YouTube does not delete fraudulent advertising even after reporting it. Media should help, not harm, writes David Klimeš 🔐 #WEEKLY ~ December 24th
HP Ink is getting more expensive from January 25. The worst games of 2023. EasyPark leaked customer data. Facebook is overwhelmed with stolen images from AI. Adobe and Figma end merger
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An interview with Tim Sweeney about Epic's victory over Google and his fears that Google will "continue its plan" through "fake" remedies. (FT)
YouTube does not delete fraudulent advertising for Czechs despite reporting it. It risks a billion-dollar fine. Although they have a duty to fight against objectionable content, US social networks like YouTube and Facebook take a lax approach to blatant fraud on their platforms, letting scammers who lure money from people advertise without any problems despite warnings. (E15)
A look at The New York Times' big bet on its gaming team, which grew from 15 to 100 people in 2015 , about the same size as the Business section. (Vanity Fair)
The media should help, not harm, writes David Klimeš. He focuses on how the Czech media handled the shooting at the FF UK. Especially how it failed. How editorial systems and many other things that should work don't work.. (David Klimeš)