Issue 1722 - Thursday 27th October, 2022

In Today's Issue

The News

Meta, Alphabet and Microsoft's quarterly financials are out

It's earnings season for big tech. Meta's year on year revenue is down a whopping 52% compared to the same time last year and Meta estimates revenue will decline again next quarter. Daily active users on Facebook are up slightly however, hitting 1.984 billion. Meta's share price is down 68% year on year, oof. Alphabet's revenue "only" increased by 6% this quarter compared to the whopping 41% pandemic induced revenue boost in the same quarter last year. Google Cloud is still losing money. Alphabet is planning for headcount to be "significantly lower" next quarter. Microsoft's profit took a hit as PC shipments slump 15%, impacting Windows OEM revenue, but they're still selling more Windows licences than pre-pandemic. Game Pass subscriptions are up 159% though.

Elon Musk takes a sink to Twitter while Tesla is under a 3rd criminal investigation

Elon Musk has rocked up to Twitter's HQ with a sink ("let that sink in" fucks sake, he is so bad at comedy) and is referring to himself as Chief Twit. I'd say it's fairly certain Elon will take ownership of Twitter as agreed before the court imposed deadline of 5PM on October 28th. If not, the trial continues and I'm pretty sure Elon wants to avoid the trial. Meanwhile, Reuters has leaked that "Justice Department prosecutors in Washington and San Francisco are examining whether Tesla misled consumers, investors and regulators by making unsupported claims about its driver assistance technology's capabilities", but has stalled "because it is competing with two other DOJ investigations involving Tesla". Commit so many crimes they can't figure out what's going on in't the business model I'd choose, but I'm not the world's richest person.

DTA turn over 60% of staff last year, Apple pauses gambling ads on App Store & confirms iPhone to go USB-C

Something I Saw On The Internet

Digital Rights Watch's take on the minor updates to the Privacy Act

Digital Rights Watch has published an overview of changes coming to the Privacy Act thanks to Optus and their incompetence. Besides the already well publicised increase in financial penalties (whatever is greater - $50m, 30% of the company turnover or 3x the value of the benefit the company got from their conduct), the OAIC will get new powers to conduct assessments, expand the range of things it can tell a company to do if it breaches the Act and enhance information sharing between the OAIC and other government departments. The update will also remove a current exclusion for non-Australian companies, a popular loophole. Even if you don't have an Australian prescence, as long as you conduct business here (i.e: sell to Australians I guess) you must comply with the Act. As nice as these changes are, Digital Rights Watch wants "a direct right of action and a statutory tort for serious invasion of privacy" and hope it is included in a full review of the Privacy Act due later this year.

Bargains

Image Of The Day

IBM Quantum Dilution Refrigerator (IBM Research Flickr)

The End

📻 Turn It On - Sleater-Kinney, Margo Price

😎 The Sizzle is curated by Anthony "@decryption" Agius and emailed every weekday afternoon.

💬 Checked out the paid subscriber only forum? It's a tidy little place to discuss tech with like minded Aussies.

👋 Forums not your thing? The Sizzle has a Slack group you can procrastinate in and chat with other nerds bored at work.

💳 Paid subscriber looking to manage your billing info, change email address or cancel your subscription? Visit the customer portal.

📚 Browse The Sizzle Archive. A few issues are missing and it's not searchable, but it's better than nothing.

🫂 Friends of The Sizzle is a small group of businesses or organisations operated by Sizzle subscribers. Support your fellow Sizzler!

💔 Tired of my bullshit? Unsubscribe and I'll never speak to you again.

Always Was, Always Will Be Aboriginal Land

The Sizzle is created on Wathaurong land and acknowledges the traditional owners of country throughout Australia, recognising their continuing connection to land, water and community. I pay my respect to them and their cultures and to elders both past and present.