Clean Every Nook and Cranny In Your Car With This Discounted Vacuum

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Your car is disgusting, but you can go a long way towards fixing that today with this deeply discounted automotive vacuum.

This Black & Decker vacuum plug into your car’s 12V outlet, and includes both a pivoting nose and a detachable hose to help you clean every vent, cup holder, and tiny crevice in your car. Normally, this would set you back $40-$50, but today only, Amazon is selling them for $30. Don’t miss out!

$30

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Your Morning Coffee Isn't Destroying Your Financial Future

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When you live paycheck to paycheck, everyone (including you) likes to blame your financial woes on the tiniest expenses. However, you’ll have a harder time than you think ruining your retirement plans by buying a morning coffee.

As personal finance author Helaine Olen explains in Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry, the idea that you can ruin your budget with small indulgences is a tempting one because it’s something we can control. The idea, as popularized by personal finance advisor David Bach, is that if you simply skip the coffee every morning and invest that money instead, you’ll be a millionaire by the time you’re ready to retire.

However, as Olen points out, the math on this concept doesn’t add up. For example, check out this Latte Factor Calculator. Assuming a $5 expenditure every single day, a generous 8% annual return for investing that money, and a 30 year wait, the potential interest only comes out to around $171k on top of $54k in coffee savings. While that’s not chump change, you also can’t retire on it.

The broader lesson should be that reducing expenses overall is better for your retirement. Sure, you could skip your beloved coffee to save maybe $1,500 a year and put that towards a portion of your retirement, or you could opt to live somewhere that costs $200/month less in rent for the same effect. Or you could cut your cable bill in half by dropping all those useless channels. Or you could campaign for a raise from your boss and put the excess you earn towards your savings. Best of all, you can do all of these things to build an awesome retirement plan. There’s nothing wrong with saving the money you would normally spend on your coffee, but it’s not the only part of your personal finance plan. If you have the rest of your ducks in a row, you don’t have to guilt yourself over the little things.

Buying Coffee Every Day Isn’t Why You’re in Debt | Slate



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Reasoned Discourse as a Vital 21st Century Skill

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In this strangest of American election years, discourse, long regarded as the lifeblood of democratic societies, appears more endangered than ever before, confined to sound bites and slogans of the moment. Rarely do people have the need or occasion to account for their beliefs, much less question them. It’s enough that I identify where I stand, without needing to say why. Dialog, if it occurs at all, is confined to the “echo chamber” of like-minded individuals.

In this age of twitter, is reasoned discourse truly an historical relic, or is there hope for its revival?

As one who has explored ways to develop the values and skills associated with reasoned discourse among young people, I am cautiously optimistic. With the right setting and little prompting, we have found, young teens are ready to engage deeply in debating complex issues of the day with their peers. Yet, reasoned discourse as a cultural practice can flourish only if its participants have achieved a critical set of intellectual skills and intellectual values. We need to nurture both.

Underlying them is an understanding of the nature of knowing. Epistemological understanding—the understanding of how we know what we claim to – develops in a predictable sequence. Through at least their first decade, children believe that we know the world directly and first hand—just look and see and truth reveals itself as a set of known facts. By their second decade, the discovery that the beliefs even of alleged experts differ typically leads to a radical turnabout. A world of certain facts is replaced by one of knowledge as freely chosen opinions—how things seem to me. Knowledge, once entirely objective, is now treated as entirely subjective – believe whatever you want.

Only some individuals progress to a third epistemological stance in which objective and subjective dimensions of knowing are coordinated and knowledge consists of judgments, made within a framework of alternatives and evidence and expressing our best current understanding, though subject always to change.

This evaluativist epistemological stance not only welcomes discourse but demands it, as the means by which knowing is accomplished. Knowledge as facts or opinions, in contrast, renders discourse irrelevant. Claims are not open to question. Facts can simply be “looked up,” and opinions must be accepted as the unquestioned possessions of their holder. You can’t challenge how I feel because my feelings are mine. Tolerance demands that all beliefs have equal status—because everyone has a right to their beliefs, all beliefs are equally right.

An evaluativist epistemological stance is thus the foundation for a commitment to discourse a valuing of it as a form of human activity worth the effort it entails. It affirms respect for all views while maintaining that they are nonetheless subject to evaluation.

Yet values by themselves are not enough. If it is to be productive, reasoned discourse requires particular intellectual skills of its participants. There are others, but I describe two here that are particularly consequential for discourse.

One of them is making clear distinction between explanation and evidence. When we asked a random sample of teens and adults of all ages what evidence they could offer to support their view regarding the cause of a social problem (for example, prisoners’ return to crime following release), they often offered an explanation of how the alleged cause they identified could produce the outcome (a mechanism account), rather than any evidence that this cause does produce the outcome. In effect, the plausibility of the explanation serves as the evidence, which has the further effect of drawing attention away from any quest for genuine evidence.

The consequences become more damaging if explanations are rehearsed and investment in them forms, further disinclining one to seek or be responsive to evidence. The damage to discourse is considerable, allowing Jack to claim “Here’s how it happens,” and Joe to counter, “No, here’s how it happens”—an exchange that quickly reaches a dead end, one moreover in which neither has addressed the other’s claim. And should they do so, the grounds for comparison are limited to ones of plausibility.

Second, and equally important as an intellectual skill that affects discourse, is disavowing single-cause thinking. Not recognizing that multiple causes most often contribute to an outcome is severely limiting to thinking in general, as well as to discourse. Yet we found the majority of a random sample of adults satisfied with single causes of a phenomenon (such as poverty or longevity). If a single cause is regarded as sufficient to bear the explanatory burden, alternative causes will be seen as contradictory: Either my cause or your cause is the correct one. An affective component enters in and reasoning becomes motivated by allegiance to one’s preferred cause. An alternative cause is seen as threatening to replace it, when in fact it may be unnecessary to choose between them. Do we look inside the abuser or outside the abuser to find the cause of drug abuse? A single-cause thinker is never going to develop a very deep understanding of the phenomenon. Nor is he or she likely to sustain a rich conversation on the topic.

Educators today are talking a lot about the need to equip students with 21st century skills. In a democratic society, reasoned discourse should be one of them, if citizens are to participate in shaping the future of the society they live in. A culture that supports discourse is certainly needed, but so is each individual’s development of the skills and values that reasoned discourse requires

The views expressed are those of the author(s) and are not necessarily those of Scientific American.



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A Guaranteed Income for Every American

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When people learn that I want to replace the welfare state with a universal basic income, or UBI, the response I almost always get goes something like this: “But people will just use it to live off the rest of us!” “People will waste their lives!” Or, as they would have put it in a bygone age, a guaranteed income will foster idleness and vice. I see it differently. I think that a UBI is our only hope to deal with a coming labor market unlike any in human history and that it represents our best hope to revitalize American civil society.

The great free-market economist Milton Friedman originated the idea of a guaranteed income just after World War II. An experiment using a bastardized version of his “negative income tax” was tried in the 1970s, with disappointing results. But as transfer payments continued to soar while the poverty rate remained stuck at more than 10% of the population, the appeal of a guaranteed income persisted: If you want to end poverty, just give people money. As of 2016, the UBI has become a live policy option. Finland is planning a pilot project for a UBI next year, and Switzerland is voting this weekend on a referendum to install a UBI.

The UBI has brought together odd bedfellows. Its advocates on the left see it as a move toward social justice; its libertarian supporters (like Friedman) see it as the least damaging way for the government to transfer wealth from some citizens to others. Either way, the UBI is an idea whose time has finally come, but it has to be done right.

First, my big caveat: A UBI will do the good things I claim only if it replaces all other transfer payments and the bureaucracies that oversee them. If the guaranteed income is an add-on to the existing system, it will be as destructive as its critics fear.

Second, the system has to be designed with certain key features. In my version, every American citizen age 21 and older would get a $13,000 annual grant deposited electronically into a bank account in monthly installments. Three thousand dollars must be used for health insurance (a complicated provision I won’t try to explain here), leaving every adult with $10,000 in disposable annual income for the rest of their lives.

People can make up to $30,000 in earned income without losing a penny of the grant. After $30,000, a graduated surtax reimburses part of the grant, which would drop to $6,500 (but no lower) when an individual reaches $60,000 of earned income. Why should people making good incomes retain any part of the UBI? Because they will be losing Social Security and Medicare, and they need to be compensated.

The UBI is to be financed by getting rid of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, Supplemental Security Income, housing subsidies, welfare for single women and every other kind of welfare and social-services program, as well as agricultural subsidies and corporate welfare. As of 2014, the annual cost of a UBI would have been about $200 billion cheaper than the current system. By 2020, it would be nearly a trillion dollars cheaper.

Finally, an acknowledgment: Yes, some people will idle away their lives under my UBI plan. But that is already a problem. As of 2015, the Current Population Survey tells us that 18% of unmarried males and 23% of unmarried women ages 25 through 54—people of prime working age—weren’t even in the labor force. Just about all of them were already living off other people’s money. The question isn’t whether a UBI will discourage work, but whether it will make the existing problem significantly worse.

I don’t think it would. Under the current system, taking a job makes you ineligible for many welfare benefits or makes them subject to extremely high marginal tax rates. Under my version of the UBI, taking a job is pure profit with no downside until you reach $30,000—at which point you’re bringing home way too much ($40,000 net) to be deterred from work by the imposition of a surtax.

Some people who would otherwise work will surely drop out of the labor force under the UBI, but others who are now on welfare or disability will enter the labor force. It is prudent to assume that net voluntary dropout from the labor force will increase, but there is no reason to think that it will be large enough to make the UBI unworkable.

Involuntary dropout from the labor force is another matter, which brings me to a key point: We are approaching a labor market in which entire trades and professions will be mere shadows of what they once were. I’m familiar with the retort: People have been worried about technology destroying jobs since the Luddites, and they have always been wrong. But the case for “this time is different” has a lot going for it.

When cars and trucks started to displace horse-drawn vehicles, it didn’t take much imagination to see that jobs for drivers would replace jobs lost for teamsters, and that car mechanics would be in demand even as jobs for stable boys vanished. It takes a better imagination than mine to come up with new blue-collar occupations that will replace more than a fraction of the jobs (now numbering 4 million) that taxi drivers and truck drivers will lose when driverless vehicles take over. Advances in 3-D printing and “contour craft” technology will put at risk the jobs of many of the 14 million people now employed in production and construction.

The list goes on, and it also includes millions of white-collar jobs formerly thought to be safe. For decades, progress in artificial intelligence lagged behind the hype. In the past few years, AI has come of age. Last spring, for example, a computer program defeated a grandmaster in the classic Asian board game of Go a decade sooner than had been expected. It wasn’t done by software written to play Go but by software that taught itself to play—a landmark advance. Future generations of college graduates should take note.

Exactly how bad is the job situation going to be? An Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development study concluded that 9% of American jobs are at risk. Two Oxford scholars estimate that as many as 47% of American jobs are at risk. Even the optimistic scenario portends a serious problem. Whatever the case, it will need to be possible, within a few decades, for a life well lived in the U.S. not to involve a job as traditionally defined. A UBI will be an essential part of the transition to that unprecedented world.

The good news is that a well-designed UBI can do much more than help us to cope with disaster. It also could provide an invaluable benefit: injecting new resources and new energy into an American civic culture that has historically been one of our greatest assets but that has deteriorated alarmingly in recent decades.

A key feature of American exceptionalism has been the propensity of Americans to create voluntary organizations for dealing with local problems. Tocqueville was just one of the early European observers who marveled at this phenomenon in the 19th and early 20th centuries. By the time the New Deal began, American associations for providing mutual assistance and aiding the poor involved broad networks, engaging people from the top to the bottom of society, spontaneously formed by ordinary citizens.

These groups provided sophisticated and effective social services and social insurance of every sort, not just in rural towns or small cities but also in the largest and most impersonal of megalopolises. To get a sense of how extensive these networks were, consider this: When one small Midwestern state, Iowa, mounted a food-conservation program during World War I, it engaged the participation of 2,873 church congregations and 9,630 chapters of 31 different secular fraternal associations.

Did these networks successfully deal with all the human needs of their day? No. But that isn’t the right question. In that era, the U.S. had just a fraction of today’s national wealth. The correct question is: What if the same level of activity went into civil society’s efforts to deal with today’s needs—and financed with today’s wealth?

The advent of the New Deal and then of President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society displaced many of the most ambitious voluntary efforts to deal with the needs of the poor. It was a predictable response. Why continue to contribute to a private program to feed the hungry when the government is spending billions of dollars on food stamps and nutrition programs? Why continue the mutual insurance program of your fraternal organization once Social Security is installed? Voluntary organizations continued to thrive, but most of them turned to needs less subject to crowding out by the federal government.

This was a bad trade, in my view. Government agencies are the worst of all mechanisms for dealing with human needs. They are necessarily bound by rules applied uniformly to people who have the same problems on paper but who will respond differently to different forms of help. Whether religious or secular, nongovernmental organization are inherently better able to tailor their services to local conditions and individual cases.

Under my UBI plan, the entire bureaucratic apparatus of government social workers would disappear, but Americans would still possess their historic sympathy and social concern. And the wealth in private hands would be greater than ever before. It is no pipe dream to imagine the restoration, on an unprecedented scale, of a great American tradition of voluntary efforts to meet human needs. It is how Americans, left to themselves, have always responded. Figuratively, and perhaps literally, it is in our DNA.

Regardless of what voluntary agencies do (or fail to do), nobody will starve in the streets. Everybody will know that, even if they can’t find any job at all, they can live a decent existence if they are cooperative enough to pool their grants with one or two other people. The social isolates who don’t cooperate will also be getting their own monthly deposit of $833.

Some people will still behave irresponsibly and be in need before that deposit arrives, but the UBI will radically change the social framework within which they seek help: Everybody will know that everybody else has an income stream. It will be possible to say to the irresponsible what can’t be said now: “We won’t let you starve before you get your next deposit, but it’s time for you to get your act together. Don’t try to tell us you’re helpless, because we know you aren’t.”

The known presence of an income stream would transform a wide range of social and personal interactions. The unemployed guy living with his girlfriend will be told that he has to start paying part of the rent or move out, changing the dynamics of their relationship for the better. The guy who does have a low-income job can think about marriage differently if his new family’s income will be at least $35,000 a year instead of just his own earned $15,000.

Or consider the unemployed young man who fathers a child. Today, society is unable to make him shoulder responsibility. Under a UBI, a judge could order part of his monthly grant to be extracted for child support before he ever sees it. The lesson wouldn’t be lost on his male friends.

Or consider teenage girls from poor neighborhoods who have friends turning 21. They watch—and learn—as some of their older friends use their new monthly income to rent their own apartments, buy nice clothes or pay for tuition, while others have to use the money to pay for diapers and baby food, still living with their mothers because they need help with day care.

These are just a few possible scenarios, but multiply the effects of such interactions by the millions of times they would occur throughout the nation every day. The availability of a guaranteed income wouldn’t relieve individuals of responsibility for the consequences of their actions. It would instead, paradoxically, impose responsibilities that didn’t exist before, which would be a good thing.

Emphasizing the ways in which a UBI would encourage people to make better life choices still doesn’t do justice to its wider likely benefits. A powerful critique of the current system is that the most disadvantaged people in America have no reason to think that they can be anything else. They are poorly educated, without job skills, and live in neighborhoods where prospects are bleak. Their quest for dignity and self-respect often takes the form of trying to beat the system.

The more fortunate members of society may see such people as obstinately refusing to take advantage of the opportunities that exist. But when seen from the perspective of the man who has never held a job or the woman who wants a stable family life, those opportunities look fraudulent.

My version of a UBI would do nothing to stage-manage their lives. In place of little bundles of benefits to be used as a bureaucracy specifies, they would get $10,000 a year to use as they wish. It wouldn’t be charity—every citizen who has turned 21 gets the same thing, deposited monthly into that most respectable of possessions, a bank account.

A UBI would present the most disadvantaged among us with an open road to the middle class if they put their minds to it. It would say to people who have never had reason to believe it before: “Your future is in your hands.” And that would be the truth.

Mr. Murray is the W.H. Brady Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. His book advocating a universal basic income, “In Our Hands: A Plan to Replace the Welfare State,” was first published by AEI in 2006. A revised edition will be out later this month.



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WebGazer.js – Webcam Eye Tracking

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To use WebGazer.js you need to add the webgazer.js file as a script in your website:

 /* WebGazer.js library */ 
<script src="webgazer.js" type="text/javascript" >

Be aware that when you do local development and you might need to run locally a simple http server that supports the https protocol.

Once the script is included, the webgazer object is introduced into the global namespace. webgazer has methods for controlling the operation of WebGazer.js allowing us to start and stop it, add callbacks, or change out modules. The two most important methods on webgazer are webgazer.begin() and webgazer.setGazeListener(). webgazer.begin() starts the data collection that enables the predictions, so it's important to call this early on. Once webgazer.begin() has been called, WebGazer.js is ready to start giving predictions. webgazer.setGazeListener() is a convenient way to access these predictions. This method invokes a callback you provide every few milliseconds to provide the current gaze location of a user. If you don't need constant access to this data stream, you may alternatively call webgazer.getCurrentPrediction() which will give you a prediction at the moment when it is called.


webgazer.setGazeListener(function(data, elapsedTime) {
    if (data == null) {
        return;
    }
    var xprediction = data.x; //these x coordinates are relative to the viewport 
    var yprediction = data.y; //these y coordinates are relative to the viewport
    console.log(elapsedTime); //elapsed time is based on time since begin was called
}).begin();
                    

Here is the alternate method of getting predictions where you can request a gaze prediction as needed.


var prediction = webgazer.getCurrentPrediction();
if (prediction) {
    var x = prediction.x;
    var y = prediction.y;
}
                    


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Hockey Headlines: The Real Crosby Bias

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Who’s Crying Now?

I know where the narrative comes from, the one that labels Sidney Crosby as a “crybaby”. When he was a rookie, he did whine on occasion (although I’d say he’s grown out of that). He does complain to the referees (but please find me an NHL captain who doesn’t). And fans of other teams don’t like him because he gets too much attention. (Or because he’s an amazing player and not on their team). [The Hockey News], [Sportsnet]

I understand where it comes from. I just don’t see a lot of basis for it anymore. The San Jose Sharks find themselves in a 0-2 hole. They’re going home, which should be their source of comfort, but I’d imagine there’s a measure of frustration in that dressing room. Rather than solely looking at themselves in the mirror, they took the predictable approach of finding some way to claim bias in favor of the Penguins. It came in the form of cheating accusations against Crosby. [Mercury News], [TSN]

Consider the source. Logan Couture is one of the biggest whiners I have ever seen. He complains to the media more often than most, not to mention he had a spectacular dive last night to help get his team a powerplay. How many times in these playoffs have you heard the Penguins or Crosby specifically complain to the media about officiating or something of the sort? After Bryan Rust was hurt in game one, Crosby responded by saying the league made the right call not to suspend Patrick Marleau, and he’s not the kind of player to do something dirty. Wow what a baby.

Did you know there were a grand total of three penalty calls in game two? The Sharks got one, and the Penguins got two. Oh no the refs are biased! Well actually, one of the Sharks penalties was a delay of game, something that isn’t debatable nor up for interpretation. So essentially each team got one infraction penalty. Equal calls? Yes that’s clearly favoring the Penguins. As for the faceoff nonsense, well I think trying to get your timing down is exactly what you’re supposed to do. But perhaps things will even out in San Jose, Logan.

Logan Couture Sharks

(Gary A. Vasquez-US PRESSWIRE)

The absurdity of this “league bias” toward Crosby and the Pens is just annoying. We’re talking about a team that has overcome countless injuries all season long, including being without their second-best defenceman in the Stanley Cup Final. They overcame a dreadful start, had a complete transformation with their coaching change, and has seen a group of cast-offs become stars. Crosby’s leadership skills have been thrown under the bus, yet he has stepped it up in a huge way. [Deadspin]

Perhaps we need to stop claiming conspiracy and give this team a little credit. We have trouble celebrating great players, or giving them respect, maybe because we’re a negative society by nature. But don’t let this playoff season go by without enjoying the work of a generational talent. You’d be doing yourself a dis-service. At the end of the day, the only bias I see is hatred for a player based on not much at all, other than the fact that he isn’t a member of your favorite team. Get over it.

In Other News…

Evgeni Malkin is in the thick of a playoff race, and is also a brand new father. [Sporting News]

Where will the Canadiens go on draft day? [Todays Slapshot]

P.K Subban was planning to play a basketball game with Snoop Dogg. [Montreal Gazette]

Ken Hitchcock is giving it one more kick at the can. [Edmonton Sun], [CBC]

The owner of the Hurricanes is being sued. By his sons. [News Observer]

Are the Flames going to hire Randy Carlyle? [The Score]

And finally, it appears as though expansion to Las Vegas is happening. [The Fourth Period]



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Don't Underestimate Joint Mobility When Building Strength

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When it comes to desired traits in fitness, raw strength and speed often overshadow mobility, or how well your joints move. Maybe you just don’t think you’re that “bend-y.” Fortunately, it’s a process that contributes to strength, and everyone can work on it.

Mobility is different from flexibility, and in general, having good range of motion lets you exercise and perform everyday movements (like getting off the couch or reaching behind something to plug it in) better. Mobility exercises, then, let you actively improve your strength, control of your body, and range of motion all at the same time. This video from Calisthenic Movements explains that if your joints move only in a small range, you are basically limiting the development of strength and muscle from your exercises. If you were ever to “accidentally” move beyond your limited range, you could hurt yourself, and no one wants that.

We stretch for lots of reasons: Because it feels good, because it’s part of our pre-workout… Read more Read more

If you want to work mobility exercises into your routine, incorporate them into your pre-workout warm-up, or do a few simple drills on your rest day. To start, check out this awesome one for hip mobility (great for runners too!).

How Important Is Mobility? | Calisthenic Movement



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Google voice search records and keeps conversations people have around phones

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Google could have a record of everything you have said around it for years, and you can listen to it yourself.

The company quietly records many of the conversations that people have around its products.

The feature works as a way of letting people search with their voice, and storing those recordings presumably lets Google improve its language recognition tools as well as the results that it gives to people.

But it also comes with an easy way of listening to and deleting all of the information that it collects. That’s done through a special page that brings together the information that Google has on you.

It’s found by heading to Google’s history page and looking at the long list of recordings. The company has a specific audio page and another for activity on the web, which will show you everywhere Google has a record of you being on the internet.

The new portal was introduced in June 2015 and so has been active for the last year – meaning that it is now probably full of various things you have said, which you thought might have been in private.

The recordings can function as a kind of diary, reminding you of the various places and situations that you and your phone have been in. But it’s also a reminder of just how much information is collected about you, and how intimate that information can be.

You'll see more if you've an Android phone, which can be activated at any time just by saying "OK, Google". But you may well also have recordings on there whatever devices you've interacted with Google using.

On the page, you can listen through all of the recordings. You can also see information about how the sound was recorded – whether it was through the Google app or elsewhere – as well as any transcription of what was said if Google has turned it into text successfully.

But perhaps the most useful – and least cringe-inducing – reason to visit the page is to delete everything from there, should you so wish. That can be done either by selecting specific recordings or deleting everything in one go.

To delete particular files, you can click the check box on the left and then move back to the top of the page and select “delete”. To get rid of everything, you can press the “More” button, select “Delete options” and then “Advanced” and click through.

The easiest way to stop Google recording everything is to turn off the virtual assistant and never to use voice search. But that solution also gets at the central problem of much privacy and data use today – doing so cuts off one of the most useful things about having an Android phone or using Google search.



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