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Google Will Eliminate Play Store Apps That Don’t Comply With The New Call Log and SMS Policies

In October, Google adopted new, stricter, call log and SMS policies, and granted apps developers 90 days to bring their applications into compliance with the new regulations. Now, that period is coming to an end, so Google will eliminate all the Play Store apps that don’t comply with the new call log and SMS policies.

According to Google, the Internet giant decided to adopt stricter policies regarding call log and SMS permissions because some apps abused the function. In short, Google wants to protect users from potentially malicious apps and private data leaks.

“As previously announced and directly communicated to developers via email, we’ll be removing apps from the Google Play Store that ask for SMS or Call Log permission and have not submitted a Permissions Declaration Form. If you have not submitted a permissions declaration form and your app is removed, see below for next steps,” said Paul Bankhead, Director, Product Management at Google Play Store on Android Developers Blog.

Google Will Eliminate Play Store Apps That Don’t Comply With The New Call Log and SMS Policies

“Our new policy is designed to ensure that apps asking for these permissions [call log and SMS] need full and ongoing access to the sensitive data in order to accomplish the app’s primary use case and that users will understand why this data would be required for the app to function,” Paul Bankhead added.

Paul Bankhead also explained what Google would consider when reviewing a submission:

  • The likelihood that an average user would understand why this type of app needs full access to the data.
  • User benefit of the feature.
  • Importance of the permission relative to the core functionality of the app.
  • Risks presented by all apps with this use case having access to this sensitive data.
  • Availability of more narrow alternatives for enabling the feature.

According to Google, tens of thousands of devs have already resubmitted their apps to comply with the new call log and SMS policies. Those applications which do not meet the requirements, however, will be deleted from the Google Play Store.

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News Tech

MX Player 1.10.35 Beta Rolled Out on Android With New Features and Bug Fixes

MX Player is the most powerful multimedia player on Android, packing advanced hardware acceleration, gesture control, and subtitle support, among other functions. Today, MX Player 1.10.35 Beta rolled out on Android with new features and bug fixes.

MX Player is a potent video player for Android smartphones, which boasts advanced hardware acceleration for better playback of videos, thanks to the HW+ decoder. It also is the first video player for Android to come with multi-core decoding, and according to various tests, MX Player is by 70% more performant on dual-core devices than on single-core ones.

In addition to all that, MX Player boasts gesture controls support so that users can zoom in, zoom out, and pan by just pinching the screen of their devices. Also, subtitles support gestures to move forward/backward, zoom in/zoom out to change fonts size, and so on.

MX Player 1.10.35 Beta Rolled Out on Android With New Features and Bug Fixes

MX Player is already an excellent app, and its popularity proves that statement. According to Google Play Store, more than 500 million users downloaded MX Player on Android, and about 7 million of these folks rated it with 4.5 stars out of 5.

Now, MX Player 1.10.35 Beta rolled out on Android with new features and bug fixes. According to the official release notes of the update, the Dark Mode is again available for Indian users of the app, while the standard file operations are at your fingertips thanks to MX Player’s new ‘More’ menu for local files. Also, MX Player added new Content Preferences menu under the Me tab, which is helping users get only the contents of their interest.

According to the official release notes of the new MX Player 1.10.35 Beta, the following bug fixes were implemented:

  • Background Playback issues on recent versions, fixed.
  • Quality switching issues on the online player were solved out.
  • Fixed the navigation bar issues on dark mode.
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News Tech

WhatsApp Messenger 2.19.11 Beta Is Available With New Features

WhatsApp is a free instant messaging application, owned by Facebook since 2014, and which became the most popular app of its type. WhatsApp uses your mobile data (4G, 3G, 2G, EDGE) or WiFi, when available, to permit users to send/receive text or voice messages and initiate voice calls or video calls. Also, with WhatsApp, users can share documents, images, videos, and so on with their contacts. Now, WhatsApp Messenger 2.19.11 Beta is available with new features.

WhatsApp Features

WhatsApp is the most popular instant messaging application, and there are some excellent reasons for that. First, WhatsApp is entirely free to use as long as you have unlimited data plan or use WiFi connection to send messages and call your friends with WhatsApp. Secondly, WhatsApp is more than a messenger application, as it’s also allowing users to share files with their contacts.

Besides, WhatsApp permits group chats, and it also comes with a web-based version that you can use on desktop PCs. Nonetheless, you don’t need to sign up on WhatsApp as you do on Facebook or Twitter for example. All you have to do is to enter your phone number, verify it within the app via SMS or voice call, and that’s all.

WhatsApp Messenger 2.19.11 Beta Is Available With New Features

WhatsApp devs are continuously updating the instant messaging app with new functions. These new features are at first coming to the WhatsApp Beta version so that the Beta tester can probe them and send feedback to the developers or report bugs.

Now, WhatsApp Messenger 2.19.11 Beta is live, and it comes with new features and several bug fixes and stability improvements. According to the official release notes, WhatsApp Messenger 2.19.11 Beta comes with the following additions:

  • When you receive a link to a video from places like Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube, you can now play it right within WhatsApp. With picture-in-picture, you can keep watching the video while you chat.
  • You can now reply to a group message privately in your 1:1 chat. Tap and hold a message in a group chat and select ‘Reply privately.’
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Finance News

How the Legalisation of US Sports Betting Could Affect Online Gambling

2018 was a landmark year for the gambling industry in the US. On June 14th Phil Murphy, Governor of New Jersey, placed the first legal bet in his state. It was the end of a long, hard fought battle to legalise sports betting in the Garden State – a battle that had, in due course, overturned legislation preventing states deciding on whether to legalise sports betting for themselves.

Previously, the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA) had prohibited states (with the exception of Nevada) from determining their own sports gambling laws. In 2012, however, New Jersey began the process that would see the Supreme Court reforming PASPA last year.

“The legalization of sports gambling requires an important policy choice, but the choice is not ours to make. Congress can regulate sports gambling directly, but if it elects not to do so, each state is free to act on its own. Our job is to interpret the law Congress has enacted and decide whether it is consistent with the constitution. PASPA is not,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote for the court.

The decision opened up the very real possibility for national online sports betting, which could pave the way for huge developments for gambling in general.

Giving sports fans the ability to make data-informed bets

“It brings a multibillion dollar industry out of the shadows and into the sunlight, where its integrity can be guaranteed and consumers can be better protected,” Ted Leonsis, who owns the NBA’s Washington Wizards, the WNBA’s Washington Mystics and the NHL’s Washington Capitals wrote in a blog post. “I think that the increased transparency that will accompany more legalized betting around the country will only further protect against potential corruption,” he added.

Proponents of online gambling argue that as new generations of sports fans continue to embrace the second screens they carry in their pockets, it isn’t hard to imagine them using their devices to analyse data, place bets and communicate with each other in real time as games progress.

Advocates note that data analysis has always been the lifeblood of sports fandom, and with ever more information about player movements, biometrics and detailed opponent history, it’s a logical next step to enable fans to place bets based on that data. It will bring fans closer to the game, intensifying the action with the increase in personal stakes, they argue.

Beyond the fans, professional sports teams are also likely to benefit. Famed investor and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban even went so far as to say that franchise owners saw their investments double overnight with the change to the law.

The NBA has been swift to embrace the new changes. “We’re going to have better results in a regulated market than an unregulated market,” said Scott Kaufman-Ross, vice president and head of fantasy and gaming for the NBA. The upshot is a deal with Sportradar and Genius Sports to distribute NBA betting data to sports gambling providers in the U.S., just one of many such deals that will see sports brands, media outlets and platform holders such as Google and Facebook benefit from the new regulations.

Britain: a case study for potential benefits

The UK provides a compelling case study for the benefits that legalised sports betting can bring. It’s a much smaller market than the US with a tighter selection of popular sports, but it still had a total gross gambling yield of $18.19 billion in 2017 – the equivalent of £208.50 for every one of the country’s citizens.

The online sports betting market is thought to be worth around £650 million and saw a compounding annual growth rate from 2009–12 of approximately 7%. Gross profits are taxed at 15%, with taxes on online casinos set to increase to 21%. That’s a significant boom to Treasury coffers – and the government can reinvest this cash to maintain hospital, schools and transport.

Online gambling has driven this growth. It now accounts for £4.5 billion annually – making it the largest single gambling sector in terms of revenue produced. And it’s clear to see the reasons why. Attracted by the option of playing their favourite casino games and slots from the comfort of their own home, players have headed to virtual operators in their droves. With a range of exciting games that can be played anytime, anywhere and on any device, here’s an example of a leading online casino in the UK.

Ripple effects of the PASPA ruling

Many expect that the legalisation of sports betting in the US will have a worldwide impact, particularly in Asian markets. “This decision is going to have ramifications around the world,” David Leppo, CEO of FootballBet.com and BetMex.net, said. “If sports betting in the U.S. is legalized, others will fall in line.”

It’s expected that legalised sports betting, mostly done online, will have a knock on effect domestically, too. It’s likely to lead to the legalisation of other forms of online gambling – something some jurisdictions are already exploring. Know Your Customer provisions and other safeguards created for sports betting designed to prevent money laundering and tackle problem gambling could be rolled out to other forms of online play, and the increased tax revenue is likely to prove extremely tempting for government on both state and federal levels.

Illegal sports betting is estimated to be worth $150 billion on the black market. A 2017 gaming industry study estimated that offshore bookmakers are already making $2.5 billion to $3 billion from Americans betting illegally. That same report said that somewhere in the region of 12–15 million people in the U.S. are currently active illegal bettors, and that doesn’t even account for ‘casual’ or ‘social’ sports fans having a flutter on their favourite team.

The potential tax revenues for sports betting alone are huge, never mind the streams that could be opened up by legalising other forms of online gambling. An Oxford Economics report commissioned by the American Gaming Association, published in 2017, said that sports betting could contribute $11.6 billion to $14.2 billion to US gross domestic product annually, depending on the specifics of which states adopt it and what tax rates they use.

Furthermore, that same Oxford Economics report found that legal sports betting would create between 125,000 and 152,000 jobs, paying between $6 billion and $7.5 billion in total wages. So if Trump’s so in favour of jobs for Americans, this looks like a golden opportunity.

Research firm Eilers & Krejcik Gaming LLC estimates that online gambling could account for $9 billion of sports betting revenue thanks to the ease of access to mobile applications, and it’s not hard to imagine that growth spilling over to other forms of online gambling too, should expectations of further gambling liberalisation be met.

The new regulations could open up more interesting forms of sports betting than those currently provided in Nevada, too.

In the UK, many sports books let you create your own prop bets, focusing on a single aspect of a game and giving you personalized odds. If you want to bet on whether Harry Kane will score the next goal in a game, for example, a bookie will let you do so.

Summary

The exact fallout of recent changes to US sports betting regulations are difficult to predict, but it’s clear that sports fans will have new opportunities to engage with their sports, professional leagues and franchises will have new markets open to them and tax revenues will increase – providing a win-win situation for everyone. For now, all eyes are on the dozen states who’ve applied to have their own gambling laws reviewed in a bid to enjoy the same freedoms afforded to New Jersey. The likes of Oklahoma, South Carolina and Kentucky are all hoping to authorise sports betting – and there’s every chance that this trickle of interest will lead to a sea change.

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News Tech

Microsoft Will Shut Down Windows 7 Support In Precisely One Year From Now

Despite the fact that Windows 10 is now the most prevalent operating system of Microsoft, Windows 7 is still popular among some users and in some regions of the world. However, if you’re now using Windows 7, you should consider upgrading to Windows 10 (would be useless to get Windows 8, obviously) because in precisely one year from now, on January 14th, 2020, Microsoft will shut down Windows 7 support.

That would mean that as of January 14th, 2020, Windows 7 users won’t get any new updates and security patches for their operating system. Thus, it would be smart to upgrade to Windows 10 before the before-mentioned date. Not only that Windows 10 is much better than Windows 7, but there are a whole bunch of programs, including games, that run smoother on Windows 10 or just don’t run on previous versions of the operating system.

Windows 7 rolled out in 2009, and it has been one of the most popular operating systems released by Microsoft since then.

Microsoft Will Shut Down Windows 7 Support In Precisely One Year From Now

At the end of 2018, according to some recent statistics, Windows 10 has begun to gain traction, surpassing Windows 7 in popularity. According to the data, Windows 10 is now holding a 39.2 percent of the desktop OS market, while Windows 7 comes second with 36.9 percent.

Nonetheless, Windows 7 is a very smooth operating system and less demanding than Windows 10. For that reason, among others, there are still many users out there using it. But that would soon change since they must upgrade to Windows 10 to be up-to-date with the latest security patches.

As we’ve already mentioned before, as of January 14th, 2020, in one year from now, precisely, Microsoft will shut down Windows 7 support. Therefore, you should upgrade your computer to Windows 10 before that date or, why not, get a new, more performant PC or laptop with Windows 10 pre-installed.

 

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