Friday, May 7, 2021

Latest Tech News

Earlier this week the share price of the investment group Berkshire Hathaway rose so high that it broke the code of the Nasdaq stock exchange.

As reported by The Register, Nasdaq uses 32-bit unsigned integers as opposed to 64-bit unsigned integers for stocks listed on its exchange. Normally this wouldn't be a problem but because the investment group, run by Warren Buffett, is so highly valued its BRK.A stock exceeded the maximum value of a 32-bit variable which is 4,294,967,295 in decimal.

At the time of writing, one share of BRK.A stock is currently valued at over $437k per share. The stock is also listed on the New York Stock Exchange but unlike Nasdaq, it was unaffected by the bug.

Breaking Nasdaq's code

Following BRK.A's recent increase in price, the Nasdaq exchange stopped transmitting information about the stock on both its website and in the feeds of brokers and other financial organizations. Instead, the website for the stock displayed a message which read “Data is currently not available”.

As Nasdaq doesn't store stock prices using a floating-point number format likely due to the fact that they can be approximate, the exchange multiply quotes by 10,000 and stores them as 32-bit unsigned integers. In this case the value 123,456 represents a stock price of $12.3456.

BRK.A's current price of $437,131.0000 would be stored as 4,371,310,000 and this exceeds the maximum of  4,294,967,295 and for this reason, it would overflow to a value far lower than the actual stock price as it would wrap around from the maximum to zero and then go past zero to  43,713,100 or $4,713.100.

If Nasdaq had broadcast this price online, there would be utter pandemonium as investors would think the stock lost over $400k in value while consumers would believe that they could pick up shares of one of the world's highest valued stocks at a bargain price.

According to Nasdaq, the exchange has said that the issue will be fixed by May 17 but the fact that Berkshire Hathway's stock price broke it's code is still quite interesting nonetheless. 



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Thursday, May 6, 2021

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Latest Tech News

Netflix is testing the waters with an exclusive insider service dubbed 'N-Plus' that features behind-the-scenes content, podcasts, TV show playlists and more, according to reports from Protocol.

The streaming giant sent out a survey to select users asking if they'd like to see the aforementioned features, referring to N-Plus as "a future online space where you can learn more about the Netflix shows you love and anything related to them".

Speaking with Protocol, a Netflix representative stated that the survey was one of its many efforts to gauge the audience's response to features and changes it's considering introducing, so we don't have any concrete details on when this service may launch, or indeed if it ever will.

Among the proposed features is the ability for users to create custom playlists containing TV shows they curate, with the ability to share these playlists with other Netflix subscribers. This idea could even extend to showcasing the music featured in said shows, allowing for custom soundtrack-esque playlists to be made.

This could appear as an N-Plus feature alongside Netflix-curated behind-the-scenes content, user reviews, podcasts diving deeper into a show's production, in-memoriam pages, and even the option for users to weigh in on planned and pre-production shows ahead of their creation to see if they're worthwhile enough to launch on the platform.

This last feature could create a system where the streaming giant gets a chance to gauge interest in its upcoming ideas without having to commit to the entire development process, and the cost and time involved in it. 

For showmakers, this trial by fire could just as easily be a boon as a curse – plenty of successful series may not have looked so great on paper ahead of their development, but wound up becoming cult classics regardless. It'll come down to just how much weight Netflix would place in the user feedback they gather.

All of these proposed ideas are evidently part of Netflix's desire to expand its platform beyond a TV and movie streaming service, much like Spotify has done in the past with its 'behind the lyrics' sections, artist curations, podcast and audiobook integration, and other multimedia exercises. However, there's no indication on whether this proposed new service would cost Netflix users more to access.



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Latest Tech News

Apple has insisted that app developers on its App Store to disclose the details that they gather and how they use them. Now Google is following suit with a similar guidelines on its Play Store.

Google has said that it would have a new safety section in its mobile-app store that will let Android smartphone users see what data developers collect about them and share, plus give access to additional privacy and security information.

All apps on Google Play — together with Google’s personal apps — will be required to share this info and supply a 'privateness' coverage.

Developers have time till 2022

The Google Play safety section will tell users if an app encrypts data, if it follows Google’s policies for families and children, whether users have a choice in sharing information, and whether users can request data deletion if they uninstall an app.

Android app developers have to declare the info before second quarter of 2022. Users will begin seeing the safety section in Google Play sometime in the first three months of 2022.

“We work closely with developers to keep Google Play a safe, trusted space for billions of people to enjoy the latest Android apps. Today, we’re pre-announcing an upcoming safety section in Google Play that will help people understand the data an app collects or shares, if that data is secured, and additional details that impact privacy and security,” Google Vice President Product (Android Security and Privacy) Suzanne Frey said in a blog post.

But Google seems more flexible than Apple

It is interesting that Google is emulating Apple in this transparency drive. Apple’s latest mobile software update, iOS 14.5, includes an App Tracking Transparency feature, which requires users to opt in to being tracked by apps for personalized advertising. 

The update has kicked up a storm, primarily led by Facebook which has been saying that many small business would be affected by this change.

Facebook's protestations stem from the fact that it, along with many other apps, secrete information about users' interests so as to tailor info and ads for them. 

Google also relies on advertising revenue. But it is still working on how it can limit data collection and cross-app tracking on the Android platform and not be seen inflexible as Apple.

In a sense, the search giant is seen as more pragmatic than Apple in its approach.

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