhone seven is out of uh it's end of life, which means there's no more software updates for it.
There's no more there's no more support for it.
So you are at risk of you know, anything that could you know, exploits, let's say, and apps may no longer update or install in that device.
So I would if I were you, what I would do is what my kid has a suggestion?
What is it?
Speaker 8I would recommend the iPhone sixteen E.
It's like small, like the iPhone seven, and it's like lightweight, and it's not like a huge phone like today.
I mean I kind of tested it for a while and I just think it's a really good phone.
Yeah, pas storage, it's good for like the everyday use.
Speaker 1Yeah, I would agree with that.
So I would say, if you're going to upgrade your iPhone seven, go with the sixteen E.
It's about six hundred bucks.
I know you didn't call to spend money, but if you want to get up to speed on this stuff, and if your phone is fine, you're not doing a lot of banking and stuff on it, and you don't care about the apps, you can still use it.
It's just you have to remember that it's not supported anymore with the with the iPad.
If you want to link them up, you just have to sign in with the same iCloud ID.
Do you have an Apple ID for your phone?
Speaker 4No?
Speaker 1I don't, Okay, all right, So get an Apple ID, sign up for that, and then sign in on both your iPhone and the iPad with the same one, and that will get you on the journey of connecting those things, and your text messages will come through the iPad, your photos will come through the I've had your bookmarks, all that good stuff.
Stan, I wish we had you for the whole show.
Do you got so many questions?
That's going to do it?
What we got to go to break?
We'll be right back.
Welcome back to Rich on Tech.
Let's go to Michelle in Glendale, California.
Michelle, you're on with Rich and Family.
What's up?
Speaker 9Okay?
Apple sent me a message that my iCloud storage is full and suggested elevate my to upgrade my storage by paying nine months.
It's called stop storage.
But I don't really want to do that.
So I want to know, Oh, what is your best advice of what kind of device or option that you can advise the best way to stopping my photos?
Speaker 14First?
Speaker 9Do that?
Do that device or app?
And then after I do it, then then delete photos on my phone.
Speaker 1Okay, so the first my first question for you is are you positive that this email you got is legitimate from Apple?
Speaker 9No, it's not a They didn't send me by email.
They just send it to me by I guess by text.
Speaker 1Oh okay, well that's that's a red flag.
Now now here's the thing.
So the thing is the first thing we want to do is go on your phone.
Do you have your iPhone with you or you on it right now.
Speaker 9Yeah, I have the iPhone with me.
Speaker 1Okay, So you want to go to your phone and then settings, and then up at the top it has your name and it says iCloud.
So you want to tap there, and then you want to tap iCloud one more time.
Can you do that while we're on the line here or no?
Speaker 9Yeah, because I actually have two phones?
Speaker 1Okay, perfect, So so follow along.
So we got settings.
Are you there yet?
Speaker 9Yeah, I'm already there.
Speaker 1Settings, iCloud up at the top.
You see your name or your your Apple account all the way at the top, right right, yeah, top of that.
Okay.
Now, now in this list where it says your name, you're a little you have a emoji set up?
Or no, a like a little picture of you up at the top.
No, okay, it doesn't matter.
Oh got it your initials.
O.
Guess you're on the right page.
And now you see where it says I cloud.
Wait minute, kind of like under it says personal information, sign in, payment, and how much does it say under next to I Cloud?
What does this say there?
Two hundred two hundred gigabytes?
Okay, perfect?
Now tap in there and let's see what it says up at the top or it says storage.
What does it say there?
Speaker 9Arge pool?
Speaker 1Okay, okay, So so the email is legitimate, and the email is or the text or whatever they sent you is legitimate.
Speaker 9So oh, actually they didn't send it to me by text.
They have a notation here below saying to upgrade the two TV.
Speaker 1Oh my gosh, do you think you could fill two terabytes?
I don't think so that's a lot.
Yeah, I don't need No, you don't need that.
Okay.
So the first thing I want you to do before you go ahead and try to do anything else, go into this storage and you'll see there's a whole bunch of things underneath it where it says like iCloud drive, backups, messages.
Do you see all that?
Speaker 9I mean, I go back?
Speaker 1No, no, just tapport says storage up at the top and see and it'll show you what's taking up your storage.
So a lot of times, your your backups of old iPhones and your I messages are taking up a ton of storage.
So for instance, my backups are taking up four hun gigabytes and my messages I message is taking up twelve gigabytes.
Now why do I need twelve gigabytes of I message I probably don't.
So my point is you can go in there and clear out some things.
Now, if you back out on that screen, it also says recommended for you, and it will show you a couple of ways to clear out your storage as well.
So there's another place I want you to look on your phone if you go to Settings, and I can't do this all on the phone, so you've got to run to break But if you go to Settings General, there is one that's called iPhone Storage and you can tap that and some of that will tell you what's taking up the storage on your iPhone, which is then a lot of times reflected into your iCloud.
So with all that said, I think the first thing you should do is probably clear out some things on your phone that you don't need.
That's number one.
But if you want to offload some of these photos to somewhere else, if you're a Prime member on Amazon, you can upload unlimited for free there, or you can get a USB drive if you check my Instagram at rich on Tech, I can show you how to transfer your photos from your iPhone to a flash drive.
More rich on Tech.
Right after this, Welcome back to rich on Tech.
Rich Demiro here hanging out with you, talking technology.
The website for the show is rich on Tech dot tv.
You can follow me on Instagram at rich on Tech.
I do post a decent amount of stuff on Instagram.
Usually I try to be helpful there.
So this week I did post how to transfer your photos from your iPhone or Android to a flash drive and it's a very simple process.
You can transfer them, then you can clear out the space on your phone whatever you want to do.
I will say I'm not making this into a competition, but the iPhone video has like one hundred and thirty five thousand views.
The Android video has only fourteen thousand.
Where's the wamp wamph And then I also have an explain an explainer on the ring hacking situation that is is or is not a real situation.
We're not really sure, but anyway, that's all rich on Tech on Instagram follow me there.
Uh and we have a guest right now.
Logan Seacrest is a fellow at the r Street Institute.
They have a new report about body cameras on police and specifically AI how that's being used or should be used on these cameras.
Logan, thanks for joining me today.
Speaker 15Yeah, thanks for having me rich.
Speaker 1So the past, the present, and future of police body cameras.
We know that these body cameras are very prevalent.
What what do you what's the reason for their uptake in the world here.
Speaker 16So I think the reason for their uptake is that they are you know, potentially very very useful.
Body cameras are useful evidentiary uses obviously, and they have a training uses for for.
Speaker 1Police as well.
Speaker 16You know, I think one of the reasons that AI is apply to them is that for many years, body cameras have produced many, many thousands of hours of video, particularly for a large law enforcement agency.
You know, almost eighty percent of agencies in the United States use body cameras, and the sheer volume of this footage that the cameras generated has created a data data management problem that agencies have struggled with for years.
So as a result, you know, vast amounts of footage kind of just languished on servers, you know, unlaunched, uncatalog, unused.
You know, this is a vast reservoir of untapped lal enforcement intel.
Really, so AI systems are able to scan you know, hundreds of hours of video and seconds and you know, I've looked at some early pilot programs that suggest that AI video review, you know, jagely, when guided by human oversight, can uncover evidence that might otherwise go overlooked, or identify potential instances.
Speaker 1Of off service conduct.
Speaker 16You know, you can even you can even generate the first draft of a police report.
Uh so, yeah, there's there's a lot of.
Speaker 1Uses for this technology.
Oh wow, that's fascinating because I just recently did a story with a very similar use where basically a company would come in and put their little box in connected to all of the security cameras in a store, and basically, you know, nobody could watch all the footage from security cameras, but AI can, and so AI would flag things like theft in real time by scanning all this footage.
And that's very interesting what you're saying about these bodycam footage.
It's like, okay, we've got it, and a lot of times if something bubbles up and it's like a huge thing, of course they're going to go back to that video.
But what about all the other stuff that happens.
And so that's the question of you know, I could see good and bad for this because number one, like you said police officer misconduct.
You know, the AI might flag for that.
But also when you can identify everyone in a crowd because of AI, that's where it gets interesting as well.
Speaker 16Right, Yeah, I think I think it's really really interesting you bring that up, you know, because contextually it matters a lot here.
Yeah, you know, you look at a at a major international airport, you know, something like LAX where you know, terrorism as a serious threat.
Uh, these kind of systems AI video systems can save lives.
You know, you take the same technology, you put it on a body camera, and you take it to a protest in a public park.
Uh, you know, the same that same technology is a serious threat to civil liberties, you know, so what place it would start?
Just you know, in terms of regulating, some of this is limiting the use of facial recognition during some of those constitutionally protected activities like a peaceful protest.
You know, a system that makes sense you know in a bank or you know on some kind of mass transit system maybe doesn't doesn't make sense you know, on every corner on it, in every street front.
The public private partnership aspect of this is pretty interesting because there's there's new uh uh there's these kind of new UH agreements between private businesses and law enforcement agencies that are creating shared networks, and they're places like New Orleans and Tulsa and other places are applying AI to these shared networks, you know, and that that potentially opens up a situation where police have a three hundred and sixty degree coverage of a neighborhood or even entire city, operating continuously day and night, uh and without any kind of uh, you know, oversight or restriction and and and that's the kind of kind of black mirror dystopian future that I think we want to avoid in the United States.
Speaker 1Yeah, so a lot of this really does come down to some of the regulations and standards that we have, because every police department operates independently, right, Like, there's not like one kind of national system that regulates all of these, right So it's and I think a lot of it is being pushed by these companies that create the cameras because obviously they want to sell them and get them used as much as possible, and of course the storage and things like that.
So I mean, what is the solution.
Is it the you know, the policies or what, Yeah.
Speaker 16I think it really is.
You know, the technology, the technology is a tool.
The technology is like any other powerful technology.
Speaker 1It can be used for for good or for ill.
Speaker 16You know, whether it's used for for good or ill comes down to the policy guardrails that we put in place.
You know, the line between public safety and state surveillance isn't really in the technology, but it is in those policies that government that government.
You know, here in our Street, we saw that AI was kind of transforming some of the house and these law enforcement video systems work, and nobody had kind of mapped the risks and opportunities clearly.
So the report is basically to help policy makers catch up.
You know, I think sometimes in public policy we're always complaining that that we're behind the technology, right and at our Street, we're trying to get policy makers in front of the technology for once rather than rather than playing catchup.
Speaker 1So they can understand what's coming, what the implications are of this.
Because when you really like, this is not I've always thought of this idea of the AI stuff that's coming on board, it's like it is superhuman.
And that's the big difference is that, you know, if you wanted to put a camera at every intersection that spit out a ticket for every single person that does something wrong at that intersection.
I know we have read light cameras and those are controversial in their own aspect of their own regard.
But you know, when I was a kid, I had this idea of a car that what if your car like there's nothing in this day and age that we have with our cars that are basically iPhones on wheels from literally looking at the law and saying, oh, you're going over the speed lemit here, let's spit out a ticket.
Let's email it to your house right like that that could happen.
And the reason it doesn't is because we have kind of protocols in place where that is not something that happens in America.
But with AI and technology, it's kind of challenging all of this stuff because what's possible now was never possible before.
Speaker 16That's right, And I think that's that's one of the things to that is different about AI as a technology is such a powerful force multiplier and fundamentally change the balance of power between the public and the government, between the people and the government, and that is in the United States a very delicate balance that we always have to be kind of fine tuning and watching.
So this technology has the potential to really throw that balance out of whack.
If the government is able to watched you wherever you go, identify every place that you are, without any kind of barriers or or or warrants or kind of judicial and legal oversight, then that is, uh, that that poys us some pretty pretty challenge challenging, uh challenging problems, UH similiberty sis constitutionally speaking, and uh, that's we We want this technology because it is it is, it can be very useful.
Speaker 1We just need to implement.
Speaker 16It in a way that uh is in line with American ideals.
Speaker 1Yeah.
It reminds me of these TV shows where they're looking for someone and they're like, all right, now, give me a scan of all the cameras in the area, and it's like, you know, it seemed unrealistic and you know, probably very time consuming.
But in the future that is something that is actually very easily done with AI and with these networks of cameras and you know, the unlimited server space and things like this, like that is a possibility to track someone down very quickly and easily.
And we already do it, but it's probably much more manual than it could be in the future.
So really interesting stuff.
Where can folks find this report?
Speaker 16Yeah, the the R Street website is always always a good place for that.
It's www dot or street dot org.
It'll be there, and you know it's on our on our social media feeds.
Uh, it's pretty easy to find if you if you just google a body camera or street that will also pop up them.
Speaker 1All right, Logan Seacrest at the R Street Institute, thanks so much for joining me today.
Thanks rich all right, really appreciate it.
All Right, we're gonna go to break.
We got the feedbag coming up.
We're gonna talk to my kids about a couple of things on their mind, and uh, we're gonna wrap up the show rich on Tech dot TV.
We'll be right back.
Welcome back to Rich on Tech.
A couple of headlines to get to before we talk to my kids and then get to the feedbag.
First off, you haven't checked your bitcoin.
If you've got it, definitely check it.
It has been surging in the past week, up twenty eight percent for the year.
I would give you all the reasons why, but there's never really a reason.
Just check it out and see if you have it.
It's kind of fun to watch if you've got it.
Finally, it's back up Chrome.
If you're on Android, lets you move the address bar to the bottom of the screen.
So if you open up Chrome on your Android, you see a little message that says, hey, do you want to move the address bar to the bottom of your screen?
You now have that option.
You can also try long pressing on the address bar and you should see the message that says move address bar to the bottom.
They did this on the iPhone a long time ago.
Apple moved theirs on Safari a long time ago, and so now you can do it on Android.
I don't know if I like it down there, I'm testing it, but anyway, you do have to have the latest version of Chrome, and it's rolling out, so you may not have it immediately.
I was playing Donkey Kong Bonanza last night on the Switch too, and I gotta say it is fun, fun, fun.
It is just a game where you go around smashing things.
It is really fun and the audio is great, the sound effects, the gameplay, that everything.
So I am really really loving that game.
Apparently reviewers are too.
IGN says it is Nintendo's first switch to Masterpiece, So definitely get that one for the kids if they have a switch to and a website to tell you about.
Snitcher dot space.
Snitcher dot space.
If you get a suspicious email you're wondering if it's phishing or a scam, you can send it to scan at Snitcher dot space and they will send you back a report.
It can analyze for romance scams, fake lotteries, investment fraud, emergency ployees, whatever.
It'll give you all the red flags and it kind of explains why you can also do the same thing by control a and putting it into like CHATGBT and say tell me if this is scam.
All right, let's talk to my kid Tanner about this sensation on Roadblocks called Grow a Garden.
Twenty one million players.
This thing is incredibly popular.
What the heck is grow a garden on Roadblocks?
Speaker 8Grow a Garden is exactly what it sounds like, you grow a garden, though it is based off of rang.
There is a seed shop and it restocks every four minutes and every player sees the same thing on there, and it's local sided for you.
So if you buy something in the shop and then if another person looks at the shop, they'll see something, but you won't.
Speaker 1What does that mean, I don't understand anything you just said.
If that makes sense to me.
What's fun about this?
Are you growing plants and then selling them?
Speaker 8So yeah, what's fun about it is there's mutation.
So you grow a plant.
Let's say you grow a carrot, which is the most common thing, so you grow it, and then there's mutations like drenched.
Speaker 1What's the point just to keep you online?
Speaker 8The point basically is it grows offline, which is a big thing that people like you always want to come back to see how your garden grew.
Speaker 1Ah, So that's what I think.
Speaker 8It's keeping players in.
And there's super rare seeds like the giant pine cone seed or the burning bud or ember lily, and those are very rarely in stock.
So that's what keeps kids keep wanting to go into the game because they want to see if.
Speaker 9It's in stock.
Speaker 1So it's definitely psychological warfare.
Of course we get that all roadblocks games are.
But what's funny about this is that you also have a YouTube channel.
I'm not kidding.
It's like the CNBC of Grow a Garden.
They so they sit there on the on the couch and they play this game with this with this stock market thing on the TV.
And what's it showing you?
Speaker 8So basically it's showing what's in the sheet seeds shop.
And there's also like merchants that come around, uh like daily and they sell stuff, so like it shows that and it shows like eggs.
You can have pets that like can help you find different seeds.
And that's basically the game.
And there's mutations.
Speaker 1So a lot of people are calling it the new Farmville.
But for kids, yeah, I do.
Speaker 8I don't think it deserves all of the players because it is a little like come back, Yeah do the sing come back to the same Like there's no way to actually defeat it.
Speaker 1No, well, no roadblocks game can you defeat?
I mean realistically, I mean, well build a voote for treasure, okay, roadblocks or Minecraft.
Well, actually we're gonna get to Minecraft in a second.
But real quick, this person who created the game, let's switch to Parker.
He's going to tell us about what he did that went viral, the grow a Garden.
The guy who created it is making like five million dollars a month on this thing.
Yes on kids playing a game on roadblocks, just to remember that.
So here's what I always tell my kids.
Don't be the ones playing the game, be the ones making the game.
That's what I want them to do, all right, Parker, Parker did something where you created a video that went viral on YouTube?
What was it?
Speaker 11All right?
That is correct?
Speaker 10So I talked about this actually a couple of months ago, and I talked about the Minecraft movie and how much I liked it.
Speaker 11It's a great movie.
Speaker 10I wouldn't say it's the best of all time, but it's great.
And there was a song that went viral in it called Steve's Lava Chicken.
It was pretty catchy, thirty second song, supposedly one of the most viral songs that is classified as a song.
Speaker 11It was only thirty seconds.
Speaker 10So I made a video It was basically Steve's Lava Chicken, and it uploaded it backwards.
Speaker 1You just backwards this song.
Speaker 10I did not, you know, I just like, you know, if some people like it backwards, and I just wanted to be out there so people can easily have it at their fingertips because everyone likes that.
People don't want to have to go into it and edit themselves for five minutes.
Speaker 1So if you search, oh wow, okay, so I guess some other people did this as well, because I just searched for it on YouTube.
But yeah, it's just basically Steve's Lava Chicken reverse.
But it got like, what like two hundred thousand.
Speaker 11Views Now it's up to three thirty three hundred.
Speaker 1And thirty thousand views, just re versing something unbelievable.
Speaker 10And it's not even like a YouTube shore it's just a regular video and those are even harder to get today, to the views, which I didn't even think is gonna go this big, you know, started out just small, kept on going up.
Speaker 11Now of course it's died down, but it's still.
Speaker 1You worked on a new video today.
What's your new one?
Give us to give us it before you upload it.
Speaker 11Okay, we got it right before I upload it.
Speaker 10It's basically the song this is Me, and it's I instead of doing it's like I am brave, I am bruised, I am who I meant to be.
Speaker 11I am Steve.
So this is what our.
Speaker 1Kids of America are doing.
And there's spare time these days.
Thank you, Parker, I thank you, thank you for having me.
Gosh all right, we're gonna do one feedback.
Sharon says, thank you, rich I appreciate your advice on tech stuff and enjoy reading your newsletter.
Sharon.
Robert from California says, thank you so much.
I'm seventy two.
I had no idea what phone to purchase.
I heard angels singing, and then on TV there you were reviewing the Pixel nine.
I now own it and love it.
I believe this was divine intervention.
Thank you.
Bobo knows I'm no angel.
All right, that's gonna do it for this episode of the show.
Thanks to everyone who joined me today, Parker Tanner, Bobo, Kim.
You can find me on social media at rich on Tech.
Next week, we've got an entire show full of feedback.
I cannot wait to do that.
It's gonna be fun.
We've got Tom Merritt as a guest host of Daily Tech News show, technology journal journalist, Sabrina Ortiz, senior editor at ZD net, and my visit with Disney Imagineering.
Thanks so much for listening.
There's so many ways you can spend your time.
I appreciate you spending it right here with me.
Don't text and drive.
Thanks everyone who makes this show possible.
My name is rich Darmiro.
I'll talk to you real soon.
Speaker 10Go ahead, kids, Hi, thank you, bye, nangah, thank you, bye bye.
Speaker 11Have a great day.