[The Morning After]( It's Wednesday, October 18, 2023. After weeks of speculation, X has confirmed it will charge new users for the service previously known as Twitter. The company shared details about a new subscription called Not a Bot, which itâs currently testing in New Zealand and the Philippines. The subscription requires new users to pay the [equivalent of $1 USD per year to post](. âAs of October 17, 2023, weâve started testing Not A Bot, a new subscription method for new users in two countries,â X explained. [[TMA]
X]( X also announced major changes to its crowd-sourced fact-checking tool, to stem the flow of misinformation. The company now requires volunteer contributors to [include sources]( on every community note they write. X announced the change after Wired reported that some community notes contributors are worried the tool is being manipulated by bad actors, worsening Xâs misinformation problems amid the ongoing IsraelâHamas war. European Union officials have already raised concerns, pointing to the viral spread of video game footage and other unrelated content falsely claiming to depict scenes from the conflict. Following Muskâs purchase of Twitter, now X, the company cut the teams responsible for curating reputable information about breaking news events, removed misinformation-reporting tools and slashed safety team staffing. Requiring a linked source may be Xâs attempt to increase the quality of its notes, but there are still no guidelines about the types of sources that can be cited. â Mat Smith ââYou can get these reports delivered daily direct to your inbox. [Subscribe right here!]( The biggest stories you might have missed [Microsoft Copilot: Hereâs everything you need to know about the companyâs AI assistant]( [The best smartphones for 2023]( [Xiaomiâs new HyperOS will power its smartphones and beyond]( [EV startup Volta Trucks files for bankruptcy]( [The Stream Deck MK.2 is on sale for just $130]( [Netflixâs first live sports event is a golf tournament]( The Netflix Cup will pair up the stars of Formula 1: Drive to Survive and Full Swing. Netflix is getting into live sports streaming, but itâs not shelling out hundreds of millions of dollars on NFL games, Formula 1 races or the English Premier League quite yet. Itâs cheaping out on hosting a pro-am golf tournament with athletes from its Formula 1: Drive to Survive and Full Swing docuseries. You can watch the event starting at 6PM ET on Tuesday, November 14 â just a few days before F1âs inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix. Netflixâs first livestreamed event was a Chris Rock standup special, which it edited lightly after the live broadcast. The company ran into technical problems with its second planned livestream, a Love is Blind cast reunion, instead filming the reunion then uploading it. [Continue reading.]( [The new $79 Apple Pencil has a USB-C charging port]( And thatâs about it.
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Apple]( Apple has unveiled a new Apple Pencil for $79 and will be available in early November. It pairs and charges with a USB-C cable and is compatible with every iPad that has USB-C. While itâs the companyâs most budget-friendly Apple Pencil yet ($20 less than the original model and $40 cheaper than the second-gen Pencil), thereâs no pressure sensitivity this time, so itâs aimed at early-stage artists and sketchers. This is Appleâs latest step in its transition away from the Lightning port, which was largely prompted by European Union rules. Whatâs next, the Magic Trackpad? [Continue reading.]( [WhatsApp debuts passkey logins on Android]( It didnât say when the login solution will be available for other devices. WhatsApp just made logging in a much simpler and faster process, at least on Android devices. The Meta-owned app has launched passkey support for Android, which means users no longer have to use OTPs from two-factor authentication to log into their account. Passkeys are a relatively new login technology designed to be resistant to phishing attacks and password leaks. Theyâre made up of cryptographic pairs comprising one public key and one private key, which lives on the userâs device. The services that support passkeys donât have access to that private key, and it also canât be written down or given away. [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.