networking

It’s time to ditch Chrome

Despite a poor reputation for privacy, Google’s Chrome browser continues to dominate. The web browser has around 65 per cent market share and two billion people are regularly using it. Its closest competitor, Apple’s Safari, lags far behind with under 20 per cent market share.

Source: It’s time to ditch Chrome

Building the anti-Amazon: How loans and payments help Shopify compete

The pandemic supercharged Amazon’s ecommerce machine — but the same phenomenon strengthened a rising rival, Shopify, which takes a very different approach to selling online. The company positions itself as a counterpoint to Amazon by enabling smaller merchants to create their own stores and develop their own relationships with customers.

Source: Building the anti-Amazon: How loans and payments help Shopify compete

Hackers are targeting employees returning to the post-COVID office

With COVID-19 restrictions lifting and employees starting to make their way back into offices, hackers are being forced to change tack. While remote workers have been scammers’ main target for the past 18 months due to the mass shift to home working necessitated by the pandemic, a new phishing campaign is attempting to exploit those who have started to return to the physical workplace.

Source: Hackers are targeting employees returning to the post-COVID office – TechCrunch

We have basically no idea if anyone wins Instagram giveaways

In 1851, the inventor and entrepreneur Benjamin T. Babbitt began traveling around the United States in a wagon, offering consumers free lithographic prints with the purchase of baking soda. According to historian Wendy A. Woloson , this new mode of marketing inspired enterprising salesmen to launch their own prize giveaways, many of which ended up being scams.

Source: We have basically no idea if anyone wins Instagram giveaways

QAnon is disappearing from online view

Specific language about the QAnon conspiracy theory has all but disappeared from mainstream public social media platforms, new research concludes. Driving the news: Researchers from the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensics Lab found that the volume of QAnon content available online plummeted following major moderation and policy moves from Google, Facebook and Twitter.

Source: QAnon is disappearing from online view

The “TikTok intifada”

From making solidarity videos on TikTok to using Twitter to organize international protests to posting videos to Instagram showing Israeli airstrikes on Gaza, Palestinians and those around the world sympathetic to their plight have made social media a central weapon in the narrative fight against Israel. Those weapons are deployed on many fronts: using different platforms to target multiple audiences — in the region and around the world — while also using apps to coordinate actions among themselves.

Source: The “TikTok intifada”