Netflix launches first games on smartphones
Netflix launches first games on smartphones
- Netflix is launching its first games worldwide as it seeks to break into the game subscription market.
- The Netflix app on Android smartphones will be updated and display the games available for download.
- There are five games available initially, but Netflix has announced that more will come.
- The games include: ‘Stranger Things: 1984’, ‘Stranger Things 3: The Game’, ‘Card Blast’, ’Teeter Up’ and ‘Shooting Hoops’.
- Two games relate to the popular Stranger Things series.
- iOS are due to receive the update in the coming months, but no specific date has been announced.
- The games are available for current subscribers and feature no in-app payments or advertisements.
- Full story, here.
Facebook is shutting down its Face Recognition tagging program
- Meta, formerly known as Facebook, is discontinuing Facebook’s Face Recognition feature in the next coming weeks following a lengthy privacy battle.
- The facial recognition algorithm ‘DeepFace’ won’t be used to tag people in photographs and videos anymore.
- Meta announced that they will delete over a billion ‘FacePrints’ that they use for facial recognition for users who had opted into the feature.
- The change will impact Automatic Alt Text (AAT), which creates image descriptions for blind and visually impaired people.
- AAT descriptions will no longer state the name of the person identified in the photo but will function normally otherwise.
- Meta hasn’t ruled out using ‘DeepFace’ for other projects, future virtual reality hardware could also collect biometric data.
- Full story, here.
YouTube tests launching ‘YouTube Shorts’ home screen for some users
YouTube tests launching ‘YouTube Shorts’ home screen for some users
- YouTube is testing opening the ‘YouTube Shorts’ player directly for users who regularly engage with the app.
- If a user exits the YouTube app while watching Shorts, users will be ‘dropped’ into the Shorts player when they reopen the app.
- YouTube shorts are Youtube’s version of verticle style videos like TikTok or Instagram
- The testing is being made available to a small percentage of viewers using mobile devices.
- For more information on Shorts, check out our blog post.
- Full story, here.