Technology
Can’t hear or see well? IPhone settings to make hearing, seeing easier
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Technology is integral to our everyday lives, and for individuals who require assistance with vision or hearing, smartphones like the iPhone can be incredibly beneficial. We’ve compiled useful tips for those with vision challenges or who could use enhanced hearing support.
Before we dive in, if you’re an Android user, find out how to increase the font size on your Android here and learn how to unlock clearer sound here.
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Woman navigating vision feature on iPhone (Apple) (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How the iPhone 14 and 15 can improve your reading experience with accessibility features
If you are looking for a phone that has features specifically designed to help those with poor eyesight, you may want to consider using the accessibility features available on both the iPhone 14 and Apple’s latest iPhone 15 hardware. Both phones offer features such as adjusting the text size, color intensity, and tint to make reading easier, using VoiceOver to navigate by listening and performing gestures and using Magnifier to zoom in on objects near you.
Make text easier to read on your iPhone
Here are some simple ways to make your iPhone more accessible for those of you with low vision or blindness. Here is how to increase and bold text.
- On your iPhone, go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click Display & Text Size
- Enable Bold Text and Larger Text to make the on-screen text more readable
Steps to make Bold Text and Larger Text on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
- When you click on Larger Text, you will want to toggle on Larger Accessibility Sizes to access even bigger font sizes. This will affect the text size in apps that support Dynamic Type
- You are able to adjust the text size slider at the bottom of the screen to make the text larger or smaller
Step to adjust text size on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
How to increase the contrast on your iPhone
- On your iPhone, go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click Display & Text Size
- Turn on Increase Contrast to enhance visibility and make screen elements easier to distinguish.
Steps to increase the contrast on your iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
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Zoom in on the iPhone screen
Many apps let you adjust the size of specific items on the screen. For instance, you can use two fingers to make things bigger or smaller in Photos or Safari. You can also use the Zoom feature to enlarge the whole screen or just a portion of it. You can choose between Full Screen Zoom and Window Zoom modes. Here’s how to set up Zoom to make content more accessible for those of you with low vision.
- Go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click Zoom
- Toggle on Zoom
Double-tap three fingers to zoom
Drag three fingers to move around the screen
Double-tap three fingers and drag to change zoom - Double-tap three fingers to zoom
- Drag three fingers to move around the screen
- Double-tap three fingers and drag to change zoom
Steps to zoom in on the iPhone screen (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
On the same screen, you can also adjust any of the following:
- Follow Focus: Track your selections, the text insertion point, and your typing
- Smart Typing: Switch to Window Zoom when a keyboard appears
- Keyboard Shortcuts: Control Zoom using shortcuts on an external keyboard
- Zoom Controller: Turn the controller on, set controller actions, and adjust the color and opacity
- Zoom Region: Choose Full-Screen Zoom or Window Zoom
- Zoom Filter: Choose None, Inverted, Grayscale, Grayscale Inverted, or Low Light
- Maximum Zoom Level: Drag the slider to adjust the level
Zoom-in accessibility features on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Turn on Magnifier on iPhone
This feature helps you zoom in on small text or objects, making them more accessible.
- You can open the Magnifier app either by using Siri and saying something like “Siri, Open Magnifier” or by tapping on the app itself, which looks like a magnifying glass with a plus inside it. Also, on iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max, you can assign the Action button to open Magnifier.
- To adjust the zoom, drag the slider left or right.
How to turn on Magnifier app on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
You can also use the Magnifier app to point and speak. All you have to do is just point your iPhone at anything and let it speak what it sees. Click here to find out more about that amazing feature.
Turn on VoiceOver on iPhone
VoiceOver is a screen reader that lets you use your iPhone with voice feedback. It tells you what’s on your screen, such as the battery level, the caller ID, and the app you’re using. You can change the voice speed and tone to your liking. When you touch the screen or drag your finger over it, VoiceOver speaks the name of the item your finger is on, including icons and text. Here’s how to set up VoiceOver on your iPhone. It’s important to note that VoiceOver changes the gestures you use to control your iPhone. When VoiceOver is on, you must use VoiceOver gestures to operate the iPhone. Here’s how to set it up.
- Go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click VoiceOver
- Then toggle it ON
- A pop-up window will appear asking you to confirm your decision. Click OK
Steps to turn on Voiceover on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
- You can also use Siri to turn on this feature by saying something like “Siri, Turn on VoiceOver.”
- Siri knows when VoiceOver is on and often reads more information back to you than appears on the screen. You can also use VoiceOver to read what Siri shows on the screen.
Listen to articles on your iPhone with Speak Screen
This is a feature that lets you have any text on your screen spoken aloud by Siri. Here’s how to enable it.
- Go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click Spoken Content
- Then toggle ON Speak Screen
- Now you can use Siri to hear your iPhone speak the screen you want to listen to by going to the page you want it to read and saying something like: “Siri, Speak screen.”
Steps to turn on Speak Screen on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
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Enhancing accessibility for hearing impairments
Here are some 7 tips and features to enhance the accessibility of your iPhone for hearing impairments, such as using hearing aids, Live Listen, visual alerts, RTT calls, FaceTime, video subtitles, headphone accommodation, and hearing aid apps.
Individuals using sign language (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
MORE: 8 GREAT IPHONE ACCESSIBILITY TIPS TO MAKE LIFE EASIER
1) Made for iPhone hearing aids: These are devices that are designed to work seamlessly with your iPhone. They can stream audio from your iOS device directly to your hearing aids and let you adjust the volume and settings of your hearing aids from your device. You can also use your iOS device as a microphone to pick up sounds around you and send them to your hearing aids. To check compatibility with your Apple devices or for how to use them click here.
2) Live Listen: Turn your iPhone into a remote microphone that streams sound to your hearing aids or AirPods using Live Listen. This can be useful in situations where you want to hear someone more clearly, such as in a noisy environment or when they are far away from you.
To use Live Listen, follow these steps:
- Make sure your hearing aids or AirPods are paired and connected to your iPhone.
- Go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click Hearing Devices or AirPods and turn on Live Listen.
- Swipe down from the top right corner of your screen to open the Control Center.
- Tap the ear icon, then click Live Listen.
- Place your iPhone in front of the person you want to hear and adjust the volume as needed on your iPhone.
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3) Visual alerts: Enable visual alerts on your iPhone by having the LED flash blink when you receive notifications. To enable visual alerts on your iPhone, you need to follow these steps:
- Go to Settings
- Tap on Accessibility
- Tap on Audio/Visual under the Hearing section.
- Turn on the switch for LED Flash for Alerts.
- You can also turn on the switch for Flash on Silent Mode if you want the LED flash to blink even when your phone is on silent mode, or you can toggle on Flash While Unlocked.
Steps to turn on Visual Alerts on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Now, whenever you receive a notification, such as a call, message, or email, your iPhone’s LED flash will blink to alert you.
4) RTT calls: Real-time text (RTT) calls offer instant message transmission, useful for those with hearing impairments. The Real-time text (RTT) feature allows people with hearing or speech disabilities to communicate in real-time with text during a phone call. RTT calls are aided by real-time text, which is transmitted instantly and in real-time as it is typed, usually without clicking the send button. To use RTT, you can turn on the RTT feature in your phone’s settings.
- Go to Settings
- Tap Accessibility
- Click RTT/TTY
- Toggle on Software RTT/TTY
Steps to turn on RTT calls on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
- If you want to see the text messages on the call screen, turn on Show Notifications. If you want to see them in the Phone app, turn off Show Notifications.
- To make an RTT call, tap the RTT button when you dial a number or receive a call. You can also add RTT to your favorites or contacts by tapping the + button and choosing RTT.
- To send a text message during an RTT call, type your message and tap return. You can also use dictation or Siri to enter text. To read a text message, look at the call screen or the Phone app. You can also use VoiceOver or Speak Screen to read the text aloud.
Once enabled, you can place a call with RTT or switch from voice to RTT during a call. During an RTT call, the text that you enter appears to the other person in real-time, unlike with chat messaging. RTT calls use call minutes, just like a voice call. It’s important to note that RTT is not available when roaming abroad.
5) Video subtitles: Video content with closed captions (CC) or subtitles also works well on both the iPhone 14 & 15 for those who are deaf and or hard of hearing (SDH). Here’s how to set it up on your iPhone.
- Go to Settings
- Tap on Accessibility
- Tap on Subtitles & Captioning under the Hearing section.
- Turn on the switch for Closed Captions + SDH.
- You can also customize the appearance of the subtitles by tapping on Style and choosing from the presets or creating your own.
Steps to turn on Visual Subtitles on iPhone (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
- To watch video content with subtitles, make sure the video has a CC icon on the corner. Tap on the icon and select the language of the subtitles you want to see.
6) Headphone accommodation: Customize headphone audio settings to amplify soft sounds and adjust frequencies for your hearing needs. To make the most of this feature, you may want to consider downloading the TruHearing App.
TruHearing App: The TruHearing App is a free app available on the Apple App Store that allows you to manage TruHearing brand hearing aids only. You can use the app to stay in touch with your hearing care professional, even when you can’t visit in person. The app lets you tailor your personal preferences right on your smartphone. The app also lets you easily contact your hearing care professional via text message, voice call, or video call.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
Technology has the power to break down barriers and create a more inclusive world for individuals with vision and hearing impairments. Fortunately, the iPhone 14 and 15 offer a range of accessibility features, from text adjustments to voice feedback and real-time text calls, making them valuable tools for improving the digital experience for those of you with visual and hearing difficulties. We hope these tips and features empower you to navigate and interact with your iPhone more effectively so it enhances your overall quality of life.
What accessibility features are most important to you? Are there any that you would like to see added in the future? Let us know by writing us at Cyberguy.com/Contact.
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Copyright 2024 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
Two more xAI co-founders are among those leaving after the SpaceX merger
Since the xAI-SpaceX merger announced last week, which combined the two companies (as well as social media platform X) for a reported $1.25 trillion valuation — the biggest merger of all time — a handful of xAI employees and two of its co-founders have abruptly exited the company, penning long departure announcements online. Some also announced that they were starting their own AI companies.
Co-founder Yuhai (Tony) Wu announced his departure on X, writing that it was “time for [his] next chapter.” Jimmy Ba, another co-founder, posted something similar later that day, saying it was “time to recalibrate [his] gradient on the big picture.” The departures mean that xAI is now left with only half of its original 12 co-founders on staff.
It all comes after changing plans for the future of the combined companies, which Elon Musk recently announced would involve “space-based AI” data centers and vertical integration involving “AI, rockets, space-based internet, direct-to-mobile device communications and the world’s foremost real-time information and free speech platform.” Musk reportedly also talked of plans to build an AI satellite factory and city on the moon in an internal xAI meeting.
Musk wrote on X Wednesday that “xAI was reorganized a few days ago to improve speed of execution” and claimed that the process “unfortunately required parting ways with some people,” then put out a call for more people to apply to the company. He also posted a recording of xAI’s 45-minute internal all-hands meeting that announced the changes.
“We’re organizing the company to be more effective at this scale,” Musk said during the meeting. He added that the company will now be organized in four main application areas: Grok Main and Voice, Coding, Imagine (image and video), and Macrohard (“which is intended to do full digital emulation of entire companies,” Musk said).
Technology
2026 Valentine’s romance scams and how to avoid them
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Valentine’s Day should be about connection. However, every February also becomes the busiest season of the year for romance scammers. In 2026, that risk is higher than ever.
These scams are no longer simple “lonely hearts” schemes. Instead, modern romance fraud relies on artificial intelligence, data brokers and stolen personal profiles. Rather than sending random messages and hoping for a response, scammers carefully select victims using detailed personal data. From there, they use AI to impersonate real people, create convincing conversations and build trust at scale.
As a result, if you are divorced, widowed or returning to online dating after the holidays, this is often the exact moment scammers target you.
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WHEN DATING APPS GET HACKED, YOUR PRIVATE LIFE GOES PUBLIC
Romance scams surge around Valentine’s Day as criminals use artificial intelligence and stolen data to target widowed, divorced and older adults returning to online dating. (Omar Karim/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)
The new face of romance scams in 2026
Romance scams are no longer slow, one-on-one cons. They’re now high-tech operations designed to target hundreds of people at once. Here’s what’s changed:
1) AI-generated personas that look and sound real
In the past, fake profiles used stolen photos and broken English. Today, scammers use AI-generated faces, voices and videos that don’t belong to any real person, making them almost impossible to reverse search.
You may be interacting with a profile that:
- Has years of realistic-looking social media posts
- Shares daily photos that match the story they tell
- Sends customized voice notes that sound natural
- Appears on “video calls” using AI face-mapping software.
Some scam networks even create entire fake families and friend groups online, so the person appears to have a real life, real friends and real history. To the victim, it feels like a genuine connection because the “person” behaves like one in every way.
2) Automated relationship scripts that adapt to you
Behind the scenes, many scammers now use software platforms that manage dozens of conversations at once. This is known as “scamware” and is incredibly hard to flag.
These systems:
- Track your replies
- Flag emotional triggers (grief, loneliness, fear, trust)
- Suggest responses based on your mood and history.
When you mention that you are widowed, the tone quickly becomes more comforting. Meanwhile, if you say you are financially stable, the story shifts toward so-called “business opportunities.” And if you hesitate, the system responds by introducing urgency or guilt. It feels personal, but in reality, you’re being guided through a pre-written emotional funnel designed to lead to one outcome: money.
3) Crypto and “investment romance” scams
One of the fastest-growing versions of romance fraud now blends love and money. A BBC World Service investigation recently revealed that many romance scams are now run by organized criminal networks across Southeast Asia, using what insiders call the “pig butchering” model, where victims are slowly “fattened up” with trust before being financially destroyed.
These operations use call center style setups, data broker profiles, scripted conversations and AI tools to target thousands of people at once. This is not accidental fraud. It’s an industry.
And the reason you were selected is simple. Your personal data made you easy to find, easy to profile and easy to target.
After weeks of trust-building, the scammer introduces:
- A “private” crypto platform
- A fake trading app
- A business or investment opportunity, “they use themselves.”
They may show fake dashboards, fake profits and even let you “withdraw” small amounts at first to build trust. But once larger sums are sent, the site disappears and so does the person. There is no investment. There is no account. And there is no way to recover the funds.
AI DEEPFAKE ROMANCE SCAM STEALS WOMAN’S HOME AND LIFE SAVINGS
Data brokers selling personal details fuel a new wave of romance fraud by helping scammers select financially stable, older victims before contact is made. (Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images)
How scammers find you before you ever match
The biggest misconception is that romance scams begin on dating apps. They don’t. They begin long before that, inside massive databases run by data brokers. These companies collect and sell profiles that include:
- Your age and marital status
- Whether you’re widowed or divorced
- Your home address history
- Your phone number and email
- Your family members and relatives
- Your income range and retirement status.
Scammers buy this data to build shortlists of ideal victims.
The data brokers behind romance scams
They filter for:
- Age 55-plus
- Widowed or divorced
- Living alone
- Financially stable
- Not active on social media.
That’s how they know who to target before the first message is ever sent.
Why are widowed and retired adults targeted first?
Scammers aren’t cruel by accident. They target people who are statistically more likely to respond. If you’ve lost a spouse, moved recently or reentered the dating world, your personal data often shows that. That makes you a priority target. And once your name lands on a scammer’s list, it can be sold again and again. That’s why many victims say, “I blocked them, but new ones keep showing up.” It’s not a coincidence. It’s data recycling.
How the scam usually unfolds
Most romance scams follow the same pattern:
- Friendly introduction: A warm message. No pressure. Often references something personal about you.
- Fast emotional bonding: They mirror your values, your experiences, even your grief.
- Distance and excuses: They can’t meet. There’s always a reason: military deployment, overseas job, business travel.
- A sudden “crisis”: Medical bills, business losses, frozen accounts, investment opportunities.
- Money requests: Wire transfers, gift cards, crypto or “temporary help.”
By the time money is involved, the emotional connection is already strong. Many victims send thousands before realizing it’s a scam.
The Valentine’s Day cleanup that stops scams at the source
If you want fewer scam messages this year, you need to remove your personal information from the places scammers buy it. That’s where a data removal service comes in. While no service can guarantee the complete removal of your data from the internet, a data removal service is really a smart choice. They aren’t cheap, and neither is your privacy.
These services do all the work for you by actively monitoring and systematically erasing your personal information from hundreds of websites. It’s what gives me peace of mind and has proven to be the most effective way to erase your personal data from the internet. By limiting the information available, you reduce the risk of scammers cross-referencing data from breaches with information they might find on the dark web, making it harder for them to target you.
Check out my top picks for data removal services and get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web by visiting Cyberguy.com.
Get a free scan to find out if your personal information is already out on the web: Cyberguy.com.
Practical steps to protect yourself this February
Here’s what you can do right now:
- Never send money to someone you haven’t met in person
- Be skeptical of fast emotional bonding
- Verify profiles with reverse image searches
- Don’t share personal details early
- Remove your data from broker sites.
- Use strong antivirus software to block malicious links and fake login pages. Get my picks for the best 2026 antivirus protection winners for your Windows, Mac, Android and iOS devices at Cyberguy.com.
When you combine these steps, you remove the access, urgency and leverage scammers rely on.
SUPER BOWL SCAMS SURGE IN FEBRUARY AND TARGET YOUR DATA
Cybercriminals now deploy AI-generated faces, voices and scripted conversations to impersonate real people and build trust at scale in modern romance scams. (Martin Bertrand/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images)
Kurt’s key takeaways
Romance scams are no longer random. They are targeted, data-driven and emotionally engineered. This Valentine’s Day, the best gift you can give yourself is privacy. By removing your personal data from broker databases, you make it harder for scammers to find you, profile you and exploit your trust. And that’s how you protect not just your heart, but your identity, your savings and your peace of mind.
Have you or someone you love been contacted by a Valentine’s Day romance scam that felt real or unsettling? Let us know your thoughts by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
Uber Eats adds AI assistant to help with grocery shopping
Uber announced a new AI feature called “Cart Assistant” for grocery shopping in its Uber Eats app.
The new feature works a couple different ways. You can use text prompts, as you would with any other AI chatbot, to ask it to build a grocery list for you. Or you can upload a picture of your shopping list and ask it to populate your cart with all your favorite items, based on your order history. You can be as generic as you — “milk, eggs, cereal” — and the bot will make a list with all your preferred brands.
And that’s just to start out. Uber says in the coming months, Cart Assistant will add more features, including “full recipe inspiration, meal plans, and the ability to ask follow up questions, and expand to retail partners.”
But like all chatbots, Uber acknowledges that Cart Assistant may make mistakes, and urges users to double-check and confirm the results before placing any orders.
It will also only work at certain grocery stores, with Uber announcing interoperability at launch with Albertsons, Aldi, CVS, Kroger, Safeway, Sprouts, Safeway, Walgreen, and Wegmans. More stores will be added in the future, the company says.
Uber has a partnership with OpenAI to integrate Uber Eats into its own suite of apps. But Uber spokesperson Richard Foord declined to say whether the AI company’s technology was powering the new chatbot in Uber Eats. “Cart Assistant draws on publicly available LLM models as well as Uber’s own AI stack,” Foord said in an email.
Uber has been racing to add more AI-driven features to its apps, including robotaxis with Waymo and sidewalk delivery robots in several cities. The company also recently revived its AI Labs to collaborate with its partners on building better products using delivery and customer data.
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