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Google Pixel's Unstoppable Android Updates Suddenly Stop

Google Pixel's Unstoppable Android Updates Suddenly Stop

Forbes2 days ago
Has Android just changed?
Google rarely surprises Android users, especially those with its own Pixels. But that's what has happened this month. The awkward optics of Pixel owners being first amongst equals compared to the vastly bigger Samsung user base has taken a sudden twist.
As I reported earlier in the month, Android's July security update was not a security update at all. 'There are no Android security patches in the July 2025 Android Security Bulletin,' Google said, with 'no security patches' for Pixels either.
The disparity between Pixels and Samsungs was becoming a real thing. Google's phones received Android 15 more than six months before recent Galaxy flagships, and then just as Samsung's phones saw that upgrade, Pixels were already moving to Android 16.
But that same pattern has also been seen each month. A fast, efficient and 'seamless' Pixel monthly security update versus the fragmented, labored Samsung equivalent.
But this month Samsung's security update looked like business as usual, whereas Pixel's was anything but. This is the first time in almost a decade — since August 2015 — that Android's monthly security update has drawn such a blank.
The reality is somewhat different. There were Android updates for July making their way onto Pixel phones as part of an Android 16 update, but for users on older versions of the OS or with older devices, this doesn't help.
There are now more than 1 billion Android devices that fall foul of Google's cutting off security updates for Android 12 and older phones, and also from its tweaking its Play Integrity API to disfavor apps running on these unsupported versions of the OS. If you own a phone running Android 12 or older, you should really stump up for an upgrade.
Per Security Week, 'this is the first month without security updates since Google started rolling out monthly Android fixes in August 2015, looking to make the mobile operating system safer for both users and vendors.' And that also feels like a 'thing.'
But as for whether this is just a blip in the Samsung versus Pixel stakes, we'll know soon enough. Google's phone is racing ahead with Android 16 and new security and privacy features, while Samsung awaits its own rollout. It's likely nothing has really changed.
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Jack Dorsey pumps $10 million into a nonprofit focused on open-source social media
Jack Dorsey pumps $10 million into a nonprofit focused on open-source social media

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Jack Dorsey pumps $10 million into a nonprofit focused on open-source social media

Twitter co-founder and Block CEO Jack Dorsey isn't just vibe-coding new social apps, like Bitchat and Sun Day, he has invested $10 million in an effort to fund experimental open source projects and other tools that could ultimately transform the social media landscape. These efforts are funneled through an online collective called 'and Other Stuff,' formed in May, whose team includes Dorsey; Twitter's first employee, Evan Henshaw-Plath; 'Calle,' creator of the e-cash platform Cashu; Alex Gleason, former engineering head at Truth Social; and Jeff Gardner, the fourth employee at Intercom. The group originally met through collaborating on Nostr, an open, 'apolitical' social networking protocol that has been receiving the bulk of Dorsey's attention since Twitter's sale to Elon Musk and his stepping down from social network Bluesky's board. However, the team will experiment with other tools, too, like ActivityPub, the protocol that powers the decentralized app Mastodon and others, as well as Cashu. In recent years, Dorsey has been more critical of how social media platforms have evolved, saying that Twitter should have never been a company and that Bluesky seemed to be repeating the mistakes he and others made at Twitter. As a result, the team at 'and Other Stuff' is determined not to build a company but is instead operating like a 'community of hackers,' explains Henshaw-Plath. Together, they're working to create technologies that could include new consumer social apps as well as various experiments, like developer tools or libraries, that would allow others to build apps for themselves. For instance, the team is behind an app called Shakespeare, which is like the app-building platform Lovable, but specifically for building Nostr-based social apps with AI assistance. The group is also behind heynow, a voice note app built on Nostr; Cashu wallet; private messenger White Noise; and the Nostr-based social community +chorus, in addition to the apps Dorsey has already released. Developments in AI-based coding have made this type of experimentation possible, Henshaw-Plath points out, in the same way that technologies like Ruby on Rails, Django, and JSON helped to fuel an earlier version of the web, dubbed Web 2.0. Related to these efforts, Henshaw-Plath sat down with Dorsey for the debut episode of his new podcast, with @rabble. (Henshaw-Plath's handle on X is @rabble.) Since Dorsey lives in Costa Rica and Henshaw-Plath lives in New Zealand, the two met up at a hackathon in Switzerland for the chat. In the nearly hour-long episode, Dorsey delves into Twitter's history as well as his philosophies around where social media went wrong and how it can be fixed. 'It took me a long time to realize this…I didn't really put it into words until I came back as CEO the second time. But it's hard for something like [Twitter] to be a company, because you have corporate incentives when it wants to be a protocol,' Dorsey says. He notes that Twitter was at the mercy of its advertisers — something Musk also faces despite taking Twitter, now called X, private. Musk has even threatened advertisers with lawsuits over ad boycotts driven by their concerns over X's lack of moderation and controversial comments Musk himself has made. While Dorsey understands that catering to advertisers was correct for the business and for Twitter's stock price, it was the 'wrong thing for the internet.' 'They can just remove the money — your money — and your revenue goes down completely,' Dorsey says of advertisers' power. 'So if [Twitter] were an open protocol, if it were truly an open project, you could build a business on top of it, and you could build a very healthy business on top of it.' Dorsey eventually funded an effort to build an open protocol inside Twitter, which later spun out to become Bluesky. But Dorsey believes Bluesky faces the same challenges as traditional social media because of its structure — it's funded by VCs, like other startups. Already, it has had to bow to government requests and faced moderation challenges, he points out. 'I think [Bluesky CEO] Jay [Graber] is great. I think the team is great,' Dorsey told Henshaw-Plath, 'but the structure is what I disagree with…I want to push the energy in a different direction, which is more like Bitcoin, which is completely open and not owned by anyone from a protocol layer. That's what I see in Nostr as well,' he says. 'That's where I want to push my energy…rather into the more corporate direction, even if it is a public benefit corporation,' Dorsey adds. In later episodes, Henshaw-Plath will interview others who have insight into how social media and tech have evolved, including journalists like Kara Swisher and Taylor Lorenz, former Twitter head of Trust & Safety Yoel Roth, Substack co-founder Chris Best, Medium CEO Tony Stubblebine, Cory Doctorow (who coined the term 'enshittification' to describe the state of much of the current web), and renowned misinformation researcher Renée DiResta. The team at 'and Other Stuff' is also working on a social media 'Bill of Rights,' says Henshaw-Plath, which spells out what social media platforms need to provide in areas like privacy, security, interoperability, transparency, identity, self-governance, and portability. This, they believe, will help platforms, including Bluesky and others, remain accountable to their users despite any outside pressure. Dorsey's initial investment has gotten the new nonprofit up and running, and he worked on some of its initial iOS apps. Meanwhile, others are contributing their time to build Android versions, developer tools, and different social media experiments. More is still in the works, says Henshaw-Plath. 'There are things that we're not ready to talk about yet that'll be very exciting,' he teases.

I put the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 vs. Galaxy Z Fold 6 through a 10-round camera face-off — here's the winner
I put the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 vs. Galaxy Z Fold 6 through a 10-round camera face-off — here's the winner

Tom's Guide

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  • Tom's Guide

I put the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 vs. Galaxy Z Fold 6 through a 10-round camera face-off — here's the winner

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 has come to replace the Galaxy Z Fold 6, and design-wise, the difference is obvious. But what about the cameras? The new Fold 7 ups the main camera from 50MP to 200MP, and the inner camera gets a boost from 4MP to 10MP. Plus, Samsung says that the Fold has an improved ProVisual engine for better low-light performance. To see how much better (or not) Samsung's new foldable is at taking photos, I put the Z Fold 7 vs Fold 6 through a 10-round camera face-off. If you're considering an upgrade or want to know which model could be the better buy for you, this is a comparison you won't want to miss. Our first round features this main camera shot looking across a rugby field. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 uses a 200MP main camera while the Galaxy Z Fold 6 uses a 50MP one, but both take 12MP shots by default, like this example. The shot from the Galaxy Z Fold 7 has a less intensely blue sky, but has more saturated colors elsewhere. It's vice versa with the Z Fold 6, which can be interpreted as a good or bad thing depending on what you want the focus of the photo to be. Overlooking the Regent Canal, these two phones give us a good idea of their color treatment for their photos. While both photos look good, we can see when looking at the bricks of the surrounding buildings or the painted sides and roofs of the narrowboats, that the Galaxy Z Fold 6 has a cooler overall tone, while the Galaxy Z Fold 7 is slightly warmer. This moody shot of a brightly painted canal boat near Paddington station shows how the two phones display the balance of light and shadow. There is more dramatic lighting in Z Fold 7 shot, with larger shadowed areas beneath the boat, for example. Meanwhile, the clouds are darker in the Z Fold 6 image, while the shadows are lighter, showing a slightly different HDR interpretation. We switch now to a different camera for a photo of this church. The Galaxy Z Fold 6 brings out the blue in the sky again, and also the golden yellow tones in the brickwork of the church, with starker shadows too. The Galaxy Z Fold 7's less intense light shows the detail of the brickwork much better, and handles the glaring late-afternoon light more deftly. I took these images of a sign for Church Street Market on Edgware Road with both foldables' 3x telephoto cameras. While there's no difference in detail quality, it's another piece of clear evidence of these two phones' different color sensitivities. The red part of the sign is stronger on the Z Fold 7, while it's the blue part on the Z Fold 6. The outer selfie camera on the Galaxy Z Fold 7 is near-enough indistinguishable from the inside camera, as we'll see in a moment. So it's the comparison with the Galaxy Z Fold 6 that really matters here. The Z Fold 6 has produced a decent photo, but there's some excessive sharpening around my hair, and flatter lighting. It does have an arguably nicer color overall though, with the red sensitivity of the Z Fold 7 making me look unfortunately pink. Samsung has been using under-display cameras for its Z Fold phones' inner selfie shooters for years, but the Galaxy Z Fold 7 changes this to a punch-hole camera while upping the resolution from 4MP to 10MP. This should make the inner camera good for taking actual photos rather than just a functional video call method with the phone open. As we can see here, the Z Fold 6's camera makes the shot quite fuzzy, but with a more uniform brightness level. The Z Fold 7's shot is perfectly clear, even if the lighting and colors of the shot aren't as appealing to my eye. It's worth noting that portrait mode works on both of the Galaxy Z Fold 7's selfie cameras. It only works on the external front camera on the Z Fold 6, so this comparison uses the outer cameras of both phones. Looking at selfies I ended up with, both have good blur with intelligently-applied blurring. 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A year is a long time in smartphone development, after all. But the ways in which it differs from and improves upon the Galaxy Z Fold 6 are interesting. The ultrawide camera is the most obviously upgraded rear camera on the Galaxy Z Fold 7, despite the fact the 200MP main camera is the most noteworthy spec bump over the Galaxy Z Fold 6. The Galaxy Z Fold 7's new inner display selfie camera is dramatically improved, too, although the jury's out on whether adding a punch-hole cutout was worth it or not. Our Galaxy Z Fold 7 review is still in progress, and we'll be comparing its camera capabilities against more phones than just the Galaxy Z Fold 6. But it's clear to see the Z Fold 7 is a notable camera upgrade over the Z Fold 6. Let us know in the comments what you think of the Z Fold's 7 cameras and if you think the $2,000 price is worth it.

Jack Dorsey pumps $10 million into a nonprofit focused on open-source social media
Jack Dorsey pumps $10 million into a nonprofit focused on open-source social media

TechCrunch

time23 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Jack Dorsey pumps $10 million into a nonprofit focused on open-source social media

Twitter co-founder and Block CEO Jack Dorsey isn't just vibe-coding new social apps, like Bitchat and Sun Day, he has invested $10 million in an effort to fund experimental open source projects and other tools that could ultimately transform the social media landscape. These efforts are funneled through an online collective called 'and Other Stuff,' formed in May, whose team includes Dorsey; Twitter's first employee, Evan Henshaw-Plath; 'Calle,' creator of the e-cash platform Cashu; Alex Gleason, former engineering head at Truth Social; and Jeff Gardner, the fourth employee at Intercom. Image Credits:and Other Stuff The group originally met through collaborating on Nostr, an open, 'apolitical' social networking protocol that has been receiving the bulk of Dorsey's attention since Twitter's sale to Elon Musk and his stepping down from social network Bluesky's board. However, the team will experiment with other tools, too, like ActivityPub, the protocol that powers the decentralized app Mastodon and others, as well as Cashu. Image Credits:Cashu In recent years, Dorsey has been more critical of how social media platforms have evolved, saying that Twitter should have never been a company and that Bluesky seemed to be repeating the mistakes he and others made at Twitter. As a result, the team at 'and Other Stuff' is determined not to build a company but is instead operating like a 'community of hackers,' explains Henshaw-Plath. Together, they're working to create technologies that could include new consumer social apps as well as various experiments, like developer tools or libraries, that would allow others to build apps for themselves. For instance, the team is behind an app called Shakespeare, which is like the app-building platform Lovable, but specifically for building Nostr-based social apps with AI assistance. Image Credits:shakespeare The group is also behind heynow, a voice note app built on Nostr; Cashu wallet; private messenger White Noise; and the Nostr-based social community +chorus, in addition to the apps Dorsey has already released. Techcrunch event Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They're here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don't miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise. Tech and VC heavyweights join the Disrupt 2025 agenda Netflix, ElevenLabs, Wayve, Sequoia Capital — just a few of the heavy hitters joining the Disrupt 2025 agenda. They're here to deliver the insights that fuel startup growth and sharpen your edge. Don't miss the 20th anniversary of TechCrunch Disrupt, and a chance to learn from the top voices in tech — grab your ticket now and save up to $675 before prices rise. San Francisco | REGISTER NOW Developments in AI-based coding have made this type of experimentation possible, Henshaw-Plath points out, in the same way that technologies like Ruby on Rails, Django, and JSON helped to fuel an earlier version of the web, dubbed Web 2.0. Related to these efforts, Henshaw-Plath sat down with Dorsey for the debut episode of his new podcast, with @rabble. (Henshaw-Plath's handle on X is @rabble.) Since Dorsey lives in Costa Rica and Henshaw-Plath lives in New Zealand, the two met up at a hackathon in Switzerland for the chat. In the nearly hour-long episode, Dorsey delves into Twitter's history as well as his philosophies around where social media went wrong and how it can be fixed. 'It took me a long time to realize this…I didn't really put it into words until I came back as CEO the second time. But it's hard for something like [Twitter] to be a company, because you have corporate incentives when it wants to be a protocol,' Dorsey says. He notes that Twitter was at the mercy of its advertisers — something Musk also faces despite taking Twitter, now called X, private. Musk has even threatened advertisers with lawsuits over ad boycotts driven by their concerns over X's lack of moderation and controversial comments Musk himself has made. While Dorsey understands that catering to advertisers was correct for the business and for Twitter's stock price, it was the 'wrong thing for the internet.' 'They can just remove the money — your money — and your revenue goes down completely,' Dorsey says of advertisers' power. 'So if [Twitter] were an open protocol, if it were truly an open project, you could build a business on top of it, and you could build a very healthy business on top of it.' Dorsey eventually funded an effort to build an open protocol inside Twitter, which later spun out to become Bluesky. But Dorsey believes Bluesky faces the same challenges as traditional social media because of its structure — it's funded by VCs, like other startups. Already, it has had to bow to government requests and faced moderation challenges, he points out. 'I think [Bluesky CEO] Jay [Graber] is great. I think the team is great,' Dorsey told Henshaw-Plath, 'but the structure is what I disagree with…I want to push the energy in a different direction, which is more like Bitcoin, which is completely open and not owned by anyone from a protocol layer. That's what I see in Nostr as well,' he says. 'That's where I want to push my energy…rather into the more corporate direction, even if it is a public benefit corporation,' Dorsey adds. In later episodes, Henshaw-Plath will interview others who have insight into how social media and tech have evolved, including journalists like Kara Swisher and Taylor Lorenz, former Twitter head of Trust & Safety Yoel Roth, Substack co-founder Chris Best, Medium CEO Tony Stubblebine, Cory Doctorow (who coined the term 'enshittification' to describe the state of much of the current web), and renowned misinformation researcher Renée DiResta. The team at 'and Other Stuff' is also working on a social media 'Bill of Rights,' says Henshaw-Plath, which spells out what social media platforms need to provide in areas like privacy, security, interoperability, transparency, identity, self-governance, and portability. This, they believe, will help platforms, including Bluesky and others, remain accountable to their users despite any outside pressure. Dorsey's initial investment has gotten the new nonprofit up and running, and he worked on some of its initial iOS apps. Meanwhile, others are contributing their time to build Android versions, developer tools, and different social media experiments. More is still in the works, says Henshaw-Plath. 'There are things that we're not ready to talk about yet that'll be very exciting,' he teases.

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