Welcome to The Long View—where we peruse the news of the week and strip it to the essentials. Let’s work out what really matters.
This week: Google forces apps to make deleting users’ data easier, and the RISC-V drumbeat grows louder.
1. Android Apps: Forget Me
First up this week: If you want your Android app in the Play Store, you’ll need to make it easy for users to delete their data. The deadline is December 7.
Analysis: Deal with it
And quite right too. If you’ve not already done so, it’s time to start designing your policy. Those eight months will just fly by.
Abner Li: Google Play will require that all Android apps let users delete data
“Must delete the user data”
Moving forward, apps that allow account creation … must also allow users to request … their account … be deleted. This deletion option must be readily discoverable.
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Google specifies that Play developers must delete the user data associated with that app account. … Google is slowly rolling out this policy requirement. … This includes letting developers file for an extension.
Horse’s mouth? Google’s Bethel Otuteye:
This … new data deletion policy … aims to empower users with greater clarity and control over their in-app data. … Users want an easier and more consistent way to request … data deletion.
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For developers that need to retain certain data for legitimate reasons such as security, fraud prevention, or regulatory compliance, you must clearly disclose those data retention practices. … While we’re excited about the greater control this will give people over their data, we understand it will take time for developers to prepare.
What about backups? GDPR has a model for this, says AmiMoJo:
GDPR recognizes that backups are different to live data. It is permissible for a company to delete live data, and wait for backups to expire.
They aren’t allowed to restore that backed up data for which a delete request has been made, unless there are exceptional circumstances. Saying “we didn’t back up the deletion request so can’t re-apply it after restoring from a catastrophic failure” probably wouldn’t fly.
Is the “fraud/regulatory” exception a get-out-of-jail-free card? Not really, thinks u/Personal_Plastic1102:
In a separated database, with restricted access, and a log of connections to it with the reason. Anything less is … difficult to justify.
However, Dani_2077 reminds us that these things usually only restrict new versions of apps:
For years we have been reading about these “privacy requirements” on [Google Play. But] it’s full of apps that are not supported since 2015.
2. RISC-V in the Data Center
Open source instruction set architecture RISC-V is steamrolling its way towards the data center. Momentum is clearly building. And capital is flowing.
Analysis: ARMless
I’ve previously written about the importance of ARM in the data center—especially those that value “performance per Watt.” Smart DevOps people will feel the wind changing and prepare for a world where infrastructure runs on RISC-V too—not just x86 and ARM.
Simon Sharwood: Baidu backs RISC-V for the datacenter
“Baidu is sinking cash”
RISC-V upstart StarFive has revealed that … Baidu has become an investor. … The Chinese giant has also previously said it feels little pain from US sanctions on some technology exports to China.
But execs also stated that Baidu has plans to develop alternatives to banned imports. And now, just four months after those remarks, comes news that Baidu is sinking cash into one of China’s most capable RISC-V houses.
Anton Shilov: Tenstorrent Shares Roadmap of Ultra-High-Performance RISC-V CPUs
“Easier and faster”
At present, the company is working on the industry’s first 8-wide decoding RISC-V core capable of addressing both client and HPC workloads that will be first used for a 128-core high-performance CPU aimed at data centers. The company also has a roadmap of several more generations of processors.
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Wei-Han Lien, the chief CPU architect at Tenstorrent … has an impressive background, with stints at NexGen, AMD, PA-Semi, Apple, and is perhaps best known for for his work on [the] world’s first 64-bit Arm SoC, and [the Apple] M1. [He] was one of the designers responsible for Apple’s ‘wide’ CPU microarchitecture, which can execute up to eight instructions per clock. … Each out-of-order Ascalon (RV64ACDHFMV) core with eight-wide decode has six ALUs, two FPUs, and two 256-bit vector units, making it quite beefy.
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RISC-V is developing quickly. Since it is an open-source ISA, it is easier and faster to innovate with it … according to Tenstorrent. … Arm Holding’s approach ensures high quality of the standard as well as a comprehensive software stack, but it also means that the pace of ISA innovation gets slower.
Tempering the froth, here’s Findecanor:
There have been quite a few “8-wide” RISC-V cores announced from different companies so far. The real “first one” will be the first one to actually ship, not to boast about something in development.
She knows what she’s talking about. She’s RISC-V International’s Calista Redmond:
Chiplets and other ways of composing an SoC are changing the game. … And I think that you’ll see a lot more datacenter-scale operators along with HPC centers starting to more seriously consider RISC-V.
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China has been one of the strongest contributors in the RISC-V ecosystem [but] if you want to play on the global stage, you need to take an open, collaborative approach at your base. … The same no-vendor-lock-in world where Linux grew up, it’s where RISC-V is growing up.
But but but … CHINA! martinusher has déjà vu:
A goodly proportion of their 1.3 billion population are ‘entrepreneurial,’ in that they’re out to make a fast buck (or yuan). … Us harping on about ‘them’ not only echoes the invective leveled at the Japanese back in the 80s where they not only were wiping the floor with us with their vehicles and consumer electronics but they also were outperforming us with semiconductors.
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The only difference between Japan and China is that China’s a whole lot larger and hasn’t shown any signs of “knowing its place”. … Alternatively, you could keep piling on the Cold War rhetoric as we slowly circle the drain.
The Moral of the Story:
Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air
—Ralph Waldo Emerson
You have been reading The Long View by Richi Jennings. You can contact him at @RiCHi or [email protected].
Image: Master Unknown (via Unsplash; leveled and cropped)