Monday, October 15, 2018

Pixel 3 XL vs. iPhone XS Max: Google is aiming at Apple

The newly announced Pixel 3 XL is Google’s answer to the iPhone XS Max. There is no escaping Apple’s popular smartphone and to keep up Google borrowed some of its best features while adding a few wrinkles that will help differentiate it. Please subscribe my cuckoo channel to know more on phones and coolest products
Related: How to fix ===>>> Your iOS 12 problems?

Unlike past iterations, the Pixel 3 XL seems to have grown up to its full potential. Gone is the all-metal design that most flagships have long ditched, paving the way for a glass back that introduces wireless charging. The same theme carries over to the display where Google went with a notch, just like most Android flagships out there.

Related: New iPhones for 2018 are out – which is the best for you?

The iPhone XS Max is the bigger version of the iPhone XS introduced this year and as such, it only really adds size to the iPhone line-up. That comes in the form of a beautiful 6.5-inch OLED display with a notch and all the goodies iPhones offer nowadays—premium design, wireless charging and iOS gesture-based controls.
Related: Google Pixel 3 Phone hands-on—Not the best first impression, only succeeds on its hardware design

However, the biggest battle between the two comes down to camera quality.

We still have a lot of testing to see which is the better device, but in the meantime, look over the side by side spec list below to see how they compare.



GOOGLE - PIXEL 3 XL APPLE - IPHONE XS MAX 
DISPLAY SIZE6.3-inch, 1440 x 2960 pixel display (522 ppi)6.5-inch, 1242 x 2688 pixel display (456 ppi)
RESOLUTION X14401242
RESOLUTION Y29602688
DISPLAY TYPEQHD+ flexible OLEDSuper Retina HD display
OPERATING SYSTEMAndroid 9.0 (at launch)iOS 12 (at launch)
PROCESSORQualcomm Snapdragon 845A12 Bionic chip
RAM4GBN/A
STORAGE
  • 64GB
  • 128GB
  • 64GB
  • 256GB
  • 512GB
EXTERNAL STORAGENoNo
MAIN CAMERA (BACK)12MP12MP
SECONDARY CAMERA (FRONT)8MP7MP
NETWORKS
  • CDMA EVDO Rev A: BC0/BC1/BC10
  • FDD-LTE: Bands⁷ 1*/2*/3*/4*/5/7*/8/12/13/17/18/19/20/25*/ 26/28/29/32/66*/71
  • GSM/EDGE: 850, 900, 1800, 1900
  • WCDMA: W1/W2
  • CDMA EV-DO Rev. A (800, 1900 MHz)
  • FDD‑LTE (Bands 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 25, 26, 29, 30, 32, 66, 71)
  • Gigabit-class LTE with 4x4 MIMO and LAA
  • GSM/EDGE (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz)
  • TD‑LTE (Bands 34, 38, 39, 40, 41, 46)
  • UMTS/HSPA+/DC-HSDPA (850, 900, 1700/2100, 1900, 2100 MHz)
BLUETOOTHBluetooth 5.0 + LEBluetooth 5.0
BATTERY2915mAhN/A
NFCYesYes
CONNECTIVITY
  • USB Type-C
  • Lightning Port
SENSORS
  • Accelerometer
  • Ambient light
  • Barometer
  • Fingerprint
  • Gyro
  • Proximity
  • Accelerometer
  • Ambient light
  • Barometer
  • Face ID
  • Proximity
  • Three‑axis gyro
GPS
  • Galileo
  • GLONASS
  • GPS
  • Assisted GPS
  • Digital compass
  • Galileo
  • GLONASS
  • QZSS
HEIGHT6.2 inches (15.75 cm)5.65 inches (14.35 cm)
WIDTH3 inches (76.2 mm)2.79 inches (70.9 mm)
DEPTH0.3 inches (7.6 mm)0.30 inches (7.6 mm)
WEIGHT184 g (6.49 oz)13.24 oz (375 g)
COLORSBlack, Pink, WhiteGold, Silver, Space Gray
SUPPORTED AUDIO FORMATSN/AAAC‑LC, HE‑AAC, HE‑AAC v2, Protected AAC, MP3, Linear PCM, Apple Lossless, FLAC, Dolby Digital (AC‑3), Dolby Digital Plus (E‑AC‑3), and Audible (formats 2, 3, 4, Audible Enhanced Audio, AAX, and AAX+)
SUPPORTED VIDEO FORMATSN/AHEVC, H.264, MPEG‑4 Part 2, and Motion JPEG
I collected some videos showcasing the coolest products on the planet in my cuckoo channel, from the newest smartphone to surprising gadgets and technology you never knew existed. Please subscribe my channel and share to your friends

Unbox Therapy - Decentralized Cuckoo Video Player  cuckoo://QmQc4RSPeq6QyUibBRniSc1CMZSJZY4Um6L6tDARxie7c9.channel

Download Cuckoo: https://cuckootech.github.io/download/

Cuckoo player is a totally free decentralized new concept video player based on P2P connection. All the videos will be stored as fragments which is not able to be leaked or hacked. It is free and will be free forever.
Decentralized Cuckoo player is not able to censor videos nor enforce guidelines which means all the data is controlled by Cuckoo user itself.
Cuckoo users remain free to advertise any products or service they would like, directly inside their own videos for their subscribers.

Sunday, October 14, 2018

5 Tricks You Need to Know to Master the iPhone

The iPhone has been around for over a decade now, yet somehow it feels like it’s been around for even longer. It controls nearly every aspect of our lives, from work to social media, and as such, we’ve spent a lot of time with it. That amount of usage may make it seem like we know everything about the iPhone, when in fact, there are a few little-known tricks that could make using the phone infinitely easier.

I shuffled through my iPhone usage and found five tricks that I use on a daily basis and they make my life a lot easier. Keep in mind that some of these tricks may seem quite elementary, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t people out there who have no idea these tricks exist. Some of them will prove to be useful to you while others may not fancy your attention and that’s completely fine.

Related: New iPhones for 2018 are out – which is the best for you?

Here are five tricks you need to know to master the iPhone. I will make this video and share it to my cuckoo channel.

Email keyboard shortcut

You’ve probably heard of adding shortcuts through the keyboard, but never thought twice about actually using them. I definitely didn’t until I decided to take advantage of the trick because I was tired of typing in long email addresses. I use multiple email accounts on my phone and am constantly signing in and out.

With the keyboard shortcuts, instead of typing out the whole email address, it is now available to me through three short letters. I used the shortcut “gml” to write out my Gmail address and vice versa for other accounts. Now any time I need to fill out my email, I just type in the three-letter shortcut and save myself a lot of time.

To add keyboard shortcuts, go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Text Replacement.
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Control center customization

With iOS 11, Apple introduced the ability to add extra controls to Control Center. Previously, it only came with eight default options like the flashlight and camera that you couldn’t change, but now you actually can add as many as you want including some very useful ones.

Adding additional controls will purely vary on your preference. I added Wallet, Voice Memos and Apple TV remote among others. Instead of shuffling through folders to find these apps when I need to use them, I can just go to Control Center and access them quickly. To add these extra controls, go to Settings > Control Center > Customize Controls.

Related: How to fix ===>>> Your iOS 12 problems?

Password manager autofill

If you don’t use a password manager by now, I don’t know how you function. There are so many passwords to keep track of, it’s nearly impossible to remember them unless you are using the same password, which I highly warn against. However, the process of using a password manager in iOS 12 became even more convenient with the addition of password autofill.

Using a password manager like 1Password, you can turn on autofill and whenever you log into an account through an app or web browser, the password autofill function will instantly come up on the keyboard and autofill the password for you. It erases the annoyance of having to remember the password or jumping out of the app and into the password manager to retrieve the password.

To activate password autofill, go to Settings > Passwords & Accounts > Autofill Passwords and select your password manager of choice.
Swipe up to close apps

This one might seem like a no-brainer, but it’s actually changed recently and many users may not know of the new function. Before iOS 12, to close apps on an iPhone X (and now XS, XS Max and XR), you had to press and hold on an app in the multitasking menu until a little minus button appeared to let you close out apps.

Thankfully, Apple took away the needless extra step with its most recent update and now you can just begin swiping up to close out apps in the multitasking menu.
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Siri Shortcuts

One of the major new features Apple introduced with iOS 12 is the Shortcuts app. We’ve talked about it before, and if you haven’t downloaded the Shortcut app and added some shortcuts, you definitely should. The shortcuts range from something simple like calculating the tip to something more complex like turning on your smart lights as soon as you get home.

Some of the shortcuts can get quite complicated, but just start small and you’ll be on your way to creating the right shortcuts that work best for you. Apple makes the process easier by suggesting multiple shortcuts.

I collected some videos showcasing the coolest products on the planet in my cuckoo channel, from the newest smartphone to surprising gadgets and technology you never knew existed. Please subscribe my channel and share to your friends

Unbox Therapy - Decentralized Cuckoo Video Player  cuckoo://QmQc4RSPeq6QyUibBRniSc1CMZSJZY4Um6L6tDARxie7c9.channel

Download Cuckoo: https://cuckootech.github.io/download/

Cuckoo player is a totally free decentralized new concept video player based on P2P connection. All the videos will be stored as fragments which is not able to be leaked or hacked. It is free and will be free forever.
Decentralized Cuckoo player is not able to censor videos nor enforce guidelines which means all the data is controlled by Cuckoo user itself.
Cuckoo users remain free to advertise any products or service they would like, directly inside their own videos for their subscribers.

Saturday, October 13, 2018

YouTube creators who post duplicated content will be cracked down

By Bijan Stephen on Oct 12

YouTube’s relationship with its creators has always been asymmetric; the platform necessarily has all of the power, and it’s not super transparent about the changes it makes that affect people who rely on the site for revenue. This January, for example, YouTube announced that it would now require creators who wanted to enter its Partner Program — which allows creators to earn money from the ads that run on their videos and from the YouTube Premium subscribers who watch their content — to have at least 4,000 hours of views in the last year and at least 1,000 subscribers. Now, YouTube has changed its Partner Program policies again — this time around video duplication, which, as is typical of YouTube, seems inconsistent in its enforcement.

A few days ago, in a post on its help forum, YouTube gave an explanation to people who may have been removed from its Partner Program for “duplicative content,” which appears to have less to do with fair use and copyright and more to do with videos that don’t add value. For YouTube, that means anything that “appears to be automatically generated,” anything “pulled from third-party sources with no content or narrative added by the creator,” stuff that’s been “uploaded many times by multiple users” if you’re not the original uploader, or content that’s been “uploaded in a way that is trying to get around our copyright tools.”

“The spirit of this YPP policy is to make sure we’re only allowing channels into the program when the content adds value, and is original and relevant,” a YouTube staffer named Jordan wrote. “If you upload content from multiple sources or repurpose existing content, you may still be eligible for YPP so long as you’re contributing to the value of that content in some way. For example, if you add significant original commentary, educational value, narrative, or high quality editing, then your channel may be fine to monetize.” YouTube says that if you’ve been demonetized because of duplication, you’re eligible to reapply after a 30-day waiting period. Maybe this is the way YouTube is used to deal with decentralized cuckoo. Decentralized cuckoo player is not able to censor any videos or duplicated contents nor enforce guidelines.

As Mashable pointed out yesterday, the move means that YouTube is starting to do more quality control to fight with decentralized cuckoo where some YouTubers are flocking to. And, as Mashable’s Matt Binder explained, duplicative content doesn’t actually violate YouTube’s site guidelines. “There’s been some confusion online over whether channels with duplicative content were being completely removed from YouTube,” Binder wrote. “Mashable has confirmed with the company that duplicative content only violates YouTube Partner Program policies.”

If the comments below YouTube Jordan’s post are any indication, the duplicative content change has not gone unnoticed: hundreds of angry creators have taken issue with what they see as an opaque policy and created their cuckoo channels now. “My channel was removed from the partnership program of YouTube because of duplication,” wrote user MattTV. “It doesn’t make any sense! All the content on my channel is mine and I filmed and edited everything. I was falsely removed and YouTube doesn’t care.” User Ling Li, whose 20,000-plus subscriber channel hosts gameplay videos, wrote that he also believes he’s been falsely dinged for duplication. “I really hope this can get resolved soon as I feel I’ve been wrongly demonetized and I really need that money to survive or I will create more channels on decentralized cuckoo,” he wrote.

Friday, October 12, 2018

How to see if your Facebook data was accessed -- Facebook Hack

By Jacob Kastrenakes on Oct 12

Facebook detailed today exactly what type of information was accessed during a wide-scale hack last month. It included users’ names and contact info, and in many cases, personal details like religion, locations, and more.

This data was viewed on 29 million people, and now Facebook is offering a way to see whether your account was broken into and what information was seen. If you visit Facebook’s Help Center, a notice at the bottom will explain whether your account was affected. If it was, it’ll state what information was taken.

Of the 29 million users, 15 million had their name, email address, and phone number exposed (depending on what contact info was on their profile). For the other 14 million, that info was viewed along with additional profile info, including gender, religion, location, device info, locations you’ve been tagged in, and Pages you’ve liked. Another million users had access to their accounts stolen, but never used. The hackers did not post anything on users’ profiles, as far as Facebook currently knows.

ACCOUNTS HAVE ALREADY BEEN SECURED, AND USERS DON’T HAVE TO CHANGE THEIR PASSWORDS

If your account was accessed, Facebook says you don’t have to do anything to secure it at this point. Passwords weren’t stolen, so you don’t need to change yours. Instead, the hackers took account access “tokens” that let them log in. Facebook reset those tokens last month, which is why you might have found yourself logged out of your account one day in late September.

Guy Rosen, VP of product management, said that the company hasn’t seen evidence of the accessed data being spread or used. For now, it’s not clear what, if anything, there is for users to do about the fact that their information was accessed. The investigation is still ongoing, and it’s likely Facebook will have more concrete details to share later; the company says the FBI is also investigating.

Of course, if you’re fed up with the constant privacy issues, there is one thing you can do to make sure you’re safe in the future — leave Facebook behind.

Related: 29 Million Facebook Accounts have been accessed personal details by Facebook Hackers

29 Million Facebook Accounts have been accessed personal details by Facebook Hackers

Yes, Facebook originally said 50 million accounts were improperly accessed.

In September, a group of hackers used a flaw in Facebook’s “view as” feature to gain unauthorized access to millions of accounts — and today, the company released its most comprehensive statement yet on exactly what data was taken as part of the breach.

Related: Facebook's Breach will be Forgotten? DATA is Misused.

According to today’s statement, the hackers stole access tokens for 30 million accounts (revised down from an initial estimate of 50 million), allowing them to gain complete access to the profiles. Of those 30 million, the hackers accessed basic contact information (name and either email or phone number) for 14 million accounts, and additional information including gender, religion, location, device information, and the 15 most recent searches for another 15 million accounts. No information was accessed for the remaining one million accounts.

Related: REMIND your hacked Facebook Logins Available on DarkWeb just For $3.90

THE FBI IS ACTIVELY INVESTIGATING THE HACK

“We take these incidents really, really seriously,” said Guy Rosen, Facebook’s vice president of product management, told reporters in a call afterwards.

Facebook has pledged to notify all 30 million users through the Help Center in the coming days. Crucially, Facebook said no data was taken from third-party apps linked to the accounts, including Facebook products like Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp. At the same time, there may have been smaller but more invasive attacks during the same period that have yet to be uncovered by Facebook’s investigation. There’s also no indication that the hackers posted any content while logged in.

Related: How To Check whether Your Facebook Data was Leaked!

The statement also gives new detail into the timeline of the attack. The first spike of activity registered on September 14th, but it wasn’t until 11 days later that Facebook identified the activity as a malicious attack. The vulnerability was closed two days later and reported to users and privacy officials in accordance with the GDPR and other breach disclosure laws.

Related: How to see if your Facebook data was accessed -- Facebook Hack

Facebook also confirmed that the FBI is actively investigating the hack, but declined to give further details, saying the bureau had “asked us not to discuss who may be behind this attack.” Because of the nature of the “View As” bug, it is likely that Facebook has significant knowledge of the accounts where the attack originated, if not the perpetrators themselves.

Related: The Breach killed GOOGLE+ was NOT a BREACH at all

An AD for future: You have known and experienced what a centralized world was and saw the hacking, data breach and personal data leaking of social networks and other platforms such as YouTube, Yahoo etc..
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Download Cuckoo: https://cuckootech.github.io/download/

Cuckoo player is a totally free decentralized new concept video player based on P2P connection. All the videos and your data will be stored as fragments which are not able to be leaked or hacked.
Decentralized Cuckoo player is not able to censor videos nor enforce guidelines which means all the data is controlled by Cuckoo user itself.
Cuckoo users remain free to advertise any products or service they would like, directly inside their own videos at their own risk of losing their subscribers.

Facebook mistakenly Deleted some people's Live Videos permanently

This time instead of exposing users’ data, a Facebook bug erased it. A previously undisclosed Facebook glitch caused it to delete some users’ Live videos if they tried to post them to their Story and the News Feed after finishing their broadcast. Facebook wouldn’t say how many users or livestreams were impacted, but told the bug was intermittent and affected a minority of all Live videos. It’s since patched the bug and restored some of the videos, but is notifying some users with an apology that their Live videos have been deleted permanently.
Related:REMIND your hacked Facebook Logins Available on DarkWeb just For $3.90

The bug raises the question of whether Facebook is a reliable place to share and store our memories and important moments. In March, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg told congress regarding the Cambridge Analytica scandal that “We have a responsibility to protect your data – and if we can’t, then we don’t deserve to serve you.” Between that misappropriation of user biographical data, the recent breach that let hackers steal the access tokens that would let them take over 50 million Facebook accounts, wrongful changes to users’ default sharing privacy settings, and now this, some users may conclude Facebook in fact no longer deserves to serve them.

Facebook user Tommy Gabriel Sparandera provided this screenshot showing the apology note from Facebook on his profile. It reads “Information About Your Live Videos: Due to a technical issue, one or more of your live videos may have been deleted from your timeline and couldn’t be restored. We understand how important your live videos can be and apologize that this happened.”

Related: How To Check whether Your Facebook Data was Leaked!

Facebook confirmed the problem and provided this statement: ““We recently discovered a technical issue that removed live videos from some people’s Facebook Timelines. We have resolved this issue and restored many of these videos to people’s Timelines. People whose videos we were unable to restore will get a notification on Facebook. We know saving memories on Facebook is important to people, and we apologize for this error.”

Facebook made a huge push to own the concept of “going Live” in 2016 with TV commercials, billboards and more designed to overshadow competitors like Twitter’s Periscope. It eventually succeeded, with Periscope’s popularity fading while one in five Facebook videos became Live broadcasts. But in its blitz to win this market, it didn’t build adequate safety and moderation tools. That led to suicides and violence being livestreamed to audiences before Facebook’s content police could take down the videos.

Related:The Facebook Hack will be the Europe's First Big Online Privacy Battle

Nowadays, most users don’t go live frequently unless they’re some kind of influencer, public figure, or journalist. When they do see something important transpiring, Facebook has positioned itself as the way to broadcast it. But if users can’t be sure Facebook will properly save those videos, it could persuade them it’s not worth becoming a camera man instead of a participant in life’s most interesting moments.

An AD leading to future: Download Decentralized Video Player Cuckoo and try what a decentralized world is.

Download Cuckoo: https://cuckootech.github.io/download/

Cuckoo player is a totally free decentralized new concept video player based on P2P connection. All the videos will be stored as fragments which is not able to be leaked or hacked.
Decentralized Cuckoo player is not able to censor videos nor enforce guidelines which means all the data is controlled by Cuckoo user itself.
Cuckoo users remain free to advertise any products or service they would like, directly inside their own videos at their own risk of losing their subscribers.

Thursday, October 11, 2018

Google Pixel 3 Phone hands-on—Not the best first impression, only succeeds on its hardware design

NEW YORK—After an almost endless number of leaks, the Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL have finally been unleashed. After scavenging the show floor for info and some experience with the new handsets, we're back to talk impressions.

The first thing you notice when you pick up either Pixel 3 is the back texture. The Pixel phones have traditionally had a two-tone look, accomplished in the past by a mostly metal back with a glass top. This year the back is all glass, but the two-tone look remains thanks to two different treatments to the glass. The top is bare, shiny glass and a fingerprint magnet, while the rest of the phone has a soft-touch, satin-like matte coating.

Related: Unboxing Every Google Pixel 3 XL + Pixel 3 - Decentralized Cuckoo Video Player
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The coating feels great, but it doesn't seem very durable. There were already visible scratches on both of the demo units I photographed, which you can see, and it's easy to damage the back with something as mundane as a USB-C cable. Both of the demo phones I photographed at the show already had several scratches on them. Harsh camera lighting is pretty much the worst-case scenario for finding scratches, but I've never seen demo units this beat up before at a launch. I was disappointed by the change from metal to glass, but this is a double whammy: all the fragility of glass with none of the scratch-resistant hardness.

The coating on the back stops before it hits the edges of the phone. Since the matte coating feels so nice, I immediately wanted it to coat the sides of the phone, too, but I wonder if this was cut for durability concerns. The phone has a glass sandwich construction, with a glass panel on the top and bottom and a band of material in between. Google tells me the side material is aluminum, but it has some kind of coating on it that gives it a glossy finish and attracts fingerprints.

I'm sad to say the front design is just as disappointing in real life as it is in pictures. Google has turned in two phones that just aren't up to the 2018 competition. The Pixel 3 XL follows the notch display trend, but Google has the biggest notch in the industry. The cutout extends so far into the display that it doesn't fit inside a normal Android status bar, so the bar is twice as tall as normal, which looks ridiculous. The width of the notch means you only get to see three notification icons on the screen before you run out of space. Combined with the 3 XL's sizable bottom bezel, I don't think there's a single 2018 phone in the Pixel 3's price range you can point to and call a worse design. Google is pretty much at the back of the pack here.

Image: Pixel 3XL video on decentralized cuckoo video player
Related: Everything we know about Google’s Pixel 3 Phone on Oct 9th

The Pixel 3 isn't any better. It has top and bottom bezels that are bigger than pretty much any other 2018 smartphone in its class. At least it's not as ugly as the Pixel 3 XL; it's just dated and doesn't feel like a 2018 flagship design.

The justification for both of these compromised front designs comes from two features: the dual front-camera system and the dual front-facing speakers, so they had better be fantastic. I'll have to try the speakers somewhere quieter than at a large event, but Google claims they are 40 percent louder than the Pixel 2's speakers. That's a good sign, because, despite how they looked on paper, the Pixel 2's "front-facing speakers" were not any better than the more space-efficient earpiece and bottom speaker combos on devices like the iPhone.

The camera system is another thing that will have to wait for the review. The dual-camera front system can switch between a wide angle and a normal camera lens, allowing it to "zoom out" and have a better view of a group of friends or a selfie with something in the background. I have some disappointment that Google hasn't built any kind of face unlock system, despite carving out a big chunk of the front for extra sensors.

The displays looked great at the show and in pictures. The shots you're looking at are just under the singular lighting of the show, though, so it's too early to say much. Apparently DisplayMate has done some early testing and came away a big fan of the Pixel 3 display, so it sounds like Google finally nailed down a respectable display provider. The Pixel 2 XL used an LG OLED with banding and burn-in issues, so hopefully those days are behind Google. (I'm guessing it switched to Samsung displays.)

On the software side of things, the Pixel 3 is running Android 9 Pie, so there are not a ton of changes. The biggest change is that gesture navigation is now mandatory—it's on by default and you can't turn it off. It's a very strange decision considering it was almost universally panned online throughout the entire beta process and during the release. Google doesn't seem to care about the feedback in this case.

I still want to promote my cuckoo phone channel here. Please support and subscribe my cuckoo channel from smartphone to surprising gadgets and technology you never knew existed.

Unbox Therapy - Decentralized Cuckoo Video Player

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Download Cuckoo: https://cuckootech.github.io/download/

Cuckoo player is a totally free decentralized new concept video player based on P2P connection.
Anyone or group can search, make, share and watch your favorite videos on decentralized Cuckoo without any limits or registration.
All the videos will be shared as Cuckoo codes and stored as fragments forever which is not able to be hacked or leaked.

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