Mozilla News Beat, Oct 2
   
 
Mozilla News Beat

Welcome to the Mozilla News Beat, a glance at the best and worst internet news of the week. We hope you enjoy it!


red-heart A Wholesome Moment. Being a good dad means joining your kid for play time — even when mud is involved. Watch as the daughter invites her dad into the mud, the dad stares directly into the camera and then proceeds to splash around with his young one. Sir, you are a real one. | via Twitter
parrot A...Less Wholesome Moment. Animal antics ensued when five parrots at a British wildlife park were moved out of view after they started swearing at visitors. We feel you, parrots. It's been that kind of year. | via CNN
droplet Great Lakes. Two years ago scientists detected the possibility of water within Mars — a huge lake 19 miles in diameter beneath its south pole. Newer tests show us that those previous findings are even more likely to be true, with multiple sources of water potentially nearby. | via Motherboard
high-voltage Help Save The Planet. New research out of the journal Global Environmental Change notes that, 30 years from now, we could bring energy use down to 1960 levels (and still live comfortably) using tech that already exists — even if the population triples like it's expected to. | via Gizmodo
rolled-up-newspaper MisInformed. Struggling with false posts plaguing your news feed? Recode's written a comprehensive guide on protecting yourself from falling prey to misinformation and disinformation on your timeline. | via Vox
tractor Old McDonald Had* A Farm. Wow, remember Facebook games? Before the social network was known for destroying democracy, millions of users tended to virtual farms in between liking photos and sending their crushes memes. Now, after 11 years, Farmville is finally closing its barn doors. | via Ars Technica
hot-beverage Smart Home Revolt. Researchers at Avast discovered a worrisome vulnerability in the internet-connected coffee maker space. They reverse-engineered Smarter's coffee machine, and were able to turn on the burner, spin the bean grinder and even demand ransom. Watch out for this one during the robot apocalypse. | via SlashGear
disguised-face Deeply Troubling. Nonpartisan advocacy group RepresentUs released two deepfake videos, where actors + software impersonated Kim Jong Un and Vladimir Putin. The message: the U.S. doesn't need us to undermine the election, others might. | via Insider
crying-face Virtually Left Behind. Not all remote learning is created equal. Take the story of Shemar, an elementary school student in Baltimore whose lack of computer, internet and proper support system put him at a disadvantage when lessons went virtual. Shemar's story is all too common this pandemic. | via Pro Publica
house Housing Law Dilemma. Algorithms have long determined what shows up in our social feeds and search results. Now they decide who gets to live where. A report from The Markup tosses racial bias into the mix: when complaints of discrimination surface, who's at fault? The landlord or the software? | via The Markup
fearful-face Hacking Scare. Experts worry that the U.S. may not be ready for the next big hack-and-leak — when bad actors dig up dirt on a presidential candidate and use the information to discredit them or distract from something else in the news. The worst may be yet to come. | via MIT Technology Review
facepalm "Stand back and stand by". When Trump was asked to denounce white supremacy, he instead told groups like the Proud Boys to "stand back and stand by." After his comment, Proud Boys saw a spike in group-joins on Telegram — the app they use to gather after their suspension from Facebook and Twitter in 2018. | via NY Times

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