Wanda Sykes Accuses Adam Devine of Being a Cellphone 'Crackhead' in Exclusive '
Adam Devine plays Phil, a down-on-his-luck listicle writer who is addicted to his smartphone. In this exclusive sneak peek, a desperate Phil takes his broken phone to a Genius Bar-esque setup, only to get dressed down by the employee (Wanda Sykes) tasked with assisting him. "I see hipster dudes like you come in here every day, crying about how their phone died and how they need a new phone," Sykes says in the footage. Yeah, they got the crazy eyes and they're all scratchy and they're like, I need a new phone, man!" ET visited the movie's San Francisco set, where Devine discussed making a comedy about "putting your phones away and talking with people again."
Carson Daly Shocks 'Today' Co-Hosts by Announcing His Wife Is Pregnant With Baby No. 4:
Carson Daly is going to be a father of four! The 46-year-old Today co-host surprised his colleagues on Friday by announcing the news live on the air. Siri Daly, my incredible wife, she is gearing up for a big spring because thats when shes going to give birth to fourth and newest member of the Daly family, Carson said as his co-hosts gasped and jumped up to hug him. Thats right, shes pregnant. I prefer to be pregnant when someone else on our team is pregnant, so this works out great, Dreyer told Carson.
How to set up a smart speaker for privacy
It should be clear by now that your daily interactions with your smart speaker are anything but private. To mute your speaker: The simplest way to control what your smart speaker hears is to mute it when youre not using it. To mute your speaker: The simplest way to control what your smart speaker hears is to mute the device when youre not using it. To mute your speaker: The simplest and most reliable way to maintain control over what your smart speaker hears is to mute your device when youre not using it. To review or delete your recordings: Google allows you to see the conversations that have been recorded by your smart speaker and delete the contents.
Apple apologizes for listening to Siri recordings, promises changes
(CNN) - Apple apologized on Wednesday for letting contractors listen to commands that users give to its voice assistant Siri. And only Apple employees will be allowed to listen to audio samples of the Siri interactions, rather than contract workers. The company also said it will no longer keep audio recordings of users' interactions with Siri. "We know that customers have been concerned by recent reports of people listening to audio Siri recordings as part of our Siri quality evaluation process," Apple said in the post. Apple isn't the only company that's been forced to rethink its approach to reviewing recordings from users amid privacy concerns.