Technology
7 things Google just announced that are worth keeping a close eye on
Google’s flagship developer conference called I/O just wrapped up with interesting leaps in how the big tech giant is planning to change the world.
Here are the seven biggest things we learned from Google at I/O 2024.
Google’s injecting AI into nearly every aspect of its products and services
Google’s I/O 2024 conference (Google)
Google’s I/O event was largely an opportunity for it to make its case to developers — and, to a lesser extent, consumers — as to why its artificial intelligence is ahead of rivals Microsoft and OpenAI. Here’s a rundown of the seven highlights to keep an eye on. Google’s AI, named Gemini, was featured prominently at the I/O conference and is now available to developers worldwide.
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According to the conference, Gemini is now capable of pulling information from text, photos, audio, web pages and live videos from your phone’s camera and is able to synthesize the information it receives and answer questions you may have about it. Here’s what the Gemini improvements look like in practice.
1. Phone call scam detection coming to Android could compromise your privacy
Google showed a demo for its phone call scam detection feature, which the company says will be coming to a future version of Android. How it works is revolutionary and concerning. The feature will scan voice calls as they occur in real time, and it’s already drawing enormous privacy concerns.
It would be like allowing your phone calls to be tapped and monitored by big tech instead of big brother. Apple had planned a similar feature on iOS back in 2021 but abandoned it after backlash from privacy advocates. Google is under similar pressure, with privacy advocates worried that the company notorious for harvesting and profiting from personal data might soon misuse AI voice scanning technology.
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2. ‘Ask Photos’ will let AI help you find out about specific things in photos
The Ask Photos feature (Google)
Google unveiled a new feature called Ask Photos, in which users can ask Gemini to search for their photos and deliver exact results. One example showcased was the use of Gemini to locate images of your car in your photo album by telling it your license plate number.
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3. An AI button is coming to many of Google’s most popular productivity tools
Starting immediately, Google has added a button to toggle Gemini AI in the side panel of several of its Google Suite apps, including Gmail, Google Drive, Docs, Sheets and Slides. Similar to Microsoft’s Co-Pilot AI function, the Gemini button can help answer questions, craft emails and provide summaries of documents and email threads.
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4. AI tool called ‘Veo’ makes video from text
Music AI Sandbox (Google)
WHAT IS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (AI)?
On a more experimental note, Google also unveiled its VideoFX feature, a generative video model based on Google’s DeepMind video generator. Veo. VideoFX can create Full HD (1080p) videos from text prompts, and we also saw improvements made to ImageFX, Google’s high-resolution AI image generator.
For musicians, Google also showed their new DJ Mode in MusicFX, an AI music generator that can be used to create loops and samples from prompts.
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5. AI summaries will replace search results
A Google search (Google)
There’s been a lot of press lately regarding how difficult searching for things on Google has become. Constant changes to search engine optimization as well as a new wave of bots and AI-created content has disrupted the once monolithic search engine. However, Google showed off its new AI-organized search, which promises more readable search results.
Google also showed off how it is using AI to create overviews, which are short summaries to help you answer questions posed in the search box. These summaries will appear at the top of the search results page, so you don’t even need to visit another website to get answers you may be looking for.
6. Google TV gets the AI treatment
Google managed to work its Gemini AI into its Google TV smart TV operating system, allowing it to generate descriptions for movies and TV shows. When you are viewing content that is missing a description, Gemini will fill it in automatically. Gemini on Google TV will also now translate descriptions into the viewers’ native language, making it easier to find international shows and movies to watch.
7. AI for educational purposes
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Google also unveiled LearnLM, a new generative AI model that is designed for education. It comes as a collaboration between Google’s DeepMind AI research division and Google’s Research lab. LearnLM is designed as a chatbot that looks to tutor students on a range of subjects, from mathematics to English grammar.
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Kurt’s key takeaways
If you missed Google I/O 2024, here’s the scoop: Google’s AI, Gemini, stole the show with its ability to integrate information from various media and answer your queries on the fly. Noteworthy features include a call scam detection for Android, a photo search tool that can find your car using your license plate number and the integration of Gemini into Google’s Workspace suite for smarter document handling.
Plus, Google’s new AI-powered search promises more readable results, and Google TV now boasts AI-generated content descriptions. For creatives and learners, Google introduced VideoFX for AI-generated videos, MusicFX’s DJ Mode for music creation and LearnLM, an AI tutor for students. It’s clear that Google is betting big on AI to keep ahead of the competition.
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Technology
Meta expands nuclear power ambitions to include Bill Gates’ startup
These AI projects include Prometheus, the first of several supercluster computing systems, which is expected to come online in New Albany, Ohio, sometime this year. Meta is funding the construction of new nuclear reactors as part of the agreements, the first of which may come online “as early as 2030.” These announcements are part of Meta’s ongoing goal to support its future AI operations with nuclear energy, having previously signed a deal with Constellation to revive an aging nuclear power plant last year.
Financial information for the agreements hasn’t been released, but Meta says that it will “pay the full costs for energy used by our data centers so consumers don’t bear these expenses.”
“Our agreements with Vistra, TerraPower, Oklo, and Constellation make Meta one of the most significant corporate purchasers of nuclear energy in American history,” Meta’s chief global affairs officer, Joel Kaplan, said in the announcement. “State-of-the-art data centers and AI infrastructure are essential to securing America’s position as a global leader in AI.”
Technology
Why January is the best time to remove personal data online
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January feels like a reset. A new calendar. New goals. New habits. While you clean out your inbox, organize paperwork or set resolutions, however, scammers also hit reset, and they start with your personal data.
That is because January is one of the most important months for online privacy. This is when data brokers refresh profiles and scammers rebuild their target lists.
As a result, the longer your information stays online, the more complete and valuable your profile becomes. To help address this, institutions like the U.S. Department of the Treasury have released advisories urging people to stay vigilant and avoid data-related scams.
For that reason, taking action early in the year can significantly reduce scam attempts, lower identity theft risks, and limit unwanted exposure for the rest of the year.
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January is when data brokers refresh profiles and scammers rebuild target lists, making early action critical for online privacy. (iStock)
STOP DATA BROKERS FROM SELLING YOUR INFORMATION ONLINE
Why personal data does not expire and keeps compounding online
Many people assume old information eventually becomes useless. Unfortunately, that’s not how data brokers work.
Data brokers don’t just store a snapshot of who you are today. They build living profiles that grow over time, pulling from:
- Public records (property sales, court filings, voter registrations)
- Retail purchases and loyalty programs
- App usage and location data
- Past addresses, phone numbers, and relatives
- Marketing databases and online activity.
Each year adds another layer. A new address. A changed phone number. A family connection. A retirement milestone. On its own, one data point doesn’t mean much. But together, they create a detailed identity profile that scammers can use to convincingly impersonate you. That’s why waiting makes things worse, not better.
Why scammers ‘rebuild’ targets at the start of the year
Scammers don’t randomly target people. They work from lists. At the beginning of the year, those lists get refreshed.
Why January matters so much:
- Data brokers update and resell profiles after year-end records close
- New public filings from the previous year become searchable
- Marketing databases reset campaigns and audience segments
- Scam networks repackage data into “fresh” target lists.
Think of it like the upcoming spring cleaning, except it’s criminals organizing identities to exploit for the next 12 months.
If your data is still widely exposed in January, you’re far more likely to:
Once your profile is flagged as responsive or profitable, it often stays in circulation.
As personal information accumulates across databases, digital profiles grow more detailed and more valuable to scammers over time. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Why taking action in January protects you all year long
Removing your data early isn’t just about stopping scams today; it’s about cutting off the supply chain that fuels them. When your information is removed from data broker databases:
- It’s harder for scammers to find accurate contact details
- Phishing messages become less convincing
- Impersonation attempts fail more often
- Your identity becomes less valuable to resell.
This has a compounding benefit in the opposite direction. The fewer lists you appear on in January, the fewer times your data gets reused, resold, and recycled throughout the year. That’s why I consistently recommend addressing data exposure before problems start, not after.
Why retirees and families feel the impact first
January is especially important for retirees and families because they’re more likely to become targets of fraud, scams, and other crimes.
Retirees often have:
- Long addresses and employment histories
- Stable credit profiles
- Fewer active credit applications
- Public retirement and property records
Families add another layer of risk:
- Relatives are linked together in broker profiles
- One exposed family member can expose others
- Shared addresses and phone plans increase visibility
Scammers know this. That’s why households with established financial histories are prioritized early in the year.
Why quick fixes don’t work
Many people try to “start fresh” in January by:
Those steps help, but they don’t remove your data from broker databases. Credit monitoring services alert you after something goes wrong. Password changes don’t affect public profiles. And unsubscribing doesn’t stop data resale. If your personal information is still sitting in hundreds of databases, scammers can find you.
The January privacy reset that actually works
If you want fewer scam attempts for the rest of the year, the most effective step is removing your personal data at the source.
You can do this in one of two ways. You can submit removal requests yourself, or you can use a professional data removal service to handle the process for you.
Removing your data yourself
Manually removing your data means identifying dozens or even hundreds of data broker websites, finding their opt-out forms and submitting removal requests one by one. You also need to verify your identity, track responses and repeat the process whenever your information reappears.
This approach works, but it requires time, organization, and ongoing follow-up.
Using a data removal service
A data removal service handles this process on your behalf. These services typically:
- Send legal data removal requests to large networks of data brokers
- Monitor for reposted information and submit follow-up removals
- Continue tracking your exposure throughout the year
- Manage a process that most people cannot realistically maintain on their own
Removing your data at the start of the year helps reduce scam attempts, phishing messages and identity theft risks all year long. (iStock)
Because these services handle sensitive personal information, it is important to choose one that follows strict security standards and uses verified removal methods.
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.
RETIREES LOSE MILLIONS TO FAKE HOLIDAY CHARITIES AS SCAMMERS EXPLOIT SEASONAL GENEROSITY
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.
Kurt’s key takeaways
Scammers don’t wait for mistakes. They wait for exposed data. January is when profiles are refreshed, lists are rebuilt, and targets are chosen for the year ahead. The longer your personal information stays online, the more complete-and dangerous-your digital profile becomes. The good news? You can stop the cycle. Removing your data now reduces scam attempts, protects your identity, and gives you a quieter, safer year ahead. If you’re going to make one privacy move this year, make it early-and make it count.
Have you ever been surprised by how much of your personal information was already online? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.
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Technology
Xbox’s Towerborne is switching from a free-to-play game to a paid one
Towerborne, a side-scrolling action RPG published by Xbox Game Studios that has been available in early access, will officially launch on February 26th. But instead of launching as a free-to-play, always-on online game as originally planned, Towerborne is instead going to be a paid game that you can play offline.
“You will own the complete experience permanently, with offline play and online co-op,” Trisha Stouffer, CEO and president of Towerborne developer Stoic, says in an Xbox Wire blog post. “This change required deep structural rebuilding over the past year, transforming systems originally designed around constant connectivity. The result is a stronger, more accessible, and more player-friendly version of Towerborne — one we’re incredibly proud to bring to launch.”
“After listening to our community during Early Access and Game Preview, we learned players wanted a complete, polished experience without ongoing monetization mechanics,” according to an FAQ. “Moving to a premium model lets us deliver the full game upfront—no live-service grind, no pay-to-win systems—just the best version of Towerborne.”
With the popular live service games like Fortnite and Roblox getting harder to usurp, Towerborne’s switch to a premium, offline-playable experience could make it more enticing for players who don’t want to jump into another time-sucking forever game. It makes Towerborne more appealing to me, at least.
With the 1.0 release of the game, Towerborne will have a “complete” story, new bosses, and a “reworked” difficulty system. You’ll also be able to acquire all in-game cosmetics for free through gameplay, with “no more cosmetic purchasing.” Players who are already part of early access will still be able to play the game.
Towerborne will launch on February 26th on Xbox Series X / S, Xbox on PC, Game Pass, Steam, and PS5. The standard edition will cost $24.99, while the deluxe edition will cost $29.99.
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