Listen, I don't want to babble too much before the tech news but this video is sponsored by Babbel, spelled differently. Keep watching and we'll tell you how you can get 60% off a Babbel subscription, okay? After a court ruled that Google has abused its market dominance in internet search the US Department of Justice says that it's considering structural remedies which is a boring antitrust term that means forcing the company to sell off part of its business. Breaking up Google is only one of a suite of potential remedies that the DOJ will be recommending as options to the judge in the case, Ahmed Mehta who is almost definitely not just Mark Zuckerberg in a black robe and rubber mask. It's hard to believe that Google might actually get chopped up and sold for spare parts mostly because it's been over 40 years since the last time U.S. antitrust regulators actually broke up a company, the 1982 breakup of the Bell system. Microsoft nearly got the Solomon baby treatment 24 years ago but that case was appealed and then eventually settled out of court with serious restrictions for how Microsoft was allowed to do business going forward. Google is clearly taking the possibility seriously, however and has argued that the DOJ's proposals are radical and sweeping and a potential risk to consumers, businesses, and developers. That's what I say whenever I got a brew in my hands. I'm radical and sweeping. Google plans to appeal the decision but it won't have the opportunity until Meta, the judge, not the company, decides on an appropriate remedy, most likely by August 2025 meaning that this case will most likely drag on for at least a few more years. In far lower stakes Google antitrust news a judge has ordered Google to allow third-party app stores to access the Play Store's app collection. Google likewise plans to appeal this decision though it might be cheaper if Sundar Pichai just challenged Epic CEO Tim Sweeney to a fistfight in the nearest Waffle House parking lot. Just an idea. Hackers connected to the Chinese government have infiltrated several U.S. internet service providers, including AT&T, Verizon, and Lumen. They were scared off by the customer service. The hackers reportedly had access to these networks for several months and they gained that access through a system of security backdoors that are legally required by the U.S. government for use in wiretapping. Okay. The extent of the attack and what information the hackers had access to is still being investigated but if you're wondering how bad this is the answer is very. The Chinese government has denied being behind these attacks and even pretended to be hurt by the accusation, despite the fact that their government, and basically every other government is pulling stuff like this all the time. But not us! However, this kind of attack highlights a deeper problem with the U.S. government's approach to system security. where it has long pressured tech companies to embed hardware and software back doors in their products for the sake of its own convenience, despite the very real risk that a malicious actor could exploit the exact same route to cause serious harm like what we're seeing right now. This was Apple's argument when they were pressured by the FBI to access devices belonging to alleged mass shooters and the company has largely been vindicated. Buy your mom an iPhone because she's probably not a terrorist. When would she launch the attack? She spends all her time with me. Barbara, are you doing something I don't like? Barbara, you're in big trouble. EV startup Fisker has run into a potentially serious snag in its bankruptcy plan. It has no way of migrating its EV's cloud operations onto its new owner's servers. For context, in June Fisker reached an agreement with New York-based rental company American Lease to buy its remaining fleet of 3,300 vehicles for $46.3 million. However, Fisker only informed American Lease that they couldn't transfer the EV's server links last Friday when they had already paid $42.5 million and accepted 1,100 Ocean SUVs. It is currently unclear how long Fisker has known about this extremely relevant technical issue American Lease has therefore filed an emergency objection to Fisker's liquidation plan. They wanted their liquidation plan to be more solid. The Department of Justice has filed its own objection in response to claims that Fisker has been trying to make ocean owners pay for their own recall repairs which is very much illegal. Fisker is likewise attracting ominous attention from the SEC who are investigating the company, but haven't said exactly why. That's just what happens when you're a struggling company failing to meet its contractual obligations. you start seeing the silhouette of SEC Chairman Gary Gensler every time you close your eyes. Like the Grim Reaper. Does that happen to people? But when I close my eyes I just see our sponsor. Babbel, the app that helps you learn a new language. Whether it's for business or pleasure, learning a few key phrases can really save the day. For example, if you're visiting the Netherlands this fall waar is het trienstation? can help you catch the train on time. Babbel is one of the top language learning apps in the world with lessons created by over 650 language experts that will help you learn practical, real-world conversations at a pace you're comfortable with. In fact, Babbel's own research says that if you use their app to study a brand new language you can learn the equivalent of a beginner's college semester in an average of just 15 hours. That's pretty good. They even have a 20-day money-back guarantee and my research says that's way more than 15 hours. Whether you're heading back to school or exploring somewhere new Babbel is here to help you on your learning journey. Use our link in the description to get up to 60% off your subscription and you may just be saying, Dank je wel to Babbel for helping you learn a new language. Believe it or not, in 1964 this show won the Nobel Prize for quickest bit. Now that's something to tell your grandkids. YouTube has started hiding the skip button timer on its mobile app just a week after some Reddit users reported seeing a grayed-out skip button timer on desktop. Now it might not be the worst thing. As seen in a screen recording from Android Police the length of the unskippable portion is still shown in the seek bar and the skip button appears after that portion is done. And a YouTube spokesperson said the change is meant to allow users to focus on the ads. Yeah, that's why I don't watch YouTube ads. The distracting skip button. Just can't take my eyes off. It's gorgeous. Asus' new NitroPath RAM slot design can apparently boost speeds by up to 400 megatransfers per second in a peculiar way. The tech has no direct improvements for populated RAM slots, but for the unpopulated ones. Turns out that the metal contacts in empty slots act like antennas generating electrical noise that interferes with RAM at high speeds. It's like how everyone's wisdom teeth accidentally pick up secret CIA transmission. That's everyone, right? That happens to you, right? NitroPath slots solve this by shortening the contacts. Though the tech was announced back in August it's finally arriving on select high-end ASUS motherboards and should come to other OEMs sometime next year according to YouTuber Der Bauer and my teeth. Leaked slides allegedly from Intel's imminent unveiling of its Core Ultra 200 series desktop CPUs, aka Arrow Lake, show the upcoming flagship Core Ultra 9 285K providing lower FPS on average than its predecessor, the Core i9-14900K. Unless we're gonna get a Ultra 9 290K at some point we don't know. Although the Arrow Lake chip is using 80 watts less than the older model and it has eight fewer threads thanks to Intel removing hyper-threading it's a bit weird that Intel is advertising their new product with a promise of more modest performance. I don't know maybe that's their marketing angle. This CPU isn't big and flashy it's very demure very mindful of how much power it's using. This guy uses TikTok. Meta has now confirmed that they will be training its AI on pictures and videos taken using Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses after previously refusing to publicly discuss whether or not they do so. Oh, I guess, why would that be? It's not, guys, this isn't why are we even worrying about this? You can technically opt out of the training by not using the multimodal AI capabilities of your multimodal AI-powered smart glasses Meta will also use your voice convos with the AI for training though you can actually opt out of that the first time you log in to the Ray-Ban Meta app. But please don't if you're in Australia or the UK both countries that just got access to the AI. Zuck needs that voice data so he can learn how to tell what the hell you're saying. You have no idea that New Zealand even exists. Don't tell him that. Why do you say words like that? And speaking of, AI won big at this year's Nobel Prizes. The prize for chemistry was awarded to American biochemist David Baker, as well as Demi Hassabi and John Jumper of Google DeepMind for their involvement in the development of protein structure prediction AI AlphaFold. They're doing chemistry, I guess. The prize for physics went to professors John Hopfield and Jeffrey Hinton whose work laid the foundation for modern neural networks. This is confusing. All science is just AI now. You know, AI, physics. And the Nobel Prize for Biology is going to go to Boston Dynamics. Hinton, often called one of the godfathers of AI has expressed regrets about his life's work, and was reportedly flabbergasted to receive the prize. You and me both. Many in the scientific community were equally flabbergasted with German physicist Sabine Hassenfelder, and also a youtuber now, noting that the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physics wasn't even being awarded to an achievement in physics. But she seems just kind of grumpy all the time. So I can see that. But your award for sitting through an entire episode is an invitation to come back on Friday for more tech news. We're going to do the same thing. But different.