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Based in India or U.S.? Elon Musk’s X erupts over location feature

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Elon Musk’s X erupted in uproar after the rollout of a feature revealing an account’s location, exposing what users describe as global troll farms and influence operations on the platform, including in support of U.S. President Donald Trump.

X’s head of product Nikita Bier launched the feature over the weekend, allowing users “to see the country or region where an account is based,” in a bid to boost transparency on a platform that tech experts say is rife with disinformation.

“This is an important first step to securing the integrity of the global town square,” Bier wrote on X.

The launch triggered a wave of online sleuthing.

Almost immediately, the platform flooded with posts flagging dozens of right-wing internet personalities, promoters of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) or “America First” political slogans, whose location data showed they were in Nigeria, Bangladesh, or Eastern Europe.

“Why are so many MAGA influencers from outside the U.S.? It’s almost as if they are working for foreign governments,” liberal influencer Ed Krassenstein wrote in a post.

The feature also seemed to vindicate researchers who warned during last year’s U.S. presidential election that a network of MAGA accounts, posing as “Trump-supporting independent women” and using stolen photos of European models and influencers, was operating overseas.

“X’s new account info showed many of these ‘American’ women were actually based in Thailand, with some tied to Myanmar,” Benjamin Strick, the London-based director of investigations at the Centre for Information Resilience, told AFP.

“Before this change we could show these profiles were fake, but we had almost no visibility on where they were run from, and often had to rely on ‘slip ups’ posted by the accounts, time posting patterns and irregularities in language.

“Now we can see that many of the accounts in this specific network are linked to Southeast Asia, which brings us closer to understanding who might be behind them,” Strick added.

Reflecting a hyperpolarized political climate, some right-wing personalities also pointed fingers at left-wing users seemingly posting from suspicious locations.

X, however, cautioned that the location data “may not be accurate and can change periodically.”

When users clicked on an account’s location, a pop up noted: “The country or region that an account is based can be impacted by recent travel or temporary relocation.”

Some users may also be connected via a VPN that can mask their real location.

“There are a few rough edges that will be resolved by Tuesday,” Bier wrote after the feature’s launch.

Late Sunday, Bier said an “upgrade” was upcoming that will ensure “accuracy will be nearly 99.99%”

Some users criticised the launch, warning that it could expose the locations of dissidents and protestors in autocratic states. Bier, however, said that for users in countries “where speech has penalties,” the feature includes privacy toggles that reveal only the region.

Soon after the launch, some apparent imposter accounts with vast followings were suddenly taken down without any explanation.

One X handle posing as a fan account for Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter, was suspended after users noted that its location was listed as Nigeria.

The account, which had amassed more than one million followers, regularly posted pro-Trump content as well as Islamophobic and anti-immigration messages.

X did not respond to AFP’s request for comment on the suspension.

As tech platforms scale back content moderation and reduce their reliance on human fact-checkers, disinformation researchers warn of a growing threat from Russian and Chinese actors seeking to sow political chaos in Western countries, as well as from overseas influencers driven by the prospect of monetary gain.

The new feature “shines a light on a fundamental problem with social media today: paid actors are deliberately inflaming difficult issues because controversy attracts attention,” Amy Bruckman, a professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology, told AFP.

“It’s a difficult situation, and I believe we need more trustworthy platforms that don’t allow people to behave badly.”

Last month, X laid off half of its engineering team responsible for fighting influence operations, spam, and illegal content on the platform, reflecting a push to replace staff with artificial intelligence, The Information reported on Monday.

Published – November 25, 2025 11:21 am IST

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Microsoft announces new small language model Fara-7B for computer use

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FILE PHOTO: Microsoft has announced a new small language model called Fara-7B, which can be used to perform agentic tasks directly on the user’s device.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Microsoft has announced a new small language model called Fara-7B, which can be used to perform agentic tasks directly on the user’s device. Termed as a Computer Use Agent (CUA) model, Fara-7B uses computer interfaces like the mouse and keyboard to achieve state-of-the-art performance, the company has claimed, that is on par with bigger agentic AI systems powered by much bigger large language models. 

Because the data is stored locally on device, the latency is reduced and the privacy is improved, the company noted.

“Users can build and test agentic experiences beyond pure research—automating everyday web tasks like filling out forms, searching for information, booking travel, or managing accounts,” a blog post by Microsoft said.

Fara-7B visually observes a webpage and then scrolls or types and clicks, having made predictions on the coordinates.

The blog post also added that it was recommended that Fara-7B was run in a sandbox environment and monitored while also avoiding any sensitive data or high-risk areas. 

The open-weight small language model is available on Microsoft Foundry and the Hugging Face platform under an MIT license. There’s also a quantised and silicon-optimised version of the model which will be made available later via Copilot + PCs powered by Windows 11.

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As Spotify Wrapped and YouTube Music Recap gear up, music lovers await their stats

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Sharing one’s yearly music stats on social media is an excellent way to entice others to sign up with a music streaming service [File]
| Photo Credit: AP

As November comes to an end, Spotify has uploaded its annual Wrapped page while YouTube is also sharing its Music Recap for 2025.

Music streamers often spend thousands or even tens of thousands of minutes every year listening to a variety of songs, scores, playlists, ambient sounds, meditation tracks, and podcasts. Many of them enjoy reviewing a visual summary of their listening habits in the past year that reveals their favourite media genres, as well as a few guilty pleasures.

Sharing one’s yearly music stats on social media is also an excellent way to entice others to sign up with a music streaming service.

“Your listening highlights, and more. Keep playing what you love, and we’ll get in touch when it’s ready. Until then, revisit the top songs of 2024,” noted Spotify on its website as it introduced the basic Wrapped page.

Meanwhile, YouTube has livened up its annual recap with an AI-powered “Ask about your listening” feature, reported the tech outlet 9to5Google.

Google added that users can keep listening to music and podcasts on YouTube in order to get future Recap playlists and stats.

“Your yearly and seasonal Recaps include personalized playlists and stats that bring together your top songs, artists, podcasts, and more from the past year and season. Recaps are made just for you, based on your music and podcast listening history across YouTube platforms. Your Recap gets updated every time a new yearly or seasonal Recap is available. You can always save your previous stats and playlists,” noted Google on its support page.

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Oakley Meta AI glasses to be available in India from December 1: Price, specs, AI features

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The Oakley Meta HSTN AI glasses will be available in six frame and lens colour combinations, with prices starting at ₹41,800
| Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

Meta’s new AI glasses, the Oakley Meta HSTN AI glasses, are set to be available in India from December 1, complete with AI features and UPI payment options.

The Oakley Meta HSTN AI glasses will include a fully integrated camera with high-resolution 3K video, open-ear speakers, and IPX4 water resistance. Users can expect up to eight hours of battery life or 19 hours on standby. There will be fast charging options and a charging case that can deliver 48 hours of additional power.

Meanwhile, Meta AI will provide instant answers and performance insights. Specific to India-based users, the glasses support full Hindi interactions with Meta AI, powered by Sarvam’s language tools. The Celebrity AI Voice will allow users to hear responses from famous personalities, with Deepika Padukone being one of the first in English.

Coming to financial features, the company is currently testing UPI QR-code payments directly from the user’s Oakley Meta HSTN smart glasses, through their WhatsApp-linked bank account. Users will need to look at a QR code while wearing the glasses and say, “Hey Meta, scan and pay,” to complete a UPI Lite payment.

“Oakley Meta HSTN integrates Meta AI directly into the glasses, transforming them into a performance-ready AI companion. Athletes can ask Meta AI for fast, real-time insights and hands-free assistance. Whether checking surf conditions, getting wind analysis before a golf swing, or recording a moment to share on Stories, users simply say, “Hey Meta” to activate their assistant,” said Meta in a press release, adding, “Oakley Meta HSTN, designed for athletes and sports enthusiasts, brings a bold new dimension to AI glasses.”

The Oakley Meta HSTN AI glasses will be available in six frame and lens colour combinations, with prices starting at ₹41,800.

The collection is available for pre-sale through Sunglass Hut, and can be bought at Sunglass Hut and leading optical and eyewear retailers.

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Amazon pledges up to $50 billion to expand AI, supercomputing for U.S. government

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AWS cloud regions for U.S. government are based on increasing levels of data sensitivity [File]
| Photo Credit: REUTERS

Amazon.com said on Monday it would invest up to $50 billion to expand AI and supercomputing capabilities for Amazon Web Services U.S. government customers, in one of the largest cloud infrastructure commitments targeted at the public sector.

The project, expected to break ground in 2026, will add nearly 1.3 gigawatts of artificial intelligence and high-performance computing capacity across AWS Top Secret, AWS Secret and AWS GovCloud regions by building data centers equipped with advanced compute and networking technologies.

AWS cloud regions for U.S. government are based on increasing levels of data sensitivity. The cloud unit currently serves more than 11,000 U.S. government agencies.

Tech companies, including OpenAI, Alphabet and Microsoft, are pouring billions of dollars to develop AI infrastructure, boosting demand for computing power required to support the services.

One gigawatt of computing power is roughly enough to power about 750,000 U.S. households on average.

“This investment removes the technology barriers that have held government back,” AWS Chief Executive Matt Garman said. Amazon did not disclose the timeline for the spending.

Under the latest initiative, U.S. federal agencies will gain access to AWS’ comprehensive suite of AI services, including Amazon SageMaker for model training and customisation, Amazon Bedrock for deploying models and agents, as well as foundation models such as Amazon Nova and Anthropic Claude.

The federal government seeks to develop tailored AI solutions and drive significant cost savings by leveraging AWS’ dedicated and expanded capacity.

The push also comes as the U.S., along with other countries such as China, intensifies efforts to advance AI development and secure leadership in the emerging technology.

The White House did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

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U.S. senators call for probe of scam ads on Facebook and Instagram

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FILE PHOTO: U.S. senators have asked FTC and the Securities and Exchange Commission to probe Meta about its revenue from ads on Facebook and Instagram that promote scams and banned goods.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

U.S. senators Josh Hawley and Richard Blumenthal have asked the heads of the Federal Trade Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission to probe Meta Platforms, following a Reuters report about the social media giant’s revenue from ads on Facebook and Instagram that promote scams and banned goods.

“The FTC and SEC should immediately open investigations and, if the reporting is accurate, pursue vigorous enforcement action where appropriate” to force Meta to disgorge profits, pay penalties and agree to cease running such advertisements, Hawley and Blumenthal wrote in a letter to the federal agencies.

Earlier this month, Reuters reported that internal documents from late 2024 stated that that year – about $16 billion – from illicit advertising. One document noted Meta earns $3.5 billion in revenue from “higher risk” scam ads every six months. Other documents stated that Meta’s anti-fraud rules didn’t appear to apply to many ads that regulators and the company’s own staff believed “violated the spirit” of its rules against scam advertising.

In response to the Reuters report, Meta said it had reduced user reports of scams by 58% over the last eighteen months.

The Hawley-Blumenthal letter “makes claims that are exaggerated and wrong,” Meta spokesman Andy Stone said. “We aggressively fight fraud and scams because people on our platforms don’t want this content, legitimate advertisers don’t want it and we don’t want it either.”

Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, and Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, expressed skepticism about Meta’s efforts to combat illicit advertising. They pointed to the company’s “ad library,” a publicly accessible database of advertising that appears on Meta’s social-media platforms.

“Even a short review of Meta’s Ad Library at the time oft his letter shows clearly identifiable advertisements for illicit gambling, payment scams, crypto scams, AI deepfake sex services, and fake offers of federal benefits,” they wrote.

The senators cited Reuters reporting that Meta itself estimated its platforms were involved in a third of all scams in the U.S., and went on to note that the FTC estimates Americans lost $158.3 billion to scams last year.

“This would suggest Meta was responsible for more than $50 billion in consumer loss,” they wrote. Their letter alleges that Meta has consciously chosen to accept ads that promote fraudulent activities.

“Scams have been allowed to take over Facebook and Instagram as Meta has drastically cut its safety staff, including for FTC mandated reviews, even as it dumps unimaginable sums into its generative AI projects.”

Blumenthal and Hawley expressed particular concern about fake ads purporting to represent the U.S. government or political figures. They cited an example of a bogus ad that claimed President Donald Trump was offering $1,000 to recipients of food assistance.

“While Meta has been warned about advertisement deepfakes impersonating politicians, it still continues to run fraudulent clips,” their letter states. “The beneficiaries of these scams are often cybercrime groups based in China, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and the Philippines.”

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Amazon sites in Italy raided by police in China smuggling probe

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Italian police carried out searches and seizures at two Amazon sites in Italy on Monday as part of an investigation into the alleged smuggling of Chinese goods, three people with direct knowledge of the matter said.

Dozens of officers from the Guardia di Finanza tax police and the customs agency seized around 5,000 products at a logistics hub operated by the e-commerce giant in Cividate al Piano, in the northern province of Bergamo, the sources said.

At Amazon’s Italian headquarters in central Milan, police seized IT equipment and identified the Amazon manager responsible for the transportation of goods within Italy, the sources added.

Amazon in Italy was not immediately available for comment.

NEW LINE OF INQUIRY STEMMING FROM PREVIOUS CASE

Italian prosecutors allege that Amazon acts as a kind of “Trojan horse” allowing an as yet unknown number of Chinese goods to circulate in Italy without being appropriately taxed, a court document showed on Monday.

Among the products seized at the Bergamo centre were toys, mobile phone covers, air fryers, pens and small scissors.

It was not immediately clear what impact the two operations would have on Amazon’s activities in Italy.

The smuggling probe is a new line of inquiry stemming from an investigation into an alleged 1.2 billion euro tax evasion case.

The new case, led by Milan prosecutors together with the Monza branch of the Guardia di Finanza, alleges smuggling offences by dozens of Italian companies, many of which are believed to be fronts for Chinese entities, and the manager in charge of the movement of goods via Amazon.

Prosecutors suspect that goods are being brought from China into the European Union, and then into Italy, through currently unknown channels, without sales taxes or customs duties being paid.

The products are then allegedly moved and sold in Italy via Amazon’s marketplace.

Milan prosecutors are investigating both suspected smuggling and violations of the EU customs code.

PROBE EXPECTED TO EXPAND TO OTHER EU NATIONS, SOURCES SAY

Since last summer, two other ongoing operations have proceeded with Amazon’s cooperation due to the complexity of managing goods flows in the e-commerce giant’s logistics hubs.

Three people with direct knowledge of the matter said the number of products involved could total half a million, with the probe expected to be extended to the rest of the European Union.

Milan prosecutors were summoned to The Hague headquarters of the EU agency for criminal justice cooperation Eurojust in July, where they presented the scope of their investigation to counterparts from several EU countries, including Germany, France, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Belgium, Sweden and Ireland.

Disputes over customs duties and sales taxes have fueled growing tensions with the United States over the past year, but it is unclear how this case involving China will be viewed in Washington and Brussels.

TAX EVASION: EU PROSECUTORS ALSO INVESTIGATING

In the original 1.2 billion euro tax evasion case, Milan prosecutors investigated three managers and Amazon’s Luxembourg-based European unit over alleged tax fraud related to online sales in Italy between 2019 and 2021.

According to the probe, Amazon’s algorithm allows it to sell in Italy goods from non-EU sources, mostly Chinese, without disclosing their identity, helping them avoid paying Italian sales taxes.

Under Italian law, an intermediary offering goods for sale in Italy is jointly liable for non-payment of sales taxes by non-EU sellers using its e-commerce platform.

Amazon said in a previous statement that it was “committed to complying with all applicable tax laws”.

In relation to that case, Italy’s tax agency has submitted a settlement proposal to Amazon on which the U.S. group must decide by December.

Amazon’s tax position has also been investigated by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO), which has opened its probe into its accounts between 2021 and 2024 after new EU rules imposing stricter VAT obligations on marketplaces came into force.

Published – November 25, 2025 11:39 am IST

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Amazon to invest $15 billion in Indiana to boost data center infrastructure

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FILE PHOTO: Amazon is planning to invest about $15 billion in Northern Indiana to build data center campuses, the tech giant said.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Amazon.com is planning to invest about $15 billion in Northern Indiana to build data center campuses, the tech giant said as it looks to boost its cloud computing capacity to support booming artificial intelligence demand.

The new data center project, which comes on top of an $11 billion outlay announced last year, will add 2.4 gigawatts of capacity in the region, Amazon said on Monday. It is also expected to create 1,100 jobs.

The e-commerce behemoth, which is also the largest cloud services provider in the world, has invested more than $31.3 billion in Indiana since 2010.

Tech companies like Alphabet, Microsoft and Meta are spending billions of dollars to develop AI infrastructure, even though the returns from the investments have been low.

Earlier in the day, Amazon also announced plans to invest up to $50 billion to expand AI and supercomputing capabilities for U.S. government customers of its cloud unit, Amazon Web Services.

The Monday announcements are two separate investments, Amazon said.

For the Indiana project, Amazon has struck an agreement with NIPSCO, one of Indiana’s top natural gas and electric companies, for the project.

The company has agreed to pay fees to use existing power and cover the costs for any new power needs for the data center project, without additional costs for local residents and businesses.

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Apple designer Jony Ive reveal prototype of AI device ready, to be launched within 2 years

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FILE PHOTO: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman revealed that his collaboration with Apple designer Jony Ive, has finally settled down on the prototype of an AI hardware device. 
| Photo Credit: Reuters

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman revealed that his collaboration with Apple designer Jony Ive, has finally settled down on the prototype of an AI hardware device. 

In a video posted Monday (November 24, 2025) by Emerson Collective at an event that had both Ive and Altman as a part of a panel on stage, Ive added that the device could be launched in “less than two years.” 

Altman said that the work that had gone into the partnership was “jaw-droppingly good” and “exciting.” 

“Finally, we have the first prototypes,” said OpenAI boss Sam Altman. “I can’t believe how jaw-droppingly good the work is and how exciting it is. But also, now getting to the benefit of hindsight and looking at the progress — the process backwards — how much it’s all in there and how it wouldn’t have worked any other way. And then out of the end of it comes this extraordinary thing.”

While there are no details around what the AI gadget will be, earlier reports have hinted that there will be no screens.

Altman described the design of the device as “simple and beautiful and playful,” adding that it will know everything that the user has “ever thought about, read or said.”

Previously in May, OpenAI acquired Ive’s startup called io for $6.4 billion and announced an AI hardware project.

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Spotify to raise U.S. prices in first quarter of next year: Report

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Spotify did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment [File]
| Photo Credit: REUTERS

Spotify will raise its U.S. subscription prices in the first quarter of next year, the Financial Times reported on Monday, citing three people familiar with the matter.

The Swedish streaming giant said in August it would raise prices to 11.99 euros ($13.82) per month from 10.99 euros in markets including South Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Europe, Latin America and the Asia-Pacific region.

But next year’s hike would be the first price increase in the United States since June 2024.

Spotify did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The company has leaned on price increases in recent years to drive earnings growth, confident that its ubiquity ensures users stick around. It raised the cost of its premium individual plan in more than 150 markets in the September quarter.

Spotify forecast fourth-quarter profit above Wall Street expectations earlier this month, betting on robust user growth and a boost from price hikes in the crucial holiday season.

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