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The new indoor, wired Nest Cam is available today
Meet the second-generation Nest Cam (indoor, wired): a wired camera that helps you keep track of what’s going on inside your home and matches your unique interior decor. Starting at $99.99, it’s our most affordable Nest Cam ever. It has an adaptable design for tabletops or walls, and it comes in four colors: Snow, Linen, Fog and Sand with maple wood base ($119.99).
The new Nest Cam has 10 times more machine learning power than the previous generation, enhanced HDR video quality, and processes events on-device, which makes for more accurate and timely alerts. It can detect people, animals and vehicles, only sending you alerts for what matters most. We’ve also included three hours of event video history and the ability to create Activity Zones (which help the camera focus on the important places in your home). All of this works without the need for a subscription. Nest Cam also has local storage backup to help with reliability: If your Wi-Fi goes out, it will keep recording and upload your clips to the Google Home app when service returns.
Nest Cam is built specifically for the Google Home app, where you can view and control your camera anytime. You can choose which notifications you want to receive, set up Activity Zones and view your whole home history across your compatible devices, like displays, thermostats and new Nest Cams and Doorbell. A Nest Aware subscription expands your event video history to 30 days, and a Nest Aware Plus subscription provides 60 days of event video history and 10 days of continuous video history. Both subscriptions also come with Familiar Face detection to help your cameras identify people you know.
We designed this Nest Cam for the many ways you can use an indoor camera. To show you just how versatile it is, here’s how members of the Nest team are using it in their own homes.
Make the new indoor wired Nest Cam your own — it’s available today on the Google Store and at select retailers.
Nest Cam with floodlight is a smarter floodlight for your home
A floodlight does two great things for your front porch: It creates ambient light that welcomes family and visitors to your home — and it deters unwanted guests. But traditional floodlights are activated purely by motion sensors, which can be helpful when you’re walking outside in the dark, but not so much when a moth is flying in front of the light.
So when Nest set out to build our first connected floodlight, we wanted to integrate the smarts in our new Nest Cam to create a more helpful floodlight camera — one that turns on when activity is detected, and can be easily installed and replace an existing exterior light fixture.
Meet Nest Cam with floodlight, available today for $279.99. It’s designed to work exclusively with the Google Home app, so you can check on home or control your floodlight from anywhere. Here are 11 things to love about the newest nocturnal Nest Cam.
- Two of a kind: Nest Cam with floodlight combines our newest camera technology with a high-quality LED floodlight. The device is hardwired for continuous power and provides the option for 24/7 continuous video history (with a Nest Aware Plus subscription).
- A smarter floodlight: The floodlight is controlled by the smarts of the camera (rather than motion sensors alone) to light up the scene and capture important activity. Instead of the light switching on and off for activity that you don’t care about, you can select the types of activity that your floodlight turns on for, such as when a person, animal, or vehicle is detected. For example, set an activity zone so it lights your way when you pull into your driveway.
- Replace your existing lighting: Install Nest Cam with floodlight where you have an existing exterior light or wiring. It comes with what you need to upgrade your existing exterior light right in the box. We’ve created a step-by-step video as part of the setup process in the Google Home app to make installation a breeze, but you can also enlist the help of a Pro if you need a hand.
- Built for the Google Home app: Like the new battery-powered Nest Cam and Doorbell, Nest Cam with floodlight is built exclusively for the Google Home app. In the app, you can adjust the brightness of the lights, turn the floodlight on and off manually or control what kind of events turn the floodlight on.
- Enhanced by Nest Cam features: Nest Cam has built-in intelligence and on-device processing, meaning more features are available right out of the box that used to require a subscription — for example, animal, vehicle and person detection and the ability to create Activity Zones. It also has local storage fallback, meaning the camera will record up to an hour of footage (about a week’s worth of events) on-device if the power or internet go out, and when service returns you’ll be able to view your clips in the Google Home app.
- Your extra set of eyes: In addition to being powered by Nest Cam’s intelligence and delivering 1080p video with HDR, Nest Cam with floodlight is equipped with 180-degree motion sensors to detect movement. It’s optimized to give you a clear view and be your extra set of eyes where you need them. The floodlights also illuminate the scene, which makes for a clearer image in the dark.
- Ambient light you can control: At 2400 lumens, the lights are bright enough to illuminate your patio or front yard in the middle of the night. In the Google Home app, Nest Cam with floodlight can be controlled like a smart light: adjust brightness, motion sensitivity, what the lights turn on for and how long — or manually turn the lights on or off with just a tap.
- Set up routines: Nest Cam with floodlight works with your other Nest speakers and displays, so you can control the lights with your voice. In the Google Home app, schedule when your floodlight turns on and set up custom routines either by time or voice command. For example, turn on your floodlight when you say “turn on the backyard light,” or at 9:00 p.m. every night.
- A floodlight you can count on: With an IP54 rating, Nest Cam with floodlight can withstand the elements so it’s there for you when you need it the most. And similar to our other new cameras, it also requires a Google account, which provides added protection like security checkup, suspicious activity detection and two-step verification.
- Add a Nest Aware subscription: With a Nest Aware subscription, you can extend your video history from three hours of event video history (comes with the device, no subscription required!) to 30 days of event video history and add familiar face detection. A Nest Aware Plus subscription extends to 60 days of event video history and 10 days of 24/7 continuous video history.
- Thoughtful, durable design: Made of durable, high-quality materials and a sleek, white design inspired by the lighting we use for the inside of our homes, Nest Cam with floodlight was designed to complement your home’s unique character, rather than looking like high-tech security gear.
If you’re interested in learning more about the new Nest Cam with floodlight, visit the Google Store.
Making sign-in safer and more convenient
For most of us, passwords are the first line of defense for our digital lives. However, managing a set of strong passwords isn’t always convenient, which leads many people to look for shortcuts (i.e. dog’s name + birthday) or to neglect password best practices altogether, which opens them up to online risks. At Google, we protect our users with products that are secure by default – it’s how we keep more people safe online than anyone else in the world.
As we celebrate Cybersecurity Awareness Month, we’d like to share all the ways we are making your sign-in safer:
Making password sign-in seamless and safe
Everyday, Google checks the security of 1 billion passwords to protect your accounts from being hacked. Google’s Password Manager, built directly into Chrome, Android and the Google App, uses the latest security technology to keep your passwords safe across all the sites and apps you use. It makes it easier to create and use strong and unique passwords on all your devices, without the need to remember or repeat each one.
Il Fatto Quotidiano pubblica il QR di un green pass, nonostante i moniti del Garante Privacy
Alla redazione del Fatto Quotidiano non sono bastati tutti gli avvisi del Garante di non pubblicare Green Pass. Oggi il FQ ha pubblicato un articolo (copia permanente) nel quale la foto (che ho sfuocato qui accanto) mostra un Green Pass perfettamente leggibile, intestato a Romano C.G., nato il 18/6/66.
Qualcuno ha sovrapposto al codice QR un pallino sfuocato, che però non rende affatto illeggibile il codice, visto che i codici QR sono fatti apposta per tollerare danni e cancellazioni.
Per chi obietta “Ma tanto si tratta solo di nome, cognome e data di nascita”, ricordo che il codice QR contiene molti altri dati: lo stato di vaccinazione o meno, la data di eventuale vaccinazione, il tipo di vaccino e altro ancora. Dati sanitari sensibili, insomma, che non vengono letti dalle normali app di verifica ma possono essere letti tramite software facilmente reperibile online.
Questo articolo vi arriva gratuitamente e senza pubblicità grazie alle donazioni dei lettori. Se vi è piaciuto, potete incoraggiarmi a scrivere ancora facendo una donazione anche voi, tramite Paypal (paypal.me/disinformatico) o altri metodi.
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ART&more by gloTM: la prima opera di street art che diventa un NFT
Lo scorso luglio il lungomare di Napoli si è trasformato in un percorso artistico a cielo aperto Lo scorso luglio il lungomare di Napoli si è trasformato in un percorso…
L’articolo ART&more by gloTM: la prima opera di street art che diventa un NFT scritto da YOUR_DIGITAL_VOICE! proviene da Assodigitale.
Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp bloccati in tutto il mondo per sei ore
Facebook e le sue proprietà (WhatsApp, Instagram e Oculus) sono completamente inaccessibili da alcune ore in tutto il pianeta. Facebook ha confermato laconicamente il problema con un post su Twitter.
Anche la pagina ufficiale di stato di Facebook, status.fb.com, è inaccessibile.
Questa è una mia prima sintesi della situazione. La aggiornerò man mano che ci saranno novità.
—
Ultimo aggiornamento: 2021/10/04 23:50 (sei ore dall’inizio del collasso).
A quanto risulta dalle prime analisi e indiscrezioni, tutto è iniziato intorno alle 15.40 UTC (le 17.40 italiane) in seguito a un errore commesso durante un cambiamento di configurazione interno a Facebook.
Questo errore comporta che tutta Internet non sa più dove trovare Facebook, perché qualcuno di Facebook ha cancellato la mappa che dice dove si trova Facebook e che strada fare per raggiungerlo.
In termini leggermente tecnici: l’errore di configurazione ha reso inaccessibili da remoto i BGP peering router di Facebook, i computer dell’azienda che gestiscono il BGP (Border Gateway Protocol), che è il protocollo di Internet che determina l’instradamento (routing) dei dati da trasmettere, come spiegato qui e qui.
Between 15:50 UTC and 15:52 UTC Facebook and related properties disappeared from the Internet in a flurry of BGP updates. This is what it looked like to @Cloudflare. pic.twitter.com/PFw5FR2W5j
— John Graham-Cumming (@jgrahamc) October 4, 2021
ThousandEyes tests can confirm that at 15:40 UTC on October 4, the Facebook application became unreachable due to DNS failure. Facebook’s authoritative DNS nameservers became unreachable at that time. The issue is still ongoing as of 17:02 UTC. pic.twitter.com/zNmZWTxEUo
— ThousandEyes (@thousandeyes) October 4, 2021
L’errore ha causato l’eliminazione improvvisa dei route (percorsi) BGP che consentivano di accedere ai server DNS di Facebook, per cui il DNS di Facebook non va più(lo sappiamo da tweet come questo).
Il problema è che correggere questo errore richiede che si acceda fisicamente a questi peering router, visto che non sono più raggiungibili da remoto, ma chi può farlo non è necessariamente dotato delle autorizzazioni e dell’autenticazione che sono necessari. BNO News alle 22.15 ha tweetato, citando il NYT, che Facebook ha inviato una squadra a uno dei suoi data center a Santa Clara, in California, per resettare manualmente i server.
Non solo: questo errore implica che non funziona più nessuno dei servizi interni di Facebook (mail, strumenti di gestione, sistemi di sicurezza, agende, la messaggistica interna Workplace, eccetera), visto che sono tutti sul dominio Facebook.com, che è totalmente irraggiungibile, per cui neppure i dipendenti dell’azienda possono usarli per comunicare tra loro, come nota il New York Times.
E non è finita: se, come sembra (anche da qui), le serrature delle porte degli uffici di Facebook sono “smart” (basate sull’IoT), dipendono dalla connessione a Internet e dall’accesso ai server di Facebook. Che sono inaccessibili, per cui molti dipendenti non riescono a entrare perché i loro badge non funzionano. Il New York Times conferma.
Non ci sono indicazioni di eventuali attacchi esterni: tutto indica un errore interno di dimensioni catastrofiche.
NOTA: L’annuncio della diffusione dei dati di circa un miliardo e mezzo di utenti Facebook non è correlato a questo incidente. I dati non includono password.
Questo errore sta avendo conseguenze a catena sul resto di Internet, e arrivano segnalazioni di rallentamenti anche per Disney+, Netflix e Twitter (che finora ha retto):
#GoogleDNS 8.8.8.8 becomes much slower because of #Facebookdown and all the client retries. pic.twitter.com/4aTyFAykMq
— awlnx (@awlnx) October 4, 2021
Finché Facebook è fuori uso, è possibile che non funzionino neanche gli accessi alle app o ai siti che usano l’opzione “Login tramite Facebook” (per esempio Pokémon Go).
In pratica, un miliardo di smartphone e di altri dispositivi sta cercando disperatamente di trovare Facebook e questi tentativi inutili generano traffico DNS che rallenta tutti gli altri accessi.
Agli utenti di Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp e Oculus non resta che aspettare che la situazione venga ripristinata ed eventualmente installare app analoghe come Signal o Telegram. Aggiungo un paio di suggerimenti:
- Disattivate le notifiche di Facebook, WhatsApp e Instagram, altrimenti quando torneranno a funzionare verrete sommersi da un fiume di notifiche rimaste in coda (grazie ad @alessLongo per la dritta).
- NON FIDATEVI di eventuali messaggi o mail che invitano a cliccare da qualche parte per riattivare i vostri account. I truffatori approfitteranno sicuramente del panico causato da questo collasso e invieranno messaggi-esca che porteranno a siti-trappola che somigliano alle schermate di login dei social di Zuckerberg ma sono in realtà delle copie che rubano le password.
Maggiori informazioni ed analisi sono presso Ars Technica, The Register, Brian Krebs (anche qui in maggiore dettaglio), SANS.
2021/10/04 23:30. Status.fb.com è tornato online:
2021/10/04 23:50. Alcuni lettori mi segnalano che WhatsApp e Instagram stanno riprendendo a funzionare.
Questo articolo vi arriva gratuitamente e senza pubblicità grazie alle donazioni dei lettori. Se vi è piaciuto, potete incoraggiarmi a scrivere ancora facendo una donazione anche voi, tramite Paypal (paypal.me/disinformatico) o altri metodi.
A shoppable TV screen with YouTube
Whether kicking back with a movie or kicking their fitness routine into gear, more people are choosing to experience YouTube on the big screen. When they do, they can watch longer, enjoy multiple shows back to back, and experience it all from the comfort of their couch with friends and family. Many even build a routine around it. In the U.S., over 120 million people streamed YouTube or YouTube TV on their TV screens in December 2020.1
To help consumers more easily learn about the products and services they’re interested in, we’re making YouTube ads on connected TVs more shoppable. Today, we’re expanding Video action campaigns to CTVs to help advertisers drive more online sales or generate leads, and grow their business.
With a quarter of logged-in YouTube CTV viewers watching primarily on TVs,2 the living room is becoming an essential place for brands to drive incremental conversions with new audiences. In early experiments for Video action campaigns on TV screens, over 90% of conversions coming from CTV would not have been reachable on mobile and desktop devices.3
Drive online sales and leads on the TV screen with Video action campaigns
If your goal is to drive online sales or generate leads, we recommend using Video action campaigns. Video action campaigns make it easy to find new customers efficiently in a single campaign by combining inventory from across YouTube and Google video partners — and now YouTube CTV. For the first time, performance advertisers can take advantage of YouTube on CTV to drive and measure conversions.
When a viewer sees a Video action campaign on their TV, they are invited through a URL at the bottom of their screen to continue shopping on the brand’s website from their desktop or mobile device — without interrupting their viewing session.
Advertisers can also take advantage of the Conversion Lift beta on TV screens to get actionable results in real time. Conversion Lift measures the impact of YouTube ads on driving user actions, such as website visits, sign ups, purchases and other types of conversions.
Video action campaigns on TV screens are now globally available through Google Ads. Reach out to your Google team or visit the Help Center to learn more.
1. YouTube Internal Data, US, December 2020.
2. YouTube Internal Data, US, December 2020. (In December 2020, over 25% of logged-in US YouTube CTV viewers watched content almost exclusively (>=90%) on the TV screen.)
3. Google data, Global, Jun 2020.














