Facebook starts to remove recommendations for political and social groups globally

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Facebook Inc said on Wednesday it is starting to remove the recommendations it gives global users for political and social issue Facebook groups, a move it has billed as turning down tension on the site.

The company also announced in a blog post changes aimed at reducing the reach of groups that break site rules, including showing them lower in algorithmic recommendations and alerting people when they go to join a group that has previously violated policies.

Researchers and civil rights organizations have long warned that Facebook groups, a product the company has vigorously promoted as providing places for people with common interests, like sports or music, have also been used to spread misinformation and organize extremist activity.

In an interview on Tuesday, Tom Alison, Facebook’s vice president of engineering, said Facebook was aggressively investing in groups.

He said the changes to political and civic group recommendations, which Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced on an earnings call in January, were due to users wanting to see less political content.

“They want us to turn down the temperature a little bit,” said Alison.

He said newly created groups on any topic would need to wait 21 days before becoming eligible for recommendation in order to give Facebook time to understand how a group would operate.

Since 2017, Facebook has made groups a strategic priority, and Zuckerberg credits the feature as a way to foster “meaningful connections.” Last year, it stepped up promotion of groups in news feeds and search engine results.

But during the coronavirus pandemic, Facebook stopped recommending health groups to users, saying they needed authoritative sources of information. It also cracked down on certain groups in recent months as part of policy changes to curb “militarized social movements.”

In the months before the U.S. election and the Jan. 6 Capitol assault, Facebook groups buzzed with misinformation and violent rhetoric. “Stop the Steal” groups rapidly swelled despite the pauses on recommendations.

Facebook said on Wednesday it would require group moderators to temporarily approve posts for groups with a “substantial” number of rule-breaking members or members who were part of other groups removed for rule violations.

It also said it would show rule-breaking groups’ content lower in members’ news feeds and temporarily stop repeat rule-breaking members from being able to post or create new groups.

Facebook’s Alison declined to say what criteria would determine when a rule-breaking group or its members would be removed from the platform.

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OnePlus Watch will not run on Google’s WearOS, confirms company – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Smartphone maker OnePlus will launch its next-generation OnePlus 9 series smartphones on March 23. Now, the company has also confirmed that it will launch its first smartwatch at the same event.
The company CEO Pete Lau has confirmed that the OnePlus Watch will not run on Google’s WearOS.
Lau confirmed this to a OnePlus forum member that the upcoming smartwatch will run on an unnamed RTOS (real-time operating system).
Pete Lau said, “We chose to go with a smart wear operating system developed based on RTOS because we believe it provides you a smooth and reliable experience while offering a great battery life, covering some of the biggest concerns we’ve been hearing from people looking to buy a smartwatch.”
This means that the OnePlus Watch will offer a similar user experience like the Amazfit and Zepp smartwatches. The software on these wearables come with limited apps and offer no support for third-party apps. On the other hand, these watches offer long lasting battery life.
Apart from the operating system, the company has also confirmed that the OnePlus Watch will come with a burdenless design. The wearable will also offer seamless connectivity between OnePlus smartphones, audio devices and OnePlus TV. The company has also mentioned that the smartwatch will come with an affordable price tag.
Apart from this, some of the earlier leaks revealed that the OnePlus Watch will come with a square-shaped dial and it will come in Black and Silver colour options.
Rumours also suggest that the device will come with an IP68 rating which will make the smartwatch dust and water-resistant. The smartwatch is also said to come with a heart rate and SpO2 monitor. It is also said to offer features like automatic wear detection, sleep tracking and a swimming mode.

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Meet the woman shaping post-pandemic cybersex

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Interest in cybersex is soaring as the pandemic has left people subject to lockdowns and travel bans and unable to seek intimacy in the usual ways, according to experience designer Angelina Aleksandrovich.

At the same time, the pandemic has also pushed people’s willingness to use a tech solution to an all-time high.

Aleksandrovich runs a collective called Raspberry Dream Labs which creates multi-sensory cybersex experiences which allow people to enjoy intimate moments together even when they are not in same place.

“Because of COVID a lot of people understood how we can use technology and virtual reality in exciting and expanded ways,” Aleksandrovich told Reuters.

Whereas VR used to be dismissed as something just for gamers it has gone mainstream and is being used in intimacy and dating, she added.

In an industrial unit in North London two volunteers demonstrate her prototype experience combining virtual reality (VR), augmented reality and even smell, delivered through a collar worn around the neck, a head set, and hand-held sensors.

The volunteers see each other as outline human forms through their headsets and can caress each other without ever actually touching.

The experience involves haptic stimulators positioned over erogenous zones, something that could eventually be incorporated into soft robotic ‘underwearables’, said Aleksandrovich.

She argues that as we are happy to allow technology into many aspects of daily life, such as health or finance, we should include the bedroom.

A report in 2019 by US market research firm Arizton said the global market for sexual wellness products is expected to reach around $39 billion by 2024.

Asked what she made of her cyber sex experience, volunteer Victoria Gillett said, “I love it – it is definitely an experience.”

“There is so much going on and it takes a while to take it all in. When it finished I kind of wasn’t ready,” said fellow volunteer Aaron Vandeyar.

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Hacking Apple, Bill Gates and Joe Biden’s Twitter accounts leads teen to 3 years in jail – Times of India

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Graham Ivan Clark, the teen who had hacked into — and took control of — the Twitter accounts of Apple, Bill Gates, Joe Biden and several other famous personalities last year has been sentenced to 3 years in jail, as per a report by Tampa Bay Times. He pleaded guilty to the crime and was served the sentence; he also will spend the next 3 years after release in probation. Clark is 18 years old.
After getting past Twitter’s defences, Clark had taken control of aforementioned accounts to ask for more that $100,000 in Bitcoin. Besides Gates and Biden, Clark was also accused of hacking the Twitter accounts of Barack Obama, Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos. As per the report, he’d amassed about $117,000 in Bitcoin through his several accounts before Twitter gained control of the accounts again. He was arrested some days later at his home in Hillsborough County.
How did he manage to take hold of someone else’s Twitter account?
Through Twitter’s customer service portal. He reportedly convinced a Twitter employee that he worked in the information technology department of the company and then accessed the customer service portal.
His was a virtual court hearing where the judge treated him as a “youthful offender”. That is the reason why his sentence is for 3 years. If he would have been treated as an adult, he would have been slapped with a 10-years prison sentence, says the report.

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Google move to cut Play Store fee could help ‘boutique’ apps, but not big developers

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In a move that brings relief to thousands of developers across the world, Google has decided that from July 1 it will take just a 15 per cent cut — down from the present 30 per cent — on the first $1 million revenue earned by apps on Google Play. While the move does not change much for big apps, it does help smaller apps and game developers in a big way.

“Reduction of commission fees is likely to benefit boutique firms, individual application developers and early stage startups,” Manjunath Bhat, Sr Director Analyst, Gartner, tells Indianexpress.com. “It will have little to no impact on large established application development companies in India.”

Sameer Samat, VP of Android and Google Play, wrote in a blog post that “99% of developers globally that sell digital goods and services with Play will see a 50% reduction in fees.” Developers with a total revenue over $1 million each year will still need to pay a 30 per cent fee to Google.

Google’s announcement follows a similar move by Apple last year when the Cupertino company said it will reduce its fee from 30 per cent to 15 per cent from January, for developers who make less than $1 million annually. However, Google’s approach is slightly different. In the case of Apple, the company’s App Store Small Business Program applies to only those developers who earn less than $1 million in annual sales per year from all of their apps – and once they make more than $1 million, they are charged at a standard rate. Google, meanwhile, says the cut applies to the first $1 million regardless of total revenue. “We’ve heard from our partners making $2 million, $5 million and even $10 million a year that their services are still on a path to self-sustaining orbit,” Samat said.

Both Apple and Google in recent months have come under fire from large firms such as Epic Games and Spotify, as well as from smaller developers, who allege that the current business practises applied by the two tech giants are harming the tech market. In fact, Apple’s legal fight with Fortnite creator Epic Games has put the company under increased scrutiny from regulators. Because both Apple and Google control the most popular App Stores as well as the entire smartphone market and the ecosystem, many developers say they have no options but to follow the rules laid by the two companies and pay the fees.

“In a country like India, it particularly makes a big difference,” says Rajan Navani, Vice Chairman & Managing Director, JetSynthesys. “I think in a way it helps support the Indian ecosystem, especially the smaller developers.”

Navani, whose company develops popular mobile games for Android, says a reduction in the Play Store fees will make a bigger impact because the app monetization on Google’s platform is much larger. “If we look at Google’s platform numbers, they are somewhere in the range of 30 to 40 per cent growth in app purchases in India,” he said. “ It’s a good move, because with new developers coming in, more companies will engage with citizens through digital payments,”

The move is more significant also because Android dominates the smartphone market in India. The change, even though not specific to India, comes a few months after Google faced criticism from high-profile local startups including Paytm over a move to charge a 30 per cent commission for in-app purchases.

Vijay Shekhar Sharma, founder of Paytm, called Google “judge, jury and executioner” after the Mountain View giant temporarily delisted the popular payments app from the Android app store for a policy violation. Following the backlash, Google had to delay its 30 per cent Play Store cut in India to April 2022.

“The commission reduction is a step forward in growing this market,” Bhat said. “A lot lies ahead in the journey of platform innovation, democratising access to the platform and monetising platform services in India.”

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Pre-embryos made in lab could spur research, ethics debates

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Two papers published on March 17 in the journal Nature detail how two teams of scientists independently made such structures.

For the first time, scientists have used human cells to make structures that mimic the earliest stages of development, which they say will pave the way for more research without running afoul of restrictions on using real embryos.

Two papers published on March 17 in the journal Nature detail how two teams of scientists independently made such structures.

Also read | Best from science journals: Million-year-old plant fossils beneath Greenland

They stressed that their work is only for research, not reproduction, but it likely will pose new ethical questions.

“Studying early human development is really difficult. It’s basically a black box,” said Jun Wu, a stem cell biologist at the University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center. “We believe our model can open up this field,” he said, if “you can test your hypothesis without using human embryos.”

Dr. Wu’s team used embryonic stem cells and the second team used reprogrammed skin cells to produce balls of cells that resemble one of the earliest stages of human development.

These balls, called blastocysts, form a few days after an egg has been fertilised but before the cells attach to the uterus to become an embryo. To differentiate their models from blastocysts created through fertilisation, the researchers refer to the structures as “iBlastoids” and “human blastoids”.

“They shouldn’t be considered as equal to a blastocyst, although they are an excellent model for some aspects of biology,” said Jose Polo, an epigeneticist at Monash University in Australia who led the second research team.

Both groups stressed that the structures they made were not the same as naturally occurring embryos, and it’s unclear whether they could develop into viable embryos.

“The blastoids are less efficient in terms of generating structures mimicking later stage human embryos,” said Dr. Wu, whose team stopped growing the structure in a culture after four days.

Scientists previously generated similar structures of mouse cells in a lab, but this is the first time they have been made from human cells. The new models correspond to about three to 10 days after fertilisation, Dr. Wu said. In 2020, researchers unveiled structures that model cells 18 to 21 days after fertilisation.

Research involving human embryos and blastocysts is currently ineligible for federal funding in the U.S., and several States prohibit it outright.

Some scientists now use blastocysts donated from fertility clinics for research into the causes of infertility and congenital diseases. The new work should allow them to do such research at much larger scales, Dr. Polo said. “This capacity to work at scale will revolutionize our understanding of these early stages of human development,” said Dr. Polo.

The scientists stressed that their creations were not intended to be used for human reproduction.

“There is no implantation,” said Amander Clark, a stem cell biologist at the University of California, Los Angeles who co-authored the paper with Dr. Polo. “These structures are not transferred to a uterus or uterus-like structure,” she said. “There is no pregnancy.”

The distinction between blastocysts derived from fertilisation and the structures created in a lab may not be so clear-cut, said Shoukhrat Mitalipov, a human embryologist at Oregon Health and Science University who was not involved in the research.

“Both groups show how closely they resemble real embryos,” he said. “If they are really as good as embryos, should they be treated as embryos?”

“This brings new ethical issues,” he said. “Are they going to be covered as human embryos? Should restrictions apply?”

Scientists previously tried to turn the lab-generated mouse cell structures into embryos, but they were not successful.

The optimal scenario for research is to “get as close to a real embryo as possible so you can learn from it, but not a real embryo so you don’t get into debates about the moral status of embryos,” said Alta Charo, a professor emeritus of law and bioethics at University of Wisconsin who was not involved in the papers.

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India’s blue revolution needs more marine protected areas, says new research

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India, with its long coastline, has a major opportunity to boost fisheries yield by expanding Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) along its Exclusive Economic Zone, and in parallel, protect the ocean’s capacity to capture carbon and boost biodiversity, says a large scale study reported on Wednesday by a group of scientists in the journal Nature.

Expanding the realm of MPAs in the world’s oceans presents a big opportunity to raise food production, enhance carbon storage and preserve a lot more of threatened biodiversity for all countries, the authors argue. They stress the need for greater international cooperation to extend the boundaries of protection.

Although 7% of the world’s oceans are earmarked or designated as MPAs currently, in practice, that figure drops to 2.7% enjoying full or high level of protection, the team led by Enric Sala of the Pristine Seas project of the National Geographic Society said. Although many countries lower protection levels because of the view that protected areas prevent extraction of food and materials, the scientists contend that expanding MPAs would actually produce overflow effects in other parts, which would raise the yield of food.

The report assumes significance as the scheduled 15th Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in Kunming, China, later this year will consider the “30 by 30” target, which is to protect 30% of the planet’s land and ocean by 2030.

Growing biodiversity

In conserving biodiversity, Dr. Sala and his colleagues think countries have a major opportunity to make a difference, since 90% of the top 10% priority areas for marine biodiversity protection are located within the 321 km (200 mile) Exclusive Economic Zone of countries.

According to the research paper, 90% of the potential biodiversity benefits could be realised by strategically safeguarding 21% of the world’s oceans – 43% of EEZs and 6% of the high seas. The estimate is that such an expansion of area would raise protection for endangered and critically endangered species from the current 1.5% and 1.1% of their ranges to a staggering 82% and 87% respectively.

Dr. Boris Worm, a study co-author and Killam Research Professor at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia said, “Smart ocean protection will help to provide cheap natural climate solutions, make seafood more abundant and safeguard imperiled marine species – all at the same time.”

India fully protects 0.2% of its EEZ, as does the European Union, while corresponding figures for the U.S. are 22.1%, Chile 28.3%, Australia 8.9% and zero for Great Britain, Japan, China and Germany, to name a few.

What is more, in spite of the impact of climate change on the distribution of species, 80% of the areas within the top 10% global biodiversity priorities today will remain valid until 2050, based on the high greenhouse gas emission scenarios of the IPCC Special Report on Emission Scenarios.

Among the seas recommended for enhanced protection are Antarctica, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, the Mascarene Plateau, the Nazca Ridge and the Southwest Indian Ridge.

Protection through MPAs brings important benefits in the form of carbon capture that is otherwise released through deep sea trawling by fisheries, and an increase in the level of food availability.

A food surplus

A modelled increase in food stocks achieved through strategically placed MPAs covering 28% of the global ocean could touch 5.9 Million Metric Tonnes (MMT), assuming that existing fisheries move to new areas and use the same effort, as opposed to no action and a continuation of current practices. One of the effects of new MPAs would be a potential spillover of larval and adult fish from protected areas to sites outside, under the right biological conditions.

Such an intervention could address the issue of overfishing, which has depleted stocks in many seas. Even without any additional effort being taken by fisheries in the areas outside the new MPAs, there would be an estimated increase in food stock, of a marginally less 5.2 MMT.

India’s potential

To a question on whether India has the potential to benefit more from protection in overfished areas along its EEZ, Francesco Ferretti, Assistant Professor, Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation, Virginia Tech, U.S., and a co-author of the paper told The Hindu, “Yes, there is. It depends on the recovery potential of the stocks in that area and this newly protected area’s capability to affect fishing production outside.”

“In general terms, India ranks relatively low among Asiatic nations in terms of the fraction of EEZ in the top 10% of priority areas, even though its contribution would be substantial in absolute terms. That means that India would benefit relatively more than others for reaching global conservation objectives. That is, more from the overall effect of protection at the global scale by pushing for the protection targets described in this paper,” Dr. Ferretti said.

“Because of such variable costs and benefits for nations, in the paper, we stress the importance of international collaboration, which should ensure a fair distribution of costs among all nations that would benefit from a healthy ocean,” he added.

Reniel Cabral, Assistant Researcher, Bren School of Environmental Science, and Management and Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, U.S., said in response to a question that MPAs especially worked best if located in overfished areas.

“Fish stocks and biodiversity in overfished areas are expected to positively respond to protection. Our earlier work shows that India is one of the top countries that will benefit greatly from fisheries reform and MPAs definitely can help improve fisheries in India, in addition to improving biodiversity and protecting carbon stock,” according to Dr. Cabral.

A carbon question

Governments may not be paying attention to the damage done to the ocean by deep sea trawling in terms of its ability to absorb carbon dioxide. The study estimates that 1.8% of the world’s ocean, equating to 4.9 million sq. km. is deep-trawled each year by industrial trawlers and dredgers, destabilising the sediments containing organic carbon and leading to remineralisation of the sedimentary carbon into CO2 and thereby acidification of the ocean.

This potentially reduces the capacity of the ocean to absorb atmospheric CO2, the authors contend, affecting the effort to stop dangerous climate change.

The estimates were arrived at on the basis of satellite imagery of activity involving industrial trawlers and dredgers. The research paper calculates that in the first year of trawling, 1.47 Petagrams (1,470 megatonnes) of CO2 emissions from the water represents 0.02% of total marine sedimentary carbon, which might appear to be low but is equivalent to 15–20% of the atmospheric CO2 absorbed by the ocean each year. This is comparable to estimates of carbon loss in terrestrial soils caused by farming. Continued trawling uses up the entire sedimentary carbon in the top metre over time.

India’s bottom trawling for fisheries is thought to be responsible for annual CO2 emissions of the order of 28,83,128 tonnes. For comparison, it is 4,77,26,031 tonnes for Britain, and 76,92,94,185 tonnes for China.

Creating MPAs would stop large-scale dredging up of the carbon-laden sediments, with potential to reduce emissions.

According to the researchers, the areas with the highest priority are found where carbon stocks and present threats from human activity are the highest. These include China’s EEZ, Europe’s Atlantic coastal areas, and productive upwelling areas. Moreover, countries with “the highest potential to contribute to the mitigation of climate change through protection of carbon stocks are those with large EEZs and large industrial bottom trawl fisheries,” they write.

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huawei: aHuawei may start charging Samsung, Apple and other phone companies for using its patents – Times of India

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Chinese technology giant Huawei has had a rough run with the US government. With its technology under heavy scrutiny in the US and the sanctions, the company has plans to make up for some of its losses by charging big smartphone companies like Apple and Samsung for using its 5G-related patents, claims a report by CNBC.
Big smartphone companies like Apple and Samsung rely upon 5G modems from Qualcomm but Huawei has the maximum number of 5G-related patents in the world. The report has cited GreyB, an intellectual property research company, which claims that Huawei has the highest number of “declared 5G patent families of any company, at 3,007, and that 18.3% of those are in use.” Next in the list of the most number of patents are Samsung, LG Electronics, Nokia, Ericsson and Qualcomm.
According to the report, Huawei may charge Apple and Samsung $2.50 per smartphone sold. The Chinese smartphone maker plans to keep its licensing rates lower than that of competitors like Qualcomm or Nokia. This way, it could fetch Huawei $1.2-$1.3 billion from 2019-21, though these are rough estimates and the actual figure may go higher.
5G is the future and despite launching 5G phones, the smartphone giants may have to depend upon companies like Qualcomm and Huawei for 5G modems that could give faster connectivity. Apple may come up with its own 5G modems to reduce its dependability on Qualcomm. The Cupertino-based tech giant, with its M1 chip for MacBooks, has shown that it could do without the Intel chips in the past. For the nonce, Huawei’s patents may start a new revenue stream for the company.

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Samsung announces new Galaxy A-series phones, its latest attempt to tap premium mid-range market

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Samsung on Wednesday announced two new smartphones under the Galaxy A-series, the company’s latest shot at the premium mid-range market. Both the Galaxy A52 and Galaxy A72 will help the world’s largest smartphone maker to attract smartphone users who aren’t willing to pay a premium for the Galaxy S21 series but still want devices with the latest features.

The new Galaxy A-series phones will be available from €349 (around Rs 30,180) and they cost less than the flagship Galaxy S21 range. The Samsung Galaxy A52 is priced at Euro 349 (around Rs 30,180). The 5G model of the same device will cost Euro 429 (approximately Rs 37,100). The Galaxy A72, on the other hand, will be sold for Euro 449 (around Rs 38,830). Historically, the Galaxy A-series has been pricier than the Galaxy M-series, Samsung’s mid-range smartphone range.

The Galaxy A52 is viewed as Samsung’s trump card to cater to the same segment where players like Vivo and Oppo are gaining feet, especially in India. The phone features a 6.5-inch FHD+ 120Hz Super AMOLED display, which means that webpages and videos will open faster, compared with 60Hz on the previous generation model. Notably, the Galaxy A52 also has IP67 water and dust resistance rating, something no other phone offers in this price segment. Samsung is also bringing stereo speakers to the Galaxy A52 along with Dolby Atmos enhancements.

Samsung Galaxy A52, Galaxy A series 2021, Galaxy A52 5G, Galaxy A72 LTE, Galaxy A52 price in India, Galaxy A52 specs The Samsung Galaxy A52 is the update to the popular Galaxy A51. (Image credit: Samsung)

Samsung put a big focus on the cameras on the Galaxy A52, with the device having a quad-camera setup on the rear. The Galaxy A52 has a 64MP OIS-capable primary camera, a 12MP ultra-wide lens, a 5MP depth camera and a 5MP macro lens. On the front, there is a 32MP selfie camera.

The South Korean major said it plans to sell two versions of the Galaxy A52 in the market, one with 5G and the other with LTE connectivity. Barring the lack of 5G on the LTE-only variant, the phone features a 90Hz Super AMOLED display as opposed to the 120Hz screen on the Galaxy A52 5G. Both phones include a 4500mAh battery, support for Galaxy SmartTag, on-screen fingerprint scanner, and microSD card slot. The devices are powered by an Octa-core processor.

Samsung also announced the Galaxy A72 LTE, which is exactly the same as the Galaxy A52 LTE but comes with a slightly bigger 6.7-inch screen and 8MP telephoto camera that can zoom optically three times. The company promises two days of battery life on the Galaxy A72.

With the new Galaxy A-series, Samsung is testing the segment where Apple is largely absent. Both the Galaxy A52 and A72 are meant to appeal in emerging markets where the popularity of premium mid-range smartphones is high.

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Redmi K40, Redmi K40 Pro to launch as Mi 11X and Mi 11X Pro in India, claims new leak

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While Xiaomi is yet to launch its flagship Mi 11 in India, a leaked internal code suggests that recently launched Redmi K40 and Redmi K40 Pro will be introduced as Mi 11X and Mi 11X Pro in the country. The internal code was spotted by XDA Developers member and tipster Kacper Skrzypek who posted on Twitter.

Earlier it was reported that Redmi K40 will be launched as Poco F3. The highlight of the internal code reveals a device with model number M2012K11AI codenamed as “aliothin”. The suffix “in” used in the codename suggests that the phone will be launched in India. Similarly, the Redmi K40 Pro will be rebranded as Mi 11X Pro in India. The code also mentions a third device with the codename “haydn_pro_global” which will be a rebranded version of Redmi K40 Pro+. It is likely to be called Mi 11i and will not be launched in India.

Xiaomi introducing rebranded phones in India is not a new thing. Earlier this year, the Chinese smartphone maker launched Mi 10i, which is a rebranded Redmi Note 9 Pro 5G. Xiaomi has not announced any of these phones yet in India or globally.

The Redmi K40 series was launched in China last month. The Redmi K40, Redmi K40 Pro and Redmi K40 Pro+ start at Rs 22,300 (approximately), Rs 31,200 and Rs 41,300 respectively. All three devices sport a 6.67-inch AMOLED E4 TrueTone display developed by Samsung. It has Full HD+ resolution with a 120Hz refresh rate and 360Hz touch sampling rate. It also has HDR 10+ and peak brightness reaches 1,300 nits.

Check out his tweet

While the Redmi K40 is powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon 870 processor, the Pro variants come equipped with a flagship Snapdragon 888 processor. On the back, Redmi K40 has a triple-camera setup with a 48MP primary camera whereas the Redmi K40 Pro and Redmi K40 Pro+ come with 64MP Sony IMX686 and 108MP Samsung HM2 primary sensors respectively.

All three phones come with 20MP front snapper. They sport a 4,520 mAh battery with 33W fast-charging sport and run on Android 11 out of the box with MIUI 12 on top.



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