[The Morning After]( It's Thursday, August 17, 2023. Newly unsealed court filings reveal [how much data Xwitter has handed over to the January 6 investigation](. This includes all tweets sent, drafted, liked and retweeted â even if they were subsequently deleted â by Donald Trumpâs official account. This cache also included DMs sent, received or stored in draft form, as well as linked accounts used on the same device. Even more interesting is the company handed over records of all searches made by the account, too. We already knew Xwitter had fought the order tooth-and-nail, leading to a court battle and a [hefty fine](. But the list of what was available should also serve as a warning to everyone else that the platform stores a lot more data on its users than you might expect. The fact it could serve up location history, deleted DMs and a list of searches might make you wonder what else it has on you. â Dan Cooper You can get these reports delivered daily, direct to your inbox. [Subscribe right here!]( The biggest stories you might have missed [With some tech savvy, you can disconnect your robot vacuum from the cloud]( [The best soundbars for 2023]( [8BitDo stuffed 16 buttons into its hand-crampingly small Micro controller]( [Amazon Music Unlimited raises subscription prices again]( [Solo Stove introduces a $349 gas-only version of its Pi pizza oven]( [Netflix's Scott Pilgrim Takes Off teaser hits all the right notes]( [Scientists recreate an iconic Pink Floyd song by scanning listeners' brains]( It could eventually help people with speech challenges. Researchers claim to have found a way to [extract a song from a personâs brain by analyzing their neural activity](. A group of test subjects with drug-resistant epilepsy, who already have implants in their brains, were played Pink Floydâs Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1. Using the implants, the team monitored how the brains responded to the stimulus and used AI to recreate what they heard. The result is a bit like listening to a Pink Floyd cover band playing down the street while youâre swimming, but itâs recognizable enough. Itâs hoped the discovery could be used as a jumping-off point to develop tech to help people with atrophied speech communicate. [Continue Reading.]( [Intel walks away from its $5.4 billion takeover of Tower Semiconductor]( Rumors suggest Chinese regulators were slow to agree to the deal.
[[Image from the front of Intel's HQ, the Robert Noyce building.]
Intel Corporation]( Intel has [withdrawn its $5.4 billion offer to buy Israeli chip fabricator Tower Semiconductor]( after failing to get regulatory approval. Tower is not a bleeding-edge manufacturer; it makes chips for industrial and automotive applications using older processes. Intel wanted it as part of its plan not to just make its own chips but to manufacture third-party designs in its facilities. Itâs thought the major roadblock was China, which refused to give its blessing in a âtimely manner.â Itâs not clear if Chinaâs inaction was part of the current geopolitical brouhaha over the future of chip making, but it probably hasnât helped. [Continue Reading.]( [GMâs latest investment could speed development of cheaper EV batteries]( It is putting $60 million into a US-based battery company.
[[A person stands with a computer terminal in the middle of a server farm.]
Karl Nielsen for General Motors]( GM has a vested interest in making batteries both cheaper and more efficient, which is why it just dropped [$60 million into Mitra Chemâs pocket](. Mitra Chem is working on a US-made battery using cheaper, more common metals than are presently employed. Itâs also looking to speed up research into new battery technologies using software that could eliminate much of the early gruntwork. [Continue Reading.]( [Google is working to improve Bard's soulless life advice]( But not everyone on the project thinks itâs a good idea. A Google contractor developing Bard, the search giantâs AI chatbot, has enlisted a score of experts to improve the systemâs [ability to dole out life advice](. Itâs in response to users asking the platform for help with intimate issues, like how to back out of a destination wedding. The work has caused alarm in some parts of the company, where workers feel people shouldnât be asking an AI those sorts of questions. [Continue Reading.]( [Snapchat's My AI chatbot glitched so hard it started posting Stories]( It shouldnât be able to do that. Snapchatâs in-app digital assistant [experienced a malfunction so great it started posting its own stories](. My AI is a chatbot you can access if you subscribe to Snapchat Plus for $3.99 a month, but it shouldnât have access to your stories at all. In a statement, the company explained the system had a âtemporary outageâ and thereâs nothing to worry about. For now, at least. [Continue Reading.]( The Morning After is a daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't [subscribe](. Craving even more? [Like us on Facebook]( or [follow us on Twitter](. Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? [Send us a note.]( [Twitter]( [Facebook]( [Youtube]( [Instagram]( You are receiving this email because you opted in at [engadget.com](. Not interested anymore? [Unsubscribe from this newsletter.]( Copyright © 2023 Yahoo. All rights reserved.