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Google rolls out updates to its Search ranking to counter the spread of AI content in results, which includes down-ranking content that summarizes others’ work

There are always new ways to try to game Google with crappy content — and now the company is fighting back against the worst of it

 

David Pierce / The Verge:

 

 

—  Google is rolling out a few new changes to its ranking systems in search, which are designed to help surface good content in your results and hide some of the worst and most cynical stuff on the web.

 

The company says that it is doing a better job of downranking content that exists only to summarize other content — which can sometimes be normal SEO stuff but is also increasingly a job for generative AI tools— and in combatting some of the tricks people use to trick its ranking systems.

 

There are always people trying to manipulate their way to the top of Google results. That’s just a fact of the web and a fact of life for Google’s search teams. Google is always making changes to its ranking algorithms, too, in an effort to improve search results. We never hear about most of those changes.

 

“You only see the ones that sort of slipped by the controls, as it were,” says Pandu Nayak, a VP of search at Google. “Unfortunately, these are not things you can just wave a magic wand and get rid of.”

 

For Google to announce the changes it’s making signals two things. First, that these are big changes that could meaningfully change your search experience — Nayak says that Google’s measurements show a reduction in “unhelpful content” by up to 40 percent. And second, that Google is sending a message to the web: your spammy, sketchy behavior ends now.

 

       — Google is sending a message to the web: your spammy, sketchy behavior ends now

 

Nayak lays out three examples of what Google now considers spammy behavior and intends to downrank. The first is content at scale: the sites that create thousands of low-quality articles a day, either through low-paid contractors or AI generators, and target that content at search results. Nayak points to obituary spam — which The Verge’s Mia Sato recently wrote about — as an example of a problem to be solved here.

 

The second spammy behavior is what Nayak calls “site reputation abuse.” This is when an otherwise respectable website rents out part of its site for spammy nonsense; I won’t name and shame anyone here, but you’ve surely seen the sites that make you wonder why they have coupons or why there’s a whole part of the site that seems irrelevant and AI-generated. The third is “expired domain abuse,” which is when someone buys an abandoned but high-ranking domain and fills it with crummy content that then jumps to the top of search. The current state of The Hairpin is one example of how this can happen, which Wired has covered well in recent weeks.

 

For those engaging in site reputation abuse, Nayak says Google is giving the sites 60 days to cut it out before it makes the ranking changes. The others go into effect now. Google has a spam problem, it knows it, and it’s trying to shut it down. “The healthy, high-quality ecosystem is exactly the one that gets affected when spammers and low-quality purveyors of information get control of ranking,” Nayak says.

 

The job is not done, of course. The reckoning over AI-generated content — what it means, who wants it, how it should rank — is only just beginning and will cause Google plenty of internal headaches as it both tries to bring AI to everyone and tries to save the web from being overrun by it. (Even Google’s own search engine is increasingly an AI machine.) And there will always be new, sneakier ways to game your way to the top of search results. This is a headache of Google’s own making: most of the chum on the web exists entirely to game Google, and so Google will always be one step behind.

 

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— Techmeme

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Mercer County Exec-elect Dan Benson Transition Team introduces the 17 transition committees

MERCER COUNTY, N.J. — Following his recent election as Mercer County Executive, on Feb. 22 the Benson Transition Team released a 49-page report that contains recommendations from their 17 transition committees.

“Building a better future demands bold action. With the Transition Team’s unique insights, we have developed a bold and comprehensive set of goals for our administration. I look forward to turning this vision into action,” said County Executive Dan Benson.

“This was a thorough process of coordinating efforts across 17 teams and assessing hundreds of detailed and thoughtful recommendations,” said Transition Co-Chair Sharon Shinkle Gardner.

“We’re so proud of the hard work and passion that our members brought to their transition committees — it is reflected in the quality of the report,” Transition Co-Chair Jeannine Frisby LaRue said.

The Transition Team was tasked by County Executive Dan Benson with evaluating the wide range of responsibilities of Mercer County government and offering recommendations for the new administration. It was made up of a diverse group of more than 100 Mercer County residents. Each committee brought together voices from across the county to help explore a key piece of government and provide their perspectives on how to move Mercer forward.

County Executive Benson continued, “I am grateful to have a Transition Team that is so dedicated to our community and our shared values. We have already begun to implement a number of our report’s suggestions and are excited for the road map it provides for our first term.”

The full transition report can be found at BensonTransition.com.

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2 Programs in Mercer County to host bike drive to benefit Boys & Girls Club Bike Exchange

The Mercer County Planning Department and the Mercer County Park Commission are hosting a bike drive for the benefit of the Boys & Girls Club Bike Exchange on Saturday, April 13 from noon to 4 p.m.

This non-profit run by 50 volunteers collects, conditions, and sells used, quality bikes to people in the Trenton area. Do you have a bike that you no longer use? Maybe you have one your child has outgrown? Consider donating it for this cause.

Since 2009 the Bike Exchange has repaired, reconditioned, and sold over 27,000 donated bikes, raising more than $1,600,000 for Boys & Girls Club after-school programs which serve over 700 children daily. Over the past several years the Bike Exchange has given away approximately 300 bikes annually to youth in Trenton and urban areas throughout New Jersey.

The Bike Exchange also trains interested students in bike repair through their internship program.

Your bike donation will help support these efforts. Please drop off your bike at either the West Windsor or Pennington location and know that your tax-deductible donation will benefit our community.

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Taylor Swift asks fans to vote on Super Tuesday — does not endorse Joe Biden this time

Just before Instagram went down, Taylor Swift took to her Stories to encourage her 282 million followers to get out and exercise their right to vote on Super Tuesday.

 

In a post, the pop star implored eligible voters to head to the polls to support candidates that best align with their interests.

 

“Today, March 5, is the Presidential Primary in Tennessee and 16 other states and territories,” she wrote. I wanted to remind you guys to vote the people who most represent YOU into power. If you haven’t already, make a plan to vote today. Whether you’re in Tennessee or somewhere else in the US, check your polling places and times at vote.org.”

 

Though Swift doesn’t make any explicit endorsement in the post, she’s historically been influential in getting fans into the voting booth. In 2018, she made her first public endorsement of any candidate with a post on Instagram, an event that she explored in her 2020 documentary “Miss Americana.” The post had a rippling effect on fans, referred to as the Taylor Swift effect, as 169,000 people registered to vote in the 2018 midterm elections in the two days after she shared her message.

 

In 2020, she endorsed President Joe Biden and spoke out against President Donald Trump, who was then in office. Swift has continually encouraged fans to register to vote, and last September, her post on Instagram led to a surge in registrations on Vote.org where, at the time, the website was averaging 13,000 users every 30 minutes.

 

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— Variety

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‘Fixer Upper’ turns 10: Chip and Joanna Gaines celebrate with new season of ‘The Lakehouse’ on HGTV, Magnolia Network

“Fixer Upper” stars Chip and Joanna Gaines will mark the 10-year anniversary of the HGTV show that rocketed them to home-reno fame with the debut of a new season, “Fixer Upper: The Lakehouse,” in June.

 

Per its official description, this new edition of “Fixer Upper” follows Chip and Joanna as they take on a unique mid-century modern lake house flip near Lake Waco, a new neighborhood for the home renovation duo based in Waco, Texas. From demo to design, viewers will follow the full transformation of the property throughout the season as Chip and Joanna go above and beyond with surprising interior designs and unique outdoor installations never before seen on “Fixer Upper.”

 

Produced by the Gaineses’ production company Blind Nil, “Fixer Upper: The Lakehouse” will air its six episodes on both Chip and Joanna Gaines’ Magnolia Network (part owned by Warner Bros. Discovery) and HGTV, the original home of “Fixer Upper” franchise, across three weeks of double premieres beginning June 2. The show will be available to stream same day on Max and Discovery+.

 

The original “Fixer Upper” debuted on HGTV in 2014 and ran for five seasons, becoming the top unscripted show on cable, before airing its final episode in 2018. During its initial run, “Fixer Upper” was the top unscripted show on cable. The show was rebooted as “Fixer Upper: Welcome Home” for the launch of the Gaineses’ Magnolia Network in 2021 and later two new seasons: “Fixer Upper: The Castle” in 2022 and “Fixer Upper: The Hotel” in 2023.

 

“When ‘Fixer Upper’ premiered 10 years ago, we couldn’t have imagined the journey we had ahead of us,” the Gaineses said. “Though a lot has changed and evolved in the decade between then and now, our love for home is still at the heart of everything we do. We feel honored that we get to continue pouring into the stories of these homes across Waco, and we’re excited to share our latest project with you this summer with ‘Fixer Upper: The Lakehouse.’”

 

Magnolia Network president Allison Page added: “We’re so excited to see how Chip and Jo will tackle this lakehouse in Waco and flex their renovation and design muscles in ways our viewers have never seen before. Since the premiere of ‘Fixer Upper’ in 2014, they have amassed a huge global fanbase and grown a beloved lifestyle brand from the ground up, and we’re thrilled to celebrate this milestone alongside them this year.”

 

 

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— Variety

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A BlackCat ransomware gang website shows takedown notice; the UK NCA denies involvement, experts suggest an exit scam after an alleged UnitedHealth payment 

—  A website used by hackers responsible for a breach at UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N) has been replaced by a notice saying it has been seized by international law enforcement.

 

Reuters:

 

 

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) — The hackers responsible for the breach at UnitedHealth Group (UNH.N), opens new tab appear to have pulled a disappearing act on Tuesday, leaving their cybercriminal associates in the lurch and replacing their old website with a bogus statement from law enforcement.
The corporate logo of the UnitedHealth Group appears on the side of one of their office buildings in Santa Ana, California, U.S., April 13, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
The U.S. insurer disclosed on Feb. 21 that Blackcat hacking gang – also known as ALPHV – had perpetrated a cyberattack on its technology unit Change Healthcare, causing disruptions across the U.S. healthcare system.

 

A message posted to Blackcat’s website said it had been impounded “as part of a coordinated law enforcement action” by U.S. authorities and other law enforcement agencies. Among the logos of non-American agencies involved were those of Europol and Britain’s National Crime Agency.
The FBI declined comment and Europol did not return messages, but a National Crime Agency spokesperson said: “I can confirm any recent disruption to ALPHV infrastructure is not a result of NCA activity.”

 

Blackcat has not responded to Reuters requests for comment in several days.
Security experts said the law enforcement denial and other clues made it look like the hackers had simply decided to shut up shop.
“This appears to be a classic exit scam,” said researcher Will Thomas. In an exit scam, hackers pretend to be knocked out of commission only to quietly pocket their partners’ money and start over under a new name.

 

 

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— Techmeme

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Insider cybersecurity risk startup Dtex Systems raises $50M Series E from CapitalG at  $400M post-money valuation 

Sam Sabin / Axios:

 

 

CapitalG, Alphabet’s venture capital fund, is investing $50 million in Series E funding in insider risk company Dtex Systems, the companies first tell Axios.

 

Why it matters: The tech giant’s investment gives a vote of confidence to Dtex’s bet that insider risk will become the next big cybersecurity market.

 

  • CapitalG has invested in major cybersecurity companies like CrowdStrike and ZScaler.

 

Zoom in: Dtex is now valued at more than $400 million after this new funding, a company spokesperson told Axios.

 

  • The company — which has now raised a total of $138 million —plans to use the funds to expand its U.S.-based engineering teams and marketing operations around the world.
  • Dtex CEO Marshall Heilman told Axios the company is working to expand its client base to more U.S. government customers and Fortune 500 companies.
  • James Luo, a partner at CapitalG, will join Dtex’s board of directors.

 

 

How it works: Dtex uses machine learning to analyze network activity and company endpoints to flag potential insider risks, such as disgruntled employees stealing data or hacked employee accounts.

 

  • Flagged activity could include employees logging into their accounts from an unusual location, exfiltrating a large amount of corporate files and resetting an account password too many times.

 

The big picture: CapitalG’s investment comes as cybersecurity startup funding hits a five-year low, as total funding dropped 50% between 2022 and 2023, according to Crunchbase News.

 

  • Dtex last raised funding four years ago in a $17.5 million Series D round led by Northgate Capital.
  • Heilman joined the company as CEO in December after nearly 20 years at Google Cloud’s Mandiant.

 

What they’re saying: “I had always known that CapitalG was my white whale, they were the ones I wanted to land if it was possible,” Heilman said.

 

  • “I wanted someone who is going to be in the business and helping us while not trying to take over the business,” he added. “CapitalG was the perfect medium to do that.”

 

Between the lines: Insider risk has become a growing area of interest for companies.

 

  • 46% of organizations plan to increase their spending on insider threats in 2024, according to a recent report from Dtex and the Ponemon Institute.

 

What’s next: Heilman added that while Dtex is focused on insider threat, he is eyeing product areas where the company could grow in using the data it’s collected from its insider risk monitoring tools.

 

 

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— Techmeme

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Saint Laurent Productions boards ‘Emilia Perez’ starring Zoe Saldana

After making its debut at last year’s Cannes Film Festival with Jean-Luc Godard’s last work and Pedro Almodóvar’s “Strange Way of Life,” Anthony Vaccarello’s Saint Laurent Productions has boarded Jacques Audiard’s “Emilia Perez” as a co-producer.

 

The musical thriller joins Saint Laurent Productions’ roster of prestige projects, including Oscar-winning director Paolo Sorrentino’s “Parthenope,” David Cronenberg’s “The Shrouds.”

 

“Emilia Perez” is a musical thriller boasting an international cast led by Karla Sofia Gascón, Zoe Saldana (“Avatar”), Selena Gomez (“Only Murders in the Building”), Edgar Ramirez (“Carlos”) and Adriana Paz. The movie is co-produced with French production company Why Not Productions and Page 114, together with Pathé and France 2 Cinema. Pathé has acquired French distribution rights and will release the movie in French theaters. The movie has been described by Audiard as an “opera libretto in four acts.”

 

The Palme d’Or winning director assembled a stellar creative team, including composer Clement Ducol, singer, songwriter/composer Camille, and choreographer Damien Jalet. Vaccarello created the costumes for the movies. “Emilia Perez” will be released before the end of 2024.

 

Saint Laurent Productions is the first film production company launched by a fashion house. When unveiling the company last year, Vaccarello said it will give him “the opportunity to expand the vision I have for Saint Laurent through a medium that has more permanence than clothes.”

 

“You can still see a film in 10 or 30 years if it’s good. In some ways, making a film can be more impactful than a seasonal collection. For me it’s a natural extension to another field of creativity that perhaps is more general and popular,” said the Belgian native, who became the artistic director of Saint Laurent in 2016.

 

 

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— Variety

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‘Veselka: The Rainbow on the Corner at the Center of the World’ review: Come for pierogis and goulash, stay for freedom

A documentary about the fabled Ukrainian restaurant becomes a portrait of wartime valor. I wish the film had drawn a deeper connection between the taste of freedom and the taste of Veselka.

 

— It’s not every day I get to review a documentary about a subject I feel personally close to, so let me put my bias right out there.

 

Veselka: The Rainbow on the Corner at the Center of the World” is a movie about one of my favorite New York restaurants — and, in fact, countless New Yorkers feel the same way. When you walk into Veselka, the legendary Ukrainian restaurant/diner on the corner of 2nd Ave. and E. 9th St., a vibe of warmth envelops you.

 

I’ve spent endless hours hanging out there, nursing a cup of coffee or a glass of wine, writing on my laptop, chowing down on the magically tasty dishes that the purveyors call Ukrainian soul food: the pierogis that melt in your mouth, the potato pancakes that are crisp salty heaven, the succulent meatballs and rolled cabbage, the high-octane borscht, not to mention all the sublime American fare, including a burger I’d put up against any burger in New York.​

 

As Veselka devotees will tell you, the welcoming aura of the place ­— the lack of pretense, the gorgeous murals and knickknacks, the extraordinary friendliness of the staff, many of whom are Ukrainian — feeds right into the savoriness of the cuisine. Veselka is a place of love where the food is made from love; you can’t separate the two.

 

For years, the restaurant stayed open 24 hours a day, mostly to cater to the world of East Village night crawlers (it had to cut back on hours starting in the pandemic). One of the most memorable images I have of Veselka is when I sat down at around midnight to have a late dinner and write a piece at one of the back tables. I got immersed in what I was doing and didn’t leave, or even look up, until around 4 a.m. When I walked out, every table in the place was full; it felt not like a scraggly after-hours crowd but like a 7 p.m. Friday-night dinner crowd. At Veselka (the name is Ukrainian for “rainbow),” the deliciousness, the casual joy, and the love all go around the clock.

 

“Veselka: The Rainbow on the Corner at the Center of the World” pays enthusiastic tribute to Veselka’s place in the city, and to its 70-year history as a family restaurant. On some level, it’s a tale of ego, money, and real estate, and the details of how the restaurant runs are fascinating. Yet this was a documentary shot, for the most part, after the start of the war in Ukraine, and the way Veselka has confronted the war — raising hundreds of thousands of dollars in charity by donating all its borscht sales, acting as a sponsor for Ukrainian citizens to come to the United States — is more than just part of the story the movie is telling. It becomes the central story.

 

Some of this is noble and stirring. The neighborhood in which Veselka is located was once known as Little Ukraine, and though there are fewer Ukrainians living there than there were decades ago, the area retains its identity. Veselka, during the two years the war has gone on, has become a kind of beacon for the pride and fighting spirit of Ukraine.

 

Yet as moving as parts of the documentary are, I’ll be honest and say that I couldn’t escape the feeling that Michael Fiore, who wrote, produced, directed, and edited it, should have cut back on some of this stuff and done a more complete job of telling the inside story of the restaurant itself. Veselka is a place that would anchor a great segment of “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives.”

 

There’s a 12-minute video on YouTube that goes into the restaurant’s kitchen and shows you, with a Guy Fieri-like eagerness, how the sausage gets made. I found it a little odd that I learned five times as much about the food at Veselka from that video than I did from a 106-minute documentary about the place. I’m not saying that a pierogi recipe is more important, in the grand human scheme of things, than Ukraine’s — and in many ways, by extension, the Western world’s — fight for freedom in this terrible and heroic war. But “Veselka” is a documentary about a restaurant. The movie should have given us a more detailed sense of why, exactly, people come there.

 

 

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— Variety

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India’s Yash Raj Films launches Casting app for acting aspirants worldwide

Bollywood aspirants the world over wanting to feature alongside top Indian stars can now cut out the middleman. Leading Indian studio Yash Raj Films (YRF), the outfit behind Shah Rukh Khan, Deepika Padukone starrer “Pathaan,” and “Tiger 3,” led by Salman Khan and Katrina Kaif, has launched its YRF Casting app.

 

— YRF Casting/Everett Collection

Acting aspirants from across the world can get information about casting calls and submit their auditions via the app.

 

The YRF Casting app, which is live now, will enable actors to register their profile details within the app. Registered users will get information about all the upcoming auditions related to theatrical films and streaming projects that the studio will greenlight.

 

The app is designed as an online destination for actors to submit their auditions for these projects directly to YRF. The studio will not charge a fee for applications.

 

The company believes that the app will tackle the issues caused by fake YRF casting accounts that mislead people about auditions and are a threat to its market reputation.

 

YRF casting director Shanoo Sharma, who is in charge of selecting and training people to be launched as leads in YRF projects, as well as finalizing actors for other primary or secondary roles, will personally monitor all auditions coming via the app. Sharma has cast some of YRF’s biggest hits such as “Ek Tha Tiger,” “Gunday,” “Sultan,” “Tiger 3,” “Pathaan,” “War,” “Hichki,” “Dum Laga Ke Haisha,” “Mardaani,” “Jab Tak Hai Jaan” and “Ishaqzaade.”

 

Sharma said: “The YRF Casting app is a progressive step towards making aspiring actors reach out directly to YRF for projects that the company is making. We are certain that there are countless brilliant actors throughout the world waiting to be discovered. This could be their chance of a lifetime. For the first time, an aspiring actor can reach out to a production house directly. This is a safe space. They don’t have to rely on anyone else for their shot at achieving their dreams.”

 

“This step shatters all barriers and as a casting director for YRF, I’m most excited to get in touch with many incredible talents living not only in India, but also worldwide. I hope people who dream to be an actor follow this path and make the most of this incredible opportunity that empowers them to follow their heart,” Sharma added.

 

 

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— Variety (EXCLUSIVE)