Scammers Are Using AI to Impersonate Government Officials

If you get a text or voice message from someone claiming to be a U.S. government official, they probably aren’t who they say they are. The FBI is warning the public about an ongoing campaign in which scammers are using AI-generated voice messages to impersonate senior government staff in an attempt to gain access to personal accounts and, by extension, sensitive information or money.

Many of those targeted have been other current and former government officials—both federal and state—and their contacts, but that doesn’t mean this scam or something like it won’t land in your inbox or on your phone sooner or later. Here’s how these AI-powered attacks work, and how to avoid falling victim.

How the AI impersonation scam works

The current scam can take the form of smishing, which targets individuals via SMS or MMS, or vishing, which uses voice memos. Either way, bad actors are sending AI-generated voice messages and/or texts that appear to be from senior U.S. government officials. The goal is to build trust before directing targets to a separate messaging platform via a malicious link, which ultimately ends with you entering login credentials or downloading malware to your device. Scammers may also use the information gathered to target additional contacts, perpetuating the campaign.

These scams are believable on some level thanks to voice cloning and generative AI tools that allow anyone to easily impersonate public figures. Bad actors can also spoof phone numbers so that messages in smishing schemes appear to be from family, friends, or trusted contacts.

How to spot fake vishing messages

While AI-generated speech can be convincing, there are ways to identify these messages as fake. Listen for pronunciation and pacing that sound off as well as the presence (or lack) of emotion and variation in the speaker’s voice—for example, AI tends to sound slightly flatter and have less inflection than a real human, and you may detect odd pauses.

Of course, you should be wary of any communication—voice or otherwise—from anyone claiming to represent an organization, including a government agency, especially if they send unsolicited links, request money or personal information, or promote a sense of urgency.

If you do receive a message that sounds convincing, verify the caller’s identity by searching for official contact information and calling back, or hang up and reach out directly if it’s someone you know. You should always independently confirm any request to send money or provide information, and never click links or download attachments sent via email or text. The FBI also suggests selecting a secret word or phrase with your close contacts that you can use to verify their identities from AI.

This Phone-Sized E-Reader Helped Me Smash My 2025 Reading Goal

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I used to regularly read more than 125 books a year, each meticulously logged on my Goodreads profile. I read during my commute and to wind down at night. I always had a paperback in my bag or an audiobook in my ears.

Then I got a smartphone. Then I got on Twitter. Then the 2016 presidential election happened. Then there was a pandemic, and for a while I stopped commuting altogether.

With every year, it seemed like there were more things to spiral about online, and less hours in the day to relax with a novel or read some stimulating non-fiction. Suddenly I found it hard to meet my much more modest reading goals, which dropped to 75, then 50, then 30 books a year. In 2023 and 2024, I set my sights on finishing just 20 books (including graphic novels and stuff I read aloud to my kids). I still had to cram at the end of the year to manage even that comparatively sluggish pace.

But things are different in 2025. It’s May, and I’ve already met my 20-book reading goal (which I’ll soon be increasing), and I owe it all to my Boox Palma 2, a phone-shaped e-reader I can easily carry with me wherever I go.

A device so good it has a cult following

As I noted in my review of the Boox Palma—the now discontinued, nearly identical predecessor to the Palma 2—it’s one of the most lovable electronic devices I have ever owned. It’s a near perfect marriage of form (the easy-on-the-eyes e-ink screen popularized by Amazon’s Kindle, a compact size) and function—with an open Android operating system and access to the Google Play store, you can use it to run reading apps from a variety of retailers, listen to audiobooks with Bluetooth headphones, or get a little work done on productivity apps like Gmail and Google Docs.

At a time when increasing numbers of people are opting to make the switch to a “dumb phone” to escape the pull of their screen addictions, the Palma occupies a rather unique spot in the market: While it can do a great deal more than your standard Kindle, it still feels clunky and slow in comparison to your smartphone, but in the best way. It doesn’t have a cellular connection, so if you aren’t on wifi, you’ll be unable to use the internet or update your social feeds. The black and white display means using it is soothing instead of stimulating, while still scratching that “gotta pull out my device” itch. Its quirky qualities have garnered it a cult following of sorts (ironically, adherents gather to discuss the device on Reddit and TikTok, two places to avoid if you want to get any reading done).

The perfect form factor

Leaving aside all the things social media and app developers do to make their products addictive, I struggle with regulating my phone use for the sole reason that my phone is always with me. It’s how I keep in touch with my spouse and kids and it has effectively replaced my wallet, therefore it must be in my pocket at all times and hey, I might as well pull it out at every idle moment to check my notifications. Yes, I could carry a book or a standard-sized e-reader to look at instead, but that requires carrying a bag of some kind (or large pockets), and it’s hard to beat the convenience of something you can shove into any pair of jeans.

Well, the Palma 2 can be shoved into any pair of jeans. It has basically the identical form factor as most smartphones, and can even occupy the same pocket as my iPhone 14. This means that when I’m standing in line at the post office, or waiting for the train, or trying to maintain my balance on the train and with only one hand free, I can effortlessly pull out my e-reader instead of my phone and absorb a few pages rather than frantically trying to refresh my Bluesky feed at subway stops.

Slow and kinda clunky (in a good way)

If the Palma 2 can access the Google Play store, what’s to keep you from loading it up with all of the apps that already make your smartphone so addictive? Nothing! Go for it—stick Bluesky on there. Add Facebook and Instagram if you’ve yet to flee Meta’s ecosystem. You can even load up video-based apps like YouTube and Netflix and time-wasting games like Subway Surfers.

If you do, though, you’ll quickly find that none of them are that enjoyable to use. Though Boox readers’ e-ink displays employ variable refresh rate tech that makes them infinitely faster than early generation Kindles (where you could pause for a heartbeat between pressing a key on the virtual keyboard and actually seeing the text appear on the screen), even in the fastest modes they are only a fraction as responsive as a phone or tablet’s LED screen.

So while you certainly can use your Palma 2 to scroll social media or watch a few TikToks, you won’t particularly want to, because it’s kind of bad at them, but in a way I love: The device is optimized for reading text or comics (particularly black and white manga), and it presents that material so well, and so conveniently, that I want to carry it around with me everywhere so I can read on it all the time.

So far, it’s going well: As I said, I’ve already hit my 20-book reading goal for the year. In the meantime, if you’re looking for books you can binge to get you out of a doomscrolling funk, I recommend the Dungeon Crawler Carl series by Matt Dinniman. After picking up the first one in February, I blew through the seven thus-released books (ranging in length from 400 to 800 pages) in about six weeks. And yes, I read every word of them on my Palma 2.

I Love These Sony ANC Headphones, and They Just Dropped in Price by $150

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Audio enthusiasts need no introduction to Sony’s 1000X series. They’ve been around since 2016, improving on the previous iteration to eventually land on the latest Sony WH-1000XM6, the best over-ear headphones for ANC your money can buy in 2025. As you can imagine, that means the still excellent 1000XM5 is dropping in price. If you’re willing to splurge, it’s a good time to do so during Amazon’s Memorial Day Sale. The WH-1000XM5 are currently $298 (originally $399.99), matching Black Friday and Christmas prices, according to price-tracking tools.

I have been a loyal customer of the 1000X line for many years as my go-to headphones for most activities. The WH-1000XM5 came out in May of 2022 to an “outstanding” review from PCMag for their top-notch audio quality, but also for their exceptional audio when using its best-in-class active-noise cancelling (ANC) (most headphones lose their audio quality when using ANC). The headphones are also well-designed to be comfortable for long sessions.

The ear controls use tapping and swiping, which aren’t my favorite, but it’s what all the modern headphones are moving toward. There’s an app that comes with the headphones that lets you adjust your EQ settings to your liking, including what the swiping and tapping functions do on your headphones.

A great touch on these headphones that is often neglected is a Stereo 3.5mm connection, perfect for those who want to use a wired cable without worrying about battery life. Speaking of battery life, Sony says you can expect about 30 hours, but it will vary depending on your usage of ANC. They are compatible with AAC, LDAC and SBC codecs and have multipoint connection (you can pair them with more than one device at the same time).

If you’re looking for excellent ANC headphones with great audio quality at a good price, the WH-1000XM5 are a great deal right now.

Why We’re Not Getting That AI-Powered Siri Anytime Soon

If you were under the assumption that Siri was soon going to be supercharged with AI, you wouldn’t be alone. In fact, Apple has advertised as much since last WWDC, showing off its ChatGPT-like assistant in commercials and promotional materials.

It’s been nearly a year since WWDC 2024, and that new Siri is still not here. The thing is, it likely won’t be for a long time. How long is anyone’s guess (I’ve been tracking the delays here), but one thing seems for certain: Apple is not showing off AI Siri at next month’s WWDC 2025.

Apple’s AI program is a mess

In Mark Gurman’s latest piece for Bloomberg, he describes a chaotic situation regrading Apple’s AI department. The piece is a fascinating and in-depth look at Apple’s AI woes, and I won’t give a detailed summary of the entire article. However, I will briefly discuss what’s going on, and how it related to AI Siri:

Executive leadership at Apple, including senior vice president of Software Engineering Craig Federighi, didn’t believe AI was worth the investment, and didn’t want to allocate resources away from Apple’s core software components in order to develop the technology. But once Federighi used ChatGPT following its late 2022 launch, he did a 180. He and other Apple executives began meeting with the big AI companies to learn everything they could, and pushed for iOS 18 to have “as many AI-powered features as possible.”

While Apple’s AI department already existed before this scramble (the company had poached Google’s artificial intelligence chief John Giannandrea), the engineers simply couldn’t match the quality or accuracy of the tools provided by other companies like OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google, who had a huge head start on generative AI. That lag manifested in two ways: First, many of the AI features that Apple did bring to market were half-baked. Apple Intelligence’s notification summaries feature, for example, infamously made some major mistakes, such as “summarizing” a BBC news alert to say that United Healthcare shooting suspect Luigi Mangione had shot himself. (Apple later disabled the feature for news alerts.)

Second, because Apple couldn’t rely on its own tech to carry Apple Intelligence, they outsourced some tech to another AI company. While there was much debate about which company they should work with (Giannandrea wanted to work with Google and bring Gemini to iOS), Apple eventually settled for ChatGPT—which is why OpenAI’s bot is built into your iPhone today.

Apple’s lack of AI focus meant they missed the rush to acquire GPUs—the main processing unit used for training and running AI models. They also have strict privacy policies when it comes to user data, which severely limits what data they can use to train their models. (Some might say that’s actually a good thing, and take a pause to think about the companies that do have a plethora of data to train with.)

Siri

While Apple was able to get some AI features working “well” enough to ship, Siri was never among them. In order to bring AI to Siri, the company had to split Siri’s “brain” in two—one featuring the existing code, used for traditional Siri tasks like setting timers and making calls, and the other for AI. While the AI-side in a vacuum can work, integrating it with the other half of Siri’s brain is problematic, and is the cause of much of the delay.

But rather than wait until Apple figured out how to get AI Siri working to actually show off its new features, the company went ahead and marketed them heavily. During WWDC 2024, we saw prerecorded demos of Siri taking complex requests, and generating helpful answers by accessing both a knowledge base about the user in question, as well as an awareness of what was happening on-screen. A prime example was an Apple employee asking Siri about their mom’s travel itinerary: Siri dove through the employee’s messages with their mom to draw up the plans.

Apple even hired Bella Ramsey of The Last of Us to promote AI Siri features: In the commercial, Ramsey sees someone at a party they recognize but don’t remember the name of. Ramsey then asks Siri “What’s the name of the guy I had a meeting with a couple of months ago at Cafe Granel?” Siri immediately responds with the acquaintance’s name, pulling from a calendar entry. Ramsey doesn’t need to say the exact date or where to pull the information from, since AI Siri is presumably contextually aware, and can understand vague responses. (Apple has since deleted the ad from its YouTube account

Since then, AI features have trickled in on various iOS 18 updates, but not AI Siri. We’ve been following reports (mostly from Gurman) that Apple’s engineers were having trouble getting it to work, and each delay pushed AI Siri’s release to the next major iOS 18 update. At one point, we thought it could come with iOS 18.4: As Gurman reports in this latest piece, that was the plan, but Federighi himself was surprised to see that the AI Siri features didn’t work on a beta for 18.4.

Siri’s big AI upgrade was delayed again, and now “indefinitely.” There are no plans to announce Siri’s new features alongside iOS 19 next month. While the goal is to get AI Siri out for iOS 19 at some point, the situation is dire—Siri’s features reportedly don’t work a third of the time, and every time you fix one of Siri’s major bugs, “three more crop up.”

Gurman’s sources say Apple has an AI department in Zurich working on a new LLM-based Siri that scraps the two-sided brain of the current assistant. Siri also has a new leader, Mike Rockwell, who replaced Giannandrea this spring. Some sources even say that Apple’s internal chatbot is now rivaling ChatGPT, which could prove useful if integrated with Siri.

There are reasons to be mildly optimistic about Siri’s long-term future, but there’s no denying the last year has been a disaster. If you’re excited for Siri’s next big development, lower your expectations for the short-term.

Seven Ways to Turn Your Entryway Into a More Functional Space

If you’re like most folks, you use your home’s entryway to hang a few coats, store an unruly pile of shoes, and give you a place to drop your keys and the mail when you walk in. If you have the space, you might use it as a full-fledged mud room—a space to shed your wet coats, boots, and umbrellas before stepping into the house proper.

But your entryway could be a lot more than that—especially if you live in a small space and need to make use of every inch of square footage. Just because it’s a space you and your guests pass through on the way to somewhere else doesn’t mean you can’t use it for other purposes. And you can enhance the space for the guest experience as well, turning a transitional room no one remembers into a multi-functional space. Here are seven options for getting more out of your entryway.

Use it as an office space

If you ever work from home or just need a space to do household paperwork or to noddle away at your hobbies, your entryway can easily be transformed into a tiny office. A fold-down desk that compresses into an unobtrusive wall unit when not in use, combined with an adjustable stool or other mobile seating that can be used for putting on and taking off shoes when you’re not working, is all you need. If you have the wall space, throw in extra shelving or a narrow filing cabinet (or combination piece like this filing cabinet/printer stand/shelving unit) for maximum office storage in a minimal footprint. When you’re not working, you can fold everything up and instantly have a clear entryway again.

Turn it into a library

Need a place to store your books and set up a cozy reading nook? The entryway could be that spot. A row of shelves (or other book storage) along one wall, a small but comfy chair (with a slim console table for cups of tea or literary cocktails), and a floor lamp that’s great for reading, and you’re all set. When not in use, this area can also set a warm, comfortable vibe for visitors.

If you have lots of art pieces, collectibles, or mementos to display, your entryway is an ideal place to put them all. Hanging pictures or installing floating shelves to display your items not only beautifies the space, giving it a cohesive and personal style, it also makes it a lot more inviting for guests. Instead of moving through a chaotic or antiseptic place that pushes them to kick off their shoes and get into the main part of the house as quickly as possible, your entryway could be a place people want to linger.

Build a conversation nook

If your home lacks a space to sit and chat without distractions, your entryway might be the ideal spot. If you have room for a shallow sofa like this one, or a pair of small accent chairs like these, you can set up a spot where you can visit with guests. Having a space like this in your entryway also makes it ideal for those casual encounters with neighbors—instead of standing awkwardly in the doorway for fifteen minutes, invite them in to sit.

Add storage

If you’re hurting for storage space, consider all that underused wall and floor space in your entryway. You can store anything there, after all—it doesn’t have to be entryway-related, and no one will ever know what’s in those drawers and cabinets unless you tell them. Even a small foyer can be made into a storage paradise with some shelving, a shallow wardrobe or armoire, or a dual-purpose storage bench.

Use it as a bar

You want to host sophisticated gatherings fueled by social lubricants, but your bar is currently also your kitchen counter? Look to your entryway. A narrow bar cart against one wall could be the answer. If you want to make it a space people will linger in after securing their cocktails, add some floating shelves at counter heights (typically 36-48 inches high) to set down glasses. To really commit, a slim beverage refrigerator for beer, wine, and mixers next to the bar cart is a great addition.

Turn it into your family information center

Your entryway can be the place where everyone in the house knows to look for daily information. A cork board or chalkboard (or a combination) mounted in the entryway makes it easy for everyone coming and going to check the day’s schedule, look for reminders, or pick up and drop off items for later retrieval. This can be a better option than the kitchen because it will be the last and first place people see when leaving or entering the house, increasing the chances that you’ll actually remember the things you’re reminding one another about. (When you have guests staying over, it’s also a perfect spot to mark down things like the WiFi password or important phone numbers.)

The Best Deals on Fitness Equipment During Amazon’s Memorial Day Sale

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If you’re looking to upgrade your home gym or fitness gear without breaking the bank, look toward Amazon’s Fitness Memorial Day sale. I know Memorial Day isn’t for another week, but naturally, the retail giant is kicking off the festivities early.

Especially with summer right around the corner, now is the time to buy all the equipment you need to keep you motivated through the dog days. I know I’ve personally got my eye on massage guns and foam rollers to help me survive my upcoming marathon training. So, with Amazon’s Memorial Day Sale is in full swing, I’ve done all the leg work for you using price-checking tools to bring you the best fitness deals you can find right now.

Cardio equipment

At-home cardio equipment feels like a major investment—not just in terms of space and money, but your lifestyle. I usually hate the treadmill, but when I’m training in peak summer heat, it’s necessary. And if you’re going to buy a treadmill, it’s worth spending the money to get one that feels sturdy and safe. Right now the NordicTrack Commercial Treadmill is 20% off, bringing a true gym-quality machine (with interactive training features) into a far more affordable range.

For apartment dwellers like me, the classic Original Peloton Bike also marked down 20%, offering studio-quality cycling without sacrificing space. Pelotons are the most popular indoor exercise bike, but they’re notoriously expensive and don’t go on sale often. While they’re still expensive, the discounts are historically good, down to $1,145 (originally $1,445).

Strength training essentials

I’m a huge advocate for adjustable dumbbells; a good set eliminates the need for 30-some individual dumbbell pairs. Right now the adjustable Bowflex SelectTech 552 dumbbells are seeing one of their deepest discounts of the year. After testing the Nüobells and REP adjustable dumbbells, the Bowflex are next on my list; their reputation is pretty much the gold standard in the adjustable dumbbell world.

The TRX All-in-One Suspension Training System is 25% off, perfect for bodyweight exercises that engage your entire core. Or if you’re just looking for one addition to your home gym at just $20, this Vinsguir ab roller wheel is 40% off.

Massage guns and foam rollers

Don’t neglect recovery in your fitness journey. The Bob and Brad D5 Pro Massage Gun is marked down by 30%, bringing you professional-grade percussion therapy at home. I’m personally a fan of this brand, if you’re looking for alternatives to the (understandably) popular Theragun or Hypervolt at half the price.

The highly-rated Lifepro vibrating foam roller is 15% off, helping you roll out those post-workout kinks with added vibration technology for deeper muscle relief.

Fitness trackers

If you’ve been holding out on a new watch, now is a great time to finally snag some discounted wearable tech. Your classic Fitbit Charge 6 is available at 25% off.

And anytime you’re looking for a good smartwatch, Garmin’s name is bound to come up. Right now the Garmin Instinct 2 is discounted by 33%, and the Solar version is down 44%. What’s extra cool about the solar version is its potentially unlimited battery life, and it comes with Garmin Pay and plenty of customizable watch faces.

Headphones and speakers

Finally, it’s worth mentioning there are solid deals on earphones and speakers, which are always a must-have in some way when you’re working out. The Beats Studio Pro are a whopping 50% off, down to $169.95. For anyone who wants spatial audio, Apple-first integrations, and a good-looking pair of over-ears that feel comfortable over long sessions, this is a good deal.

Also noteworthy: You can snag the AirPods Pro 2 at 24% off, and the JBL Go 4 portable (and waterproof!) speaker at 20% off.

Whether you’re just starting your fitness journey or looking to fill gaps in your existing setup, now is a great time to take advantage of significant markdowns through the holiday weekend.

I Used ‘Cover Your Tracks’ to See What’s Following Me Online, and Yikes

The internet is not a private place. Every time you connect to a website, ads and beacons—both visible and invisible—attempt to follow your every move. They’ll even take the anonymized information they collect and build a profile that other trackers can use to identify you as you surf the web. It’s pretty bleak.

Luckily, modern browsers are fighting back. While there are certainly better options than others, most browsers have privacy protections built in. If you know what you’re doing, you can max out these protections and install some third-party boosters to retain some (if not most) of your privacy across the internet.

If you’re curious how your browser stacks up to the competition, check out Cover Your Tracks. I gave it a shot, and was surprised to find out that my super-private setup wasn’t as anonymous as I thought.

What is Cover Your Tracks?

Cover Your Tracks is a project created by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a non-profit digital rights group, and aims to educate users on two key metrics: how unique their browser is, and how effective their tracker blockers are. The site pretends to load a series of trackers on your browser, and measures which trackers are actually able to load. If your protections are strong, more trackers will fail to load. If they’re not, well, trackers galore.

The site will load fake trackers like the following:

  • https://trackersimulator.org/?action=tracking_tally&ad_url=123456

  • https://eviltracker.net/?action=tracking_tally&trackingserver=123456

  • https://do-not-tracker.org/?action=tracking_tally&random=123456

The first link acts like an ad you might encounter on any random website. If your browser blocks the “ad,” it passes that test. The second link pretends to be an invisible beacon (or tracker). If you browser blocks the “beacon,” it passes. Finally, the third link acts like a domain that respects the EFF’s Do Not Track Policy. If your browser unblocks the domain’s scripts, it passes. (Why unblock the scripts at all? According to the EFF, so few sites choose to voluntarily abstain from tracking visitors, that it’s worth unblocking ads on these sites to reward them.) Partial credit is awarded to browsers that allow the ad or beacon to load, but block their respective cookies: Allowing the ad or tracker means you can be followed, but blocking cookies means the tracker likely can ID you.

Those trackers are only effective if they have a sense of the profile they’re following. That’s where browser uniqueness comes in: Cover Your Tracks takes a look at your browser fingerprint and compares it against its database of recently scanned browsers. It then generates a uniqueness score—the more unique your fingerprint, the more difficult it is to track you across sites. Cover Your Tracks anonymously collects and stores browser data like your timezone, screen resolution, system language, and system platform, among other data points, to compare against other users’ browsers.

How did I score?

I’m not necessarily a hardcore privacy enthusiastic, but I do enjoy protecting my privacy wherever I can online. As such, I use Safari whenever possible, with all of the privacy settings I can enable. That includes hiding my IP address from trackers and websites, as well as preventing cross-site tracking. I combine that with an ad blocker (I’m using AdGuard, but would love if uBlock Origin would make a Safari extension) for a private, ad-free web experience.

Those minimal steps do appear to have paid off—at least according to Cover Your Tracks. After processing my browser, the site concluded I have strong protection against web tracking. The tests confirmed my browser blocks tracking ads and invisible trackers, which is reassuring. The bad news, though, is that my current setup isn’t protecting me against fingerprinting—a practice where trackers build a profile to make it easier to identify you across the web. Cover Your Tracks said my browser had a unique fingerprint among the more than 250,000 browsers they had tested over the past 45 days, which means I stick out like a sore thumb on the internet. While the trackers my browser blocks won’t be able to see me, the ones my browser misses will, and they’ll know it’s my browser reading that article or watching that video.

I’m actually pretty surprised by this: Safari has “advanced tracking and fingerprinting protection,” which I keep enabled for all browsing. The fact Cover Your Tracks thinks I have a totally unique browser profile is a bit concerning to say the least.

When I tried the test in my Firefox browser—with all of its privacy protections enabled, coupled with uBlock Origin—it scored the same, save for the fingerprinting test. Unlike Safari, my Firefox browser is nearly unique: one in 125,883 browsers have the same fingerprint as mine, which, to my eyes, means my Firefox browser is twice as anonymous as my Safari browser, though that isn’t saying all that much.

How can you avoid fingerprinting on the web?

So, it turns out that any trackers that do break through my browsers defenses are able to see me in full view. That’s not great. Where do you go from here?

Unfortunately, this is tough. Fingerprinting is pretty difficult to avoid, because the more trackers you disable, the worse the web becomes. As the EFF explains, it’s a bit of a paradox, but after a certain point, you stop blocking the trackers that exist to track you, and you start to block elements that make websites work. If you disable JavaScript, you might stop a website from tracking you, but you might not be able to use it at all. On the flip side, using too many protections may actually inadvertently identify you, as trackers and sites see that you’re the only one constantly blocking everything all of the time.

There’s far from one way to be totally private on the web, but according to the EFF, the simplest way to attack fingerprinting includes the following:

  • Using Tor for your browsing, as the browser has a number of advanced anti-tracking features

  • Using a hardcore privacy extension (EFF recommends Privacy Badger and Disconnect, or NoScript if you’re using Firefox. Sadly, none are compatible with Safari.)

That all said, I did attempt the test using Tor with “Safer” privacy settings enabled, and earned the same unique browser score I did with Safari. So, I cranked up the settings to “Safest,” which, among other things, disables JavaScript on all websites. I tried to run the test again, and broke the website. Perhaps you really do need to give up a little privacy in order to use the internet at all.

What Is Frame Generation, and Should You Use It In Your Games?

Earlier this year, Nvidia announced its new line of 50 Series GPUs with a hot new feature in tow: “Multi Frame Generation.” Building on early frame gen tech, these new GPUs allow games to create multiple video frames based on a single frame rendered the normal way. But is that a good thing? Or are these just “fake frames?” Well, it’s complicated.

On a very basic level, “frame generation” refers to the technique of using deep learning AI models to generate frames in between two frames of a game rendered by the GPU. Your graphics card does the more grindy work of creating “Frame One” and “Frame Three” based on 3D models, lighting, textures, etc., but then frame generation tools take those two images and make a guess at what “Frame Two” should look like.

Multi Frame Generation takes this a step further. Instead of just generating one extra frame, it generates several. This means that, on the highest settings, three out of every four frames you see could be generated, rather than rendered directly. Whether that’s a good thing, though, depends heavily on what type of game you play and what you want your gaming experience to be.

What’s the difference between upscaling and frame generation?

Nvidia’s new Multi Frame Generation comes as part of its announcement of DLSS 4. DLSS stands for Deep Learning Super Sampling and, as the name implies, its earlier iterations weren’t about frame generation, but rather supersampling (or upscaling). 

In this version of the tech, a GPU would render a lower-resolution version of a frame—say, 1080p—and then upscale it to a higher resolution like 1440p or 2160p (4K). The “deep learning” in DLSS refers to training a machine learning model on each game individually to give the upscaler a better idea of what the higher res frame should look like.

Nowadays, DLSS refers more to a whole suite of tools Nvidia uses to eek out better performance, and the above method is usually referred to as Super Resolution. Frame generation, on the other hand, takes two entire frames and generates an entirely new frame between them from scratch.

Of course, it’s also possible to use all of this tech simultaneously. You can end up in situations where your GPU is technically only rendering one lower-resolution frame for every two—or more, on the newest GPUs—full-res frames you see. If that sounds like a lot of extrapolation, well, it is. And, incredibly, it works pretty well. Most of the time.

When is frame generation useful?

In a relatively short amount of time, we’ve seen the demand placed on GPUs explode. As mentioned above, 4K resolutions contain quadruple the amount of pixel information as 1080p ones. Moreover, while media like movies and TV have stuck at a relatively consistent 24-30 frames per second, gamers increasingly demand at least 60fps as a baseline, often pushing that even higher to 120fps or 240fps for high-end machines. And do not get me started on Samsung’s absurd display capable of supporting up to 500fps.

If your GPU had to calculate every pixel of a 4K image 120 (or 500) times every second, the resulting fire coming from your PC would be visible from space—at least for games with the kind of detailed, ray-traced graphics we’re used to from AAA titles. 

From that perspective, frame generation isn’t just helpful, it’s necessary. On Nvidia’s latest GPUs, Multi Frame Generation can allow a game to increase its frame rate by multiple hundred frames per second even in 4K, while still looking pretty great. That’s just not a frame rate that’s possible at that resolution without an industrial rig.

When it works (and we’ll come back to that), frame generation can allow for smoother movement and less eye strain. If you want to get a taste of the difference, this little tool lets you experiment with different frame rates (as long as your display supports it). Try comparing 30fps to 60fps or 120fps and follow each ball with your eyes. The effect gets even more stark if you turn off motion blur which, for many games, would be the default.

For chaotic games with a lot of movement, those extra frames can be a huge benefit, even if they’re not exactly perfect. If you were to take a close look at the images frame-by-frame, you might see some artifacts, but they might be less noticeable while playing—at least, that’s how it should work in theory.

What are the downsides of frame generation?

In practice, how well this tech works can vary greatly on a per-game basis, as well as by how powerful your machine is. For example, going from 30fps to 60fps with frame generation can look jankier than if you’re going from 60fps to 120fps. This is due, at least in part, to the fact that at lower frame rates, there’s more time in between reference frames, which means more guess work for the frames being generated. That leads to more noise and artifacts.

Whether those artifacts will bother you is also highly subjective. For example, if you’re swinging through the city in Spider-Man 2, and the trees in the background look stranger than they should, would you even notice? On the other hand, for slower-paced atmospheric games like Alan Wake II, where graphical detail and set design is more important for the vibes, ghosting and smearing can seem more pronounced.

It should also be noted that artifacts aren’t necessarily inherent to all frame generation. For starters, better input frames can lead to better frame generation. Nvidia, for example, is touting new models behind Super Resolution and Ray Reconstruction—a whole other piece of tech for improving ray tracing results that we simply don’t have enough time to get into—to improve the images that get passed to the frame generation portion of the pipeline.

You can think of it a bit like a giant, complex version of a game of telephone. The only way to get the most accurate, detailed frames from your game is to render them directly. The more you add steps to extrapolate extra pixels and frames, the more chances there are for mistakes. However, our tools are getting progressively better at cutting down on those mistakes. So, it’s up to you to decide whether more frames or more detail is worth it for you.

Why frame generation is (probably) bad for competitive games

There’s one major exception to this whole argument, and that’s when it comes to competitive games. If you play online games like Overwatch 2, Marvel Rivals, or Fortnite, then smooth motion isn’t necessarily your primary concern. You might be more concerned with latency—which is to say, the delay between when you react to something, and when your game has registered your reaction.

Frame generation complicates latency issues because it requires creating frames out of order. Recall our earlier example: The GPU generates Frame One, then Frame Three, then the frame generator comes up with what Frame Two should be. In that scenario, the game can’t actually show you Frame Two until it’s figured out what frame three should be.

Now, in most cases this isn’t usually a problem. At 120fps, each frame is only on screen for about 8.33 milliseconds. Your brain can’t even register that short of a delay, so it’s not likely to cause a huge issue. In fact, human reaction time is typically measured in the hundreds of milliseconds. For a completely unscientific proof, go ahead and try out this reaction time test. Let me know when you get under 10 milliseconds. I’ll wait.

However, this does become an issue in competitive gaming, because frame delays aren’t the only latency issues you’re dealing with. There’s latency between your keyboard and your computer, between your computer and the server, and between the server and the other players. 

Most of those individual links in the chain might be pretty low, but they have to get synced up somewhere. That “somewhere” is in the game’s tick rate. This is how often the game you’re playing updates on the server. For example, Overwatch 2 has a tick rate of 64. That means that every second, the server updates what has happened in the game 64 times, or once every 15.63 milliseconds.

That’s just enough that if, say, your game shows you our rhetorical Frame One, where the enemy Cassidy is in your crosshairs, but hasn’t yet updated to Frame Three, when he’s not, the server could have ticked over before your screen has updated. That could mean your shot registers as a miss even though it feels like it should have hit. This is also the one issue that can actually get worse with Multi Frame Generation.

There are ways to mitigate this hit—for example, Nvidia’s Reflex tech that reduces input latency in other areas—but it’s not something that can be avoided entirely. If you’re playing competitive online games, you’re better off turning your graphics settings down lower to get a better frame rate, rather than using frame generation for now.

All These Beats Headphones Are on Sale During Amazon’s Memorial Day Sale

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Amazon’s Memorial Day sale is in full swing, featuring deals on garden, sports, beauty, home items, electronics, and more. A particular sale that stood out to me, as a deals writer who frequently reviews headphones and speakers, is the one on Beats products. While it’s not uncommon to see Beats products with a good discount, it is rare to see the newest product (the Beats Powerbeats Pro 2) included in the sale.

Right now, you can get the Beats Pill, Beats Powerbeats Pro 2, and the Beats Studio Buds+ for up to 41% off. All of these options are at their lowest prices ever, according to price-tracking tools.

Beats Studio Buds + are $40 off

The Beats Studio Buds + are very similar to the Beats Studio Buds, but there are some key differences. The Studio Buds + have an extra small ear tip size, an extra hour of battery life (total of nine hours), 12 more hours from the charging case (total of 36 hours), and perhaps more importantly, they have better ANC and better features for Android users, which you can read more about in PCMag’s review. You can get them for $99.95 (originally $169.95), matching the lowest price they have ever been, according to price-tracking tools.

The Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 are $50 off

The Beats Powerbeats Pro 2 are the newest earbuds from Beats, and the second generation of the original Powerbeats Pro. Although they’re only $20 apart in price, don’t let that fool you. This new iteration offers a lot more in quality than the original ones, which you can read more about in Senior Health Editor Beth Skwarecki’s review. While your attention might go to its new heart-rate monitoring feature, it’s actually a flop. However, they’re still great workout earbuds with better flexible and durable ear hooks, ANC, audio quality, battery, case, and the newer H2 chip, which you also see in the AirPods Pro 2.

The Beats Pill is $50 off

I’ve been trying out the Beats Pill speaker since it came out in June, and it has everything I would want in a portable speaker: a stereo sound when connected to another compatible speaker, multi-room mode to play the same music on multiple speakers, the Find My Device feature in case you misplace it, and Class 1 Bluetooth for extended range. If you’re an Apple user, you can take advantage of the AAC codec for better audio quality. You can get it for $99.95 (originally $149.95), the lowest price yet.