| CURIOUS CONTRACT: The National Security Agency (NSA) has awarded a cloud computing contract worth up to $10 billion to Amazon, Nextgov reported Tuesday. The contract, named “WildandStormy,” according to filings obtained by the outlet, appears to be part of the NSA’s attempts to modernize its repository for classified data. The award is being challenged by Microsoft, according to Government Accountability Office records. Amazon referred questions about the contract to the NSA. A spokesperson for the agency confirmed to The Hill that it “recently awarded a contract for cloud computing services to support the Agency” and that another company bidding for the contract has filed a protest. A Microsoft spokesperson confirmed that it is filing the protest “based on the decision.” “We are exercising our legal rights and will do so carefully and responsibly,” they added. Read more. IMAGE CROP UH-OH: Researchers say Twitter’s image-cropping algorithm is more biased than previously known. The social media giant largely stopped using its cropping tool this year after it went viral last September for automatically highlighting white people in photos that also included a Black person. Researchers have now found that the algorithm for highlighting faces in photos also discriminated against Muslims, people with disabilities and older people. The image-cropping system also favored thinner and younger-looking people, another researcher showed. The findings were part of a contest hosted by Twitter at the Def Con hacker conference in Las Vegas over the weekend to find new ways that the algorithm coded bias. Read more. KIDS’ SAFETY UPDATES: Google is rolling out a series of updates to YouTube and its search feature aimed at increasing safety for kids and teens on its platforms, the tech giant announced Tuesday. The changes include measures to give minors more control over their digital footprint and to further constrain commercial content for children. The rollout follows mounting pressure the Silicon Valley giant has faced from advocacy groups and lawmakers. On YouTube, default privacy settings for users aged 13 to 17 will be the “most private option available,” which only lets content be seen by the user and whomever they choose. Teen users can make their content public by changing the default upload visibility setting, according to a YouTube blog post. YouTube will also start to remove “overly commercial content” from YouTube Kids, "such as a video that only focuses on product packaging or directly encourages children to spend money.” Read more about the updates. |
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