Image: Apple
Apple started a new carrier war

Good morning! This Monday, the iPhone 12 is reigniting the carrier wars, Mark Zuckeberg gets political and China's tightening export rules.
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It's been a while since anyone really cared about their cell carrier. They all work together, they all have the phones everyone wants, they all have roughly the same coverage in roughly the same places. When Sprint's advertising that it's only 1% worse than Verizon yet much cheaper, you know your market's mature.
But everything's suddenly back in play as the industry moves toward 5G. Did you notice the iPhone 12 has a slightly different price tag, depending on who you buy it from? Or that if you're willing to upgrade your plan and trade in your old phone, you can buy an iPhone 12 for next to nothing?
Things have been heating up here even since T-Mobile bought Sprint and then Dish got involved, and now 5G potentially comes with the first opportunity in at least a half-decade to remake the industry.
If this is indeed an upgrade supercycle for the iPhone, if anyone does actually give a crap about 5G yet, if carriers can successfully grab people looking to upgrade, a lot could change fast. But that's a lot of ifs.
The story everybody was talking about all weekend: The Wall Street Journal's epic dive into Mark Zuckerberg's newfound willingness to play politics. I mentioned it in yesterday's newsletter, but let's dig a bit deeper.
The piece said Facebook tweaked its News Feed algorithm specifically to deprioritize "left-leaning sites," including Mother Jones. Clara Jeffery, Mother Jones' editor-in-chief, called Facebook "a toxic cesspool" that is "directly implicated in everything tearing our country apart" after seeing the story.
Zuckerberg's moves match Facebook's policies, in a way: A little late, a little haphazard, designed less around a specific worldview than an attempt to just make life a little easier. According to the Journal — and according to everything you see with your eyes every single day — it's not working. It's driving a wedge between Facebook and both parties, and even between Zuckerberg and the rest of his team.
Relatedly:Facebook said it's rejected 2.2 million ads for violating political campaigning rules, with misinformation warnings applied to 150 million pieces of content.
The ByteDance back-and-forth always looked like a small sign of bigger things to come; that China was going to find more ways to exert control over the companies and tech created inside its borders.
The law goes into effect Dec. 1, and the government said it'll have a more concrete list of protected industries and items soon. Nikkei reported that some people are worried rare-earth metals could be on the list, which would be trouble for manufacturers everywhere.
This is all part of the broad (and now very long) fight between the U.S. and China over trade and technology. Both sides are betting they can function and innovate without the other. I don't think both sides are going to be right.
Relatedly:The EU is reportedly set to make it harder to export certain "dual use" technologies, including hacking software and facial recognition systems. And India has warned Amazon and Flipkart that they have two weeks to enforce a rule that demands sellers display the country of origin of products.
Strengthening healthcare interoperability and cybersecurity in the COVID era
A stronger healthcare system means connecting people, data and technology for a frictionless experience across care settings. At Philips, we're developing interoperable solutions that seamlessly transfer data so clinicians can stay focused on what matters most: the patient.
Airbnb has had a rough 2020, but it's still a force of a company, Scott Galloway said:
Mozilla's Robert Long really wanted someone to jailbreak the Oculus Quest 2:
Ajit Pai may want the FCC to weigh in on Section 230, but Tom Wheeler said there's no real threat there:
Qualcomm's 5G Summit is this week, as the company tries to keep making the case for the new tech. (Here's hoping Qualcomm does it better than Apple did.) Adobe Max is also this week, where we'll get the latest on all things Creative Cloud.
Conference Season continues! Two good ones this week: EmTech from MIT Technology Review, and WSJ Tech Live.
Netflix, Snap, IBM, Intel and Tesla all report earnings this week.
Let's be real, though: We're 15 days from the election, which means that's pretty much all anyone's going to talk about between now and then.
Your latest reminder that maybe algorithms don't have everything figured out yet: During a virtual conference for the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, attendees found that the chat software they used filtered out words like hell, knob, stream, pubis and bone. I think you could safely argue that the word "bone" is sort of important to a huge group of paleontologists. If you know what I mean.
Strengthening healthcare interoperability and cybersecurity in the COVID era
A stronger healthcare system means connecting people, data and technology for a frictionless experience across care settings. At Philips, we're developing interoperable solutions that seamlessly transfer data so clinicians can stay focused on what matters most: the patient.
Today's Source Code was written by David Pierce, with help from Shakeel Hashim. Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to david@protocol.com, or our tips line, tips@protocol.com. Enjoy your day, see you tomorrow.
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