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Epic Games will pay iOS fees in Apple war


One of the company's goals is to expand the number of games that are available for free in the European Union.​

Epic Games has previously indicated that it intended to incorporate games developed by third parties into its mobile application, which is now accessible on Android devices all over the world and on iOS devices in the European Union. In addition, the corporation will provide a free mobile version of a series of titles that will be rotated regularly. The very first two free games that will be available are going to be Bloons TD 6 and Dungeon of the Endless: Apogee. According to a post that Epic made on X, the company is currently working to fix some flaws before releasing the new titles on its platform.

On the other hand, the company made headlines today with a move that has the potential to entice well-known titles to become part of its free games program. Epic has the intention of covering the cost of the Core Technology Fee on iOS during the first year of involvement for participants. When an iOS app reaches a threshold of one million downloads annually and is distributed through a third-party store, Apple imposes a CTF of fifty euro cents for each and every installation of the app. There is a grace period of three years for applications that have a global income of less than ten million euros.

Epic has stated in a blog post that was shared with The Verge that covering the payments "is not financially viable for every third party app store or for Epic long term, but we'll do it while the European Commission investigates Apple's non-compliance with the law." Epic added that they will continue to cover the fees until the investigation is complete. Apple has already been the target of the Digital Markets Act, which is a digital competition legislation in Europe. This statute is the one in question.

A significant amount of controversy has arisen in the gaming and technology industries around the fees that Apple and Google charge for the usage of their respective platforms. As a result of Epic Games' allegations that Apple has engaged in anti-competitive activities, the company has been in conflict with Apple on multiple occasions over the course of its existence.

Operator from OpenAI may browse the web


To begin using it, however, you will be required to have a subscription to ChatGPT Pro.​


OpenAI has started providing a sample of a new tool that allows users to navigate within a web browser. This tool is named Operator. Apparently, the program is driven by something that the corporation refers to as a Computer-Using Agent, as stated in a blog post that was published on Thursday. OpenAI describes the model as having been "trained to interact with graphical user interfaces (GUIs)," which are the buttons, menus, and text fields that people see on a screen. "CUA is trained to interact with GUIs in the same way that humans do," "Because of this, it is able to carry out digital tasks without relying on APIs that are specific to the operating system or the web."

On the basis of OpenAI's GPT-4o model, the most recent version of Operator was developed. The vision skills of the algorithm are combined with "advanced reasoning" that has been developed through reinforcement learning. The ability to "break tasks into multi-step plans and adaptively self-correct when challenges arise" is possessed by the operator. The next stage in the evolution of artificial intelligence, according to OpenAI, is represented by that capability.




Opening AI advises that Operator is "still early and has limitations," and that it will not "perform reliably in all scenarios just yet." This warning is similar to what OpenAI has said in previous research previews. For instance, the agent would gain tremendously from the user taking a few more moments to provide a more descriptive prompt. This is because the complexity of the activity and the interface involved all play a role in creating this benefit. According to The Verge, in the event that Operator ever becomes stuck on a task, it will hand control over to the user. Additionally, it will take control anytime a website requests critical information, such as login credentials, and it will do so automatically. The corporation claims that it developed the technology with the intention of "refusing harmful requests and blocking content that is not permitted."

Customers that subscribe to OpenAI's ChatGPT Pro service, which costs $200 per month, will be the first to have access to the Operator. Additionally, it is forming partnerships with businesses such as Instacart in order to provide the agent capabilities on their platforms; however, in order to test the integration, you will once again require a ChatGPT Pro subscription.

The number of artificial intelligence agents that are capable of navigating a web browser or a complete operating system is growing, and Operator is now one of them. The first company to provide this functionality was Anthropic, which did so in October with the launch of the Claude 3.5 Sonnet model. Google, on the other hand, did so more recently with the Gemini 2.0 model and Project Mariner.

Meta launches a ‘small test’ of Threads advertisements


In the beginning, advertisements will be seen to "a small percentage of people" in both the United States and Japan.​

One of the things that has set Threads apart from Meta's other apps in its year and a half of existence is the fact that the service has been completely free of the advertisements that are present in virtually every nook and cranny of Facebook and Instagram. We are about to see a change in that. Adam Mosseri, the head of Instagram, just made the announcement that Meta is commencing its first "small test" of advertisements on Threads. This comes as the business is looking to finally begin making money off of the site.

Only "a small percentage of people" in the United States and Japan will be able to see the advertisements, which will be displayed as image posts in between the material that users see in their feeds. It has been stated by Mosseri that Meta intends to start with "a handful of brands" in both of the countries. According to what he stated, "We are aware that there will be a great deal of feedback regarding how we ought to approach advertisements, and we are making certain that they have the feel of Threads posts that you would find relevant and interesting." According to the statement, "We will closely monitor this test before scaling it more broadly, with the goal of getting advertisements on Threads to a place where they are as interesting as organic content."

To introduce advertisements to the app, it appears like Meta is making use of the advertising infrastructure it already possesses. The business adds in a blog post that brands may "extend their existing Meta ad campaigns to Threads—without the need for bespoke creative or additional resourcing—by simply checking a box in Ads Manager." This is possible without the requirement for additional resources or bespoke creative design. Additionally, the business will test its "inventory filter" on Threads. This filter "allows advertisers to control the sensitivity level of the organic content that their advertisements appear next to." As Meta relaxes its criteria for content moderation and once again permits more political information to surface in users' recommendations, this is going to become an important element for marketers to take advantage of.

Despite the fact that the initial test is very limited, Meta would be able to grow Threads ads to a much larger number of advertisers and its 300 million users very fast in the future if it took advantage of its existing advertising tools. When it comes to the development of Threads' advertising business, Mark Zuckerberg has already stated that he favors taking a more gradual approach. The chief executive officer stated in the previous year that "all of these new products, we ship them, and then there's a multi-year time horizon between scaling them and then scaling them into not just consumer experiences but very large businesses."

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