If you’ve used Cash App in the last six years, you might be entitled to compensation as part of a class-action settlement. The company set up a $15 million fund after breaches enabled a trove of user personal data to leak. You can file a claim through a dedicated settlement website, and depending on what you can prove, you could receive up to $2,500. If there’s a downside beyond having your private financial data leaked, it’s that you’ve only got until November 19 to file.
— Dan Cooper
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News in Brief
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Panic hits pause on the Playdate Stereo Dock, says it’s unlikely we’ll see it anytime soon
Alas, making the dock was almost harder than making the Playdate itself. -
Ongoing notifications similar to Apple’s Live Activities could come to Android
They’re very useful. -
What to read this week: Jeff VanderMeer returns to Area X
This includes a fourth book in the Southern Reach series, which began with Annihilation. -
Lyft will have to tell drivers how much they can truly earn, with evidence
It promised would-be driver rates only its top earners made. -
Apple reportedly tested a blood glucose monitoring app
Still no closer to the dream of a non-invasive glucose monitor. -
8Bitdo has a new $50 Android gaming controller with Hall effect sticks and triggers
There are trade-offs, but for that sort of money, you can’t complain. -
McDonald's restaurants can finally repair their own McFlurry machines
Our long national nightmare is over.
Google is reportedly developing Jarvis AI that could take over your web browser
It’ll be good for, uh, research.
Google is reportedly developing an AI agent for Chrome to act as a live assistant for your daily browsing. Codenamed Jarvis, because of course it is, it will help you with common tasks, like research, shopping and booking flights. Perhaps you could ask it to look at every price comparison website, collate the results and select the cheapest option. Maybe, in future, it could even buy, use and enjoy the thing you’re looking to purchase while you sit at your computer.
Mosseri confirms Instagram reduces video quality for posts not raking in views
‘High-resolution playback is for closers.’
If you’ve ever noticed one of your Instagram videos looks worse now than it did before, there’s a reason. Instagram head Adam Mosseri revealed the platform intentionally downgrades video quality for clips not pulling eyeballs. Which feels like Instagram’s putting its finger on the scale for folks who’ve already cracked the secret of virality against those still working it out.
Apple may tap into a beloved retro design for its smart home display
Everyone loves the Sunflower iMac G4.
As elegant as Apple’s computers are, the last one to transcend that and become beautiful was the iMac G4. Now, the rumor mill is hinting the company’s long-rumored smart home display may wind up using the same design. On one hand, great, who doesn’t want to see what Apple can do with that design? On the other, Apple’s lackluster commitment to the smart home means it’ll probably be a pointless waste of money anyway.
Apple wins $250 in Masimo smartwatch patent case
Siri, can you look up ‘Pyrrhic’ in the dictionary?
The endless battle between Apple and Masimo has seen the bigger company win its latest courtroom skirmish. Apple successfully argued some of Masimo’s watches infringed on Apple’s design patents but won just $250 (not a typo) in damages. Sadly, Apple didn’t win big enough to score an injunction preventing Masimo from selling its watches. That sound you can’t hear right now is champagne corks not being popped in the hallowed halls of Apple Park.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://ift.tt/aQ8R16lfrom Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics https://ift.tt/aQ8R16l
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