It’s already pretty hard to avoid being bombarded with TV ads, whether you’re watching Prime Video or pausing YouTube – and LG is now making things a little worse by bringing its pesky screensaver ads to older OLED TV models.
Last month, we reported that recent LG TVs, including premium OLEDs, were sneakily starting to show screensaver ads after sets had been left idle for a while. Some testing on our own LG G4 confirmed that to be the case. Now, FlatpanelsHD is reporting that those ads are rolling out to older models dating back to 2020, too.
If you own LG models like the LG GX OLED (2020), LG B1 OLED (2021) or LG B2 OLED (2022), you could soon see the screensaver ads turned on by default. It seems they’re also spreading to more recent models like the LG C4 OLED (2024), which is galling considering we consider it to otherwise be one of the best TVs you can buy.
Currently, the full-screen ads appear to be largely LG-related, promoting LG’s own channels. But an article from LG Ad Solutions previously suggested they could eventually be expanded to include third-party ones – and there’s evidence on Reddit that this might already be happening. Fortunately, there is a way to turn them off…
Advertisement
How to turn them off
There is currently a simple way to remove the default screensaver ads on your LG TV. Just go to Settings > General > System Settings > Additional Settings, then scroll down to the unsubtly-named Screen Saver Promotion. Toggle this off and you’ll be spared any more unsavory promos when your TV is idle.
Hopefully, this option will remain in the menus of LG TVs, because watching actual TV shows is quickly becoming a sideshow to being blasted with ads on many streaming platforms.
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More
The Verge last night published an exclusive and seemingly well researched and sourced report (it’s great in my opinion, read it here) from journalists Kylie Robison and Tom Warren stating that OpenAI plans to launch another new frontier AI model, codenamed Orion — which may or may not be GPT-5 — by December.
Altman hasn’t elaborated much since then from what I’ve seen, and the response is notably not exactly a direct denial of the claims — he didn’t write “No” or “this is false,” much less describe which part of the detailed article is wrong: is OpenAI not working on a new frontier model called Orion? That would contradict prior reporting from outlets including The Information that it does have such an effort internally — which to my knowledge, OpenAI never directly denied. Is it not planning to release later this year?
Advertisement
But it is clearly an attempt to push back on the reporting as it stands.
It’s an interesting quasi-denial given how precise The Verge report is, noting specific details about Orion’s supposed release plans and the fact that it appears to be geared toward enterprise customers and possibly would be served up through an application programming interface (API) only at first:
“Unlike the release of OpenAI’s last two models, GPT-4o and o1, Orion won’t initially be released widely through ChatGPT. Instead, OpenAI is planning to grant access first to companies it works closely with in order for them to build their own products and features, according to a source familiar with the plan.
Another source tells The Verge that engineers inside Microsoft — OpenAI’s main partner for deploying AI models — are preparing to host Orion on Azure as early as November. While Orion is seen inside OpenAI as the successor to GPT-4, it’s unclear if the company will call it GPT-5 externally.“
Advertisement
OpenAI’s last release of a new frontier model — o1 preview and o1-mini — occurred in early September, a little more than a month ago. Yet the wider reception of these large language models (LLMs) has been largely muted, in part because they are expensive for both the company and developers to operate, and also because they are of a new “reasoning” architecture and are more limited in many ways than OpenAI’s GPT family of models, unable at this time to accept file uploads, or to generate and analyze imagery.
Whether OpenAI does end up releasing a new frontier model later this year or not, we’ll be following closely. For now, it seems, fans of the company and its models shouldn’t get their hopes up too soon.
VB Daily
Advertisement
Stay in the know! Get the latest news in your inbox daily
Medical and administrative staff are increasingly overwhelmed with piles of paperwork they have to fill out every day.
Dozens, if not hundreds, of startups, are seeing opportunities to make those bureaucratic processes less burdensome with the help of generative AI. These companies are building AI medical scribes, platforms for pre-authorizing health insurance payments, and products for automatically extracting medical coding from patients’ electronic medical records (EMRs.)
But Pharos, a company that was a part of Y Combinator’s summer 2024 cohort, is applying AI to tackle another somewhat under-the-radar administrative function for hospitals: quality reporting to external clinical registries.
Organizations like Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and the American College of Surgeons aim to measure each healthcare centers’ record on delivering safe and effective care for patients. Although reporting to these registries is not always mandatory, it’s often in the best interest of hospitals. These external organizations play a crucial role in identifying quality issues (such as an increase in post-surgery infections), which can be addressed to improve patient care.
Advertisement
However, reporting to the registries is extremely time-consuming. Nurses and other staff must manually sift through each patient’s electronic health record to extract the precise data required for each registry. “A single case can take up to eight hours” to report, said Ryan Isono, a partner at Felicis, “It’s a big problem, but one that you only know about if you’re deep in the industry.”
Indeed, Pharos was co-founded by Felix Brann and Matthew Jones, who had some exposure to the challenges of reporting data to medical registries from their prior work at Vital, a startup that develops software for emergency rooms. They recognized that AI can take unstructured data from EMRs and automatically populate forms required by registries. As they went through YC earlier this year, they added another co-founder – Alex Clarke, a medical doctor who also holds a PhD in artificial intelligence from Imperial College London.
On Friday, Pharos announced that Felicis, with participation from General Catalyst, Moxxie and Y Combinator, led its $5 million seed round.
Pharos caught Felicis’ eye not only because the company could save hospitals money and free up nurses’ time for taking care of patients, but also because the area still doesn’t have other startups going after it, Isono said.
Advertisement
Brann (pictured center above) predicts that other quality reporting companies will emerge soon. “We have five years of experience selling and deploying into hospitals, and we have top-tier AI talent,” he said.” That Venn diagram doesn’t normally overlap. That’s why we think we’re going to win.”
For now, the entire Pharos team consists only of the three co-founders, but they will be using the capital to hire a team that will help the company sell the product and maintain relationships with hospitals.
On February 12, criminals used compromised credentials to remotely access a Change Healthcare Citrix portal, an application used to enable remote access to desktops. The portal did not have multi-factor authentication. Once the threat actor gained access, they moved laterally within the systems in more sophisticated ways and exfiltrated data. Ransomware was deployed nine days later.
Landmark Admin, a third-party administrator (TPA) specializing in administrative support services for life insurance and annuity companies, has confirmed suffering a serious ransomware attack recently.
The company revealed the news in a filing with the Maine Office of the Attorney General, in which it said that people’s data was stolen in an attack which took place in mid-May 2024.
Following the breach, Landmark Admin shut down its IT systems and remote access to its network to contain the effects, and brought in third-party security experts, who found the personal information of 806,519 people had been stolen.
Identity theft
“The forensic investigation determined that data was encrypted and exfiltrated from Landmark’s system,” the company said. “However, there was insufficient evidence available to identify which files had been compromised. The unauthorized activity occurred between May 13, 2024, and June 17, 2024.”
When the investigation concluded, the company understood that the information grabbed by the hackers included first name/initial and last name; address; Social Security number; tax identification number; driver’s license number/state-issued identification card; passport number; financial account number; medical information; date of birth; health insurance policy number; and life and annuity policy information.
Advertisement
“Please note that the information above varies for each potentially impacted individual. Affected individuals will be notified by mail of information that was impacted,” Landmark said.
So far, no threat actors assumed responsibility for the attack, so we don’t know if there were any ransom demands.
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
Since the information stolen is highly sensitive, users are advised to be extra vigilant for potential phishing attacks, social engineering, or possible wire fraud. Landmark is offering credit monitoring and identity theft protection services through IDX, which include 12 months of credit and CyberScan monitoring, a $1,000,000 insurance reimbursement policy, and fully managed id theft recovery services.
It has been eagerly anticipated, but this year’s Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 has finally dropped for gamers to get stuck into.
The Call of Duty (CoD) series is one of the best-selling in history with more than 425 million lifetime sales and has made billions of dollars.
But this latest edition comes with a bit of a difference, with it being available straight away to subscribers of Microsoft’s Game Pass service – a first for a game of this size.
It means those with the existing Netflix-style subscription do not need to pay anything extra to play.
Advertisement
Game Pass, like Sony’s rival PlayStation Plus service, lets Xbox and PC players play hundreds of video games for a monthly fee.
Earlier this year, Microsoft raised prices for all subscribers and added a tiered system.
As it’s the first mainline CoD game to be released since Microsoft completed its takeover of maker Activision Blizzard in the gaming industry’s biggest ever deal, there’s naturally a lot of focus on this approach.
Some experts feel it could bring more subscribers to the Game Pass service, but at the expense of actual game sales, with its true impact only being revealed in the coming months.
Advertisement
CoD content creator BennyCentral feels Game Pass is “one of the biggest elements this year”.
“The fact that it’s going to give people so much access, whether they’re playing on Xbox or they’re playing on PC, they’re going to be able to play the full game as part of that subscription,” he says.
Benny, who has Game Pass, tells BBC Newsbeat it will “widen the player base” of people that may not have played Black Ops in the past.
“They might be more likely to kind of hop on and try it for the first time.”
Advertisement
Fellow creator OllMS, who uses the Battlenet platform instead, agrees and thinks this approach by Microsoft can make the game “more accessible to a wider range of audience”.
“Especially younger people who may not be able to buy the game straight away, who would maybe wait until Christmas to get the game given to them by their parents.”
CoD has regularly topped PlayStation charts for its top-selling game, and Microsoft signed a 10-year deal to keep the game on Sony and Nintendo gaming platforms.
But while there have been some concerns around what it could mean for PlayStation users, who still have to pay the full price, OllMS thinks it’s also a boost from the perspective of content creators.
Advertisement
“It’ll be really exciting to be able to make content for even more people right from the launch.”
The CoD Black Ops spin-offs are generally well-regarded by fans for their single-player campaigns and the developers will be hoping this one lands well after the poor reception of last year’s Modern Warfare 3.
Benny and OllMS, who both had access to the beta version, are excited for the game because of some of the newer features.
With Black Ops 6, Benny points to omnimovement as a feature he is excited for, saying he feels it could “revolutionise how CoD is played”.
Advertisement
“The fact that you’ve got that complete 360-degree movement, is going to give players a huge opportunity to shoulder opponents, kind of bait people in and create some incredible plays,” he says.
“We saw a few in the beta already, with people doing some incredible things with sniper rifles.”
OllMS is also a fan of some of the weapons, which he says were in earlier versions and have been brought back, such as the AS VAL – a type of assault rifle.
“Which is going to be fun to use, in combination with the omnimovement,” he says.
Advertisement
“There’s going to be ways of making content and making plays that people have never seen before.”
Going back several decades for its setting is something Bennie is a fan of, particularly as he likes Black Ops games which contain things happening “behind the curtain”, and wants to see how that will play into this setting.
“It will be nice to see what kind of elements that they use, because it’s not an era where we’ve got smartphone technology.
Advertisement
“It’s the way that world is built up, and how they’ve built up the missions.
“Every single mission is supposed to be a unique experience that you’re going to take away and be like ‘wow’.”
But with regular yearly releases, is there such a thing as too much Call of Duty which could dull excitement?
Not for OllMS.
Advertisement
“I don’t think there can be too many CoD games that come out, because it’s something brand new,” he says.
“It’s something that a lot of young people and older people can get invested in, whether that’s playing with friends or playing solo.”
And they both think the game will continue to generate excitement because of what it means to gamers.
Benny says he loves Black Ops “especially because of the fast-paced nature of the game”.
Advertisement
“There’s incredible score streaks and kill streaks.”
OllMS meanwhile loves teaming up with people online.
“And I think especially with Warzone, being part of a squad of four and making memorable plays with your friends, that you absolutely love is just one of the best things.
“And you can make content out of that so easily, because you’re doing something you enjoy,” he says.
Advertisement
Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.
The next generation of nuclear technology could be moving closer to becoming a reality, driven by the tech sector’s growing demand for electricity to power artificial intelligence. Small modular reactors (SMRs) promise to reduce capital costs and accelerate construction timelines that typically plague nuclear plants, but the technology has struggled to reach the commercial stage. The difference now is the appetite of tech companies for fossil-free fuel. Amazon and Google, a unit of Alphabet , made back-to-back announcements this month putting real money behind these reactors. “In the absence of these tech companies, no one was going to build an SMR in the public utility world,” Paul Zimbardo, managing director at Jefferies, told CNBC. Demonstrating its faith in the technology, Google agreed to buy power from Kairos, a private developer of small modular reactors. Financial terms weren’t disclosed. Amazon is investing more than $500 million in the development of advanced reactors across several projects. As a result, the outlook for SMRs is improving and the potential market is far larger than appreciated, Morgan Stanley analyst Andrew Percoco wrote in a research report to clients on Wednesday. The market for SMRs could grow by two gigawatts to five gigawatts by 2035 assuming big tech companies make up a majority of the demand, Percoco said. That would represent between 6 and 17 reactors if each SMR averages 300 megawatts. Tech as a catalyst Utilities themselves have been reluctant to invest in SMRs due to the high costs associated with building a first-of-a-kind project, Zimbardo said. They have a responsibility to shareholders to make prudent decisions at the lowest cost, he added. The tech companies, meanwhile, need reliable, carbon-free electricity to power AI data centers and are increasingly willing to pay a premium for nuclear-fueled power as a consequence. Microsoft , for example, agreed to pay $130 per megawatt hour for electricity from the mothballed Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania that Constellation Energy is restarting, according to Percoco. “The cost of an SMR is highly uncertain but could potentially be feasible [at that] price level,” the Morgan Stanley analyst said. Investor options limited Investors who want exposure to SMRs have limited options right now. “There are not really large, liquid companies involved in SMRs,” Zimbardo told CNBC. The small, pure-play advanced reactor companies NuScale and Oklo are options, but their stocks are volatile and business outlook uncertain. NuScale, with a market value of $4.7 billion, is up 54% in the past month, while Oklo, worth about $2.5 billion, has more than doubled. Neither are involved in the Google and Amazon power deals. NuScale tried to deploy SMRs at a site in Idaho but the project was canceled last year as the price tag ballooned due to inflation and high interest rates. Oklo is promising to build microreactors that range in size between 15 megawatts and 100 megawatts. The startup, backed by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, hopes to have its first reactor up and running, also in Idaho, in 2027. GE Vernova offers some exposure to SMRs, albeit inside a sprawling business mostly focused on gas- and wind powered turbines. The company is slated to start construction on its BWRX-300 small modular reactor in Ontario next year, with the plant scheduled to come online in 2029. But GE Vernova doesn’t expect SMRs to become “a meaningful part of our income statement with revenue and growth until early into the next decade,” Chief Financial Officer Kenneth Parks told investors during the company’s third-quarter earnings call on Wednesday. SMR OKLO 1M mountain NuScale Power has climbed 54% and Oklo by 117% in the past month.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login