Add Me (Tensor G4 and newer): If you and your partner are traveling and there's no one around to take a picture of you both in front of a landmark (or you don't want someone to run off with your phone), just use Add Me. One person takes the photo, then swaps places with the other, but you'll have to make it seem like you were standing next to each other. The resulting image is the two photos stitched together, and no one is the wiser. This is available in the camera app as the Add Me tab. Google updated the feature in the Pixel 10 to work better with big groups and pets.
I DM my friends on Instagram. I ride the subway everyday. I am a journalist. Because of these simple matters of fact, I find myself the unwitting target of a sweeping surveillance network that knows who I am, what I say, and how I spend my time, online and off. And I'm pretty careful about what Big Tech gets out of me.
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A few weeks later, the COVID-19 pandemic landed in the U.S.—shutting down most public places, including Disney parks. The company’s revenue fell sharply; previous year profits turned to losses; and the stock price plunged. Given that the company had closed its Disneyland parks in Shanghai and Hong Kong in January, some, including the New York Times’ then–media critic Ben Smith, wondered aloud: “Had Mr. Iger, with his deep ties to China and legendary timing, seen the coronavirus about to devastate his global realm? Did he get out just in time?” (Iger assured Smith that there was “nothing different or odd to speculate about.”)