As Ashura nears, Shia neighbourhood on alert after ISIL attacks

Kabul, Afghanistan – On Wednesday, September 5, the sun was just beginning to set over the Dasht-e Barchi neighbourhood in western Kabul when a young man approached the Maiwand Wrestling Gym with haste.

Ahmad Zia, who works at the gym, saw the clean-shaven 20-something on the feed of one of five security cameras.

“I had never seen him before, and he was charging in,” said the 27-year-old.

Zia grabbed a walkie-talkie and tried to alert reception, but it was too late.

The man had already made it past the entrance to where dozens of people were lifting weights and going over wrestling drills.

Seconds later, there was a loud boom. 

The man was a suicide bomber who had been sent by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) to stage yet another attack on the Shia neighbourhood.

Just like that, a decade-old institution of Dasht-e Barchi came crashing down as dozens of sportsmen – young and old – laid on the plastic mats, many clinging to life, and others already dead. 

There was shrapnel and blood everywhere.

“All we had to fight back with was a few walkie-talkies,” said Zia. “Who would have dreamed that a place where people come to work out and better themselves would be targeted?”

According to TOLO News, at least 21 people were killed.

In the last year, ISIL attacks in Dasht-e Barchi have increasingly targeted civilian institutions, like the Maiwand Wrestling Gym [Ali Latifi/Al Jazeera]

The attack highlighted the threat posed by forces aligned with ISIL. Unlike the Taliban, ISIL does not claim to target just the Afghan government or foreign targets. They are targeting civilians.

Since last October, ISIL has claimed responsibility for attacks on mosques, a Pashto-language TV station, a centre that distributes identification and voter cards, journalists reporting on an earlier bombing, a centre to prepare people for the national college entrance exam, a cultural centre and a midwife training centre. 

Almost 150 people were killed in these attacks, several of which targeted Dasht-e Barchi, an area with unpaved roads and poor electricity.

“We used to boast that we were the most secure area of the city, that we were too focused on bettering ourselves through education and athletics to fight, but look at us now,” said Mohammad Rahim, who used the wrestling gym.

“We have no choice but to go on with our lives because the truth is each step out of the house is an actual risk for us.”

Other residents say they are afraid to gather in groups of even two or three at a time.

Mohammad Rahim says he narrowly missed the Maiwand Wrestling Gym bombing, but worries about  the next ISIL attack [Ali Latifi/Al Jazeera]

Esmael, 34, runs a small corner shop less than a kilometre from the gym, where many of his friends had worked out over the years. 

He was relieved to find out that none of them were present during the bombing, but worries that feeling won’t last.

“There is a fear among all of us that we could very well be next,” he told Al Jazeera.

Another young man said many of his friends are left with a sense of guilt and dread as they leave the neighbourhood to work and school, while their parents sit at home in one of the most dangerous areas of the Afghan capital.

Esmael’s family hails from the Eastern province of Maidan Wardak, where there is a significant Taliban presence, air raids and reported abuse by local groups allied with US forces, and yet these days he feels just as at risk in Dasht-e Barchi.

“Imagine, my family left Wardak for Barchi only to end up like this.”

Esmael says the sorts of places ISIL is targeting has forced his family to change every aspect of their lives.

Every decision, every outing, must be weighed against potential risks.

Shortly after the gym bombing, his family was invited to an engagement celebration in a brightly-coloured, multi-story wedding hall. 

Esmael tried to persuade his family to forego the party, but his wife and children insisted that they would not be robbed of the few moments of joy that come their way.

“So we went, but almost everyone left as soon as the food was served, no one could bear the risk of staying,” he said as his six-year-old son Sohal looked on.

Residents are on high alert ahead of the upcoming Muslim holy day of Ashoura, which has been targeted by ISIL before [Ali Latifi/Al Jazeera]

For many people in Barchi, the string of attacks has left them with no choice but to demand that the government hand over security to the area’s residents.

“No matter where you are in the country, it’s clear that the government has failed to protect the Afghan people. Now, we in Barchi must take matters into our own hands,” said Ahmad Zia, the gym employee.

The goal, said several residents Al Jazeera interviewed, is for the government to hand legal guns, uniforms, and rights to the people of Barchi so that they can defend their own people.

“I want to tell the president and the chief executive to come out from behind their walls and see what their people must face on a daily basis,” said Zia.

He sees the giant concrete walls towering over Afghan government buildings, military installations and foreign embassies as the clearest embodiment of Kabul’s misplaced priorities.

“Imagine if they took the tens of thousands of dollars they spend on each of those blast walls and gave it to the soldiers and police on the ground, think of the impact that would have on their capabilities.”

Athletes and staff at the Maiwand Wrestling Gym say piles of shoes left behind by the victims of ISIL attacks have become a common sight in Dasht-e Barchi [Ali Latifi/Al Jazeera]

With Ashura, a Shia festival, fast approaching – the two-day celebration begins on Thursday – Barchi residents say they need to be allowed to protect themselves immediately.

The neighbourhood is preparing for festivities. Black red and green banners with “Ya Hussein” scrawled across them hang from buildings, motorbikes, children’s bicycles and giant posts that arch above roundabouts. Devotionals play from cars and shopfronts.

Syed Habib, 35, is part of a group of 500 men in Dasht-e Barchi who are authorised and armed by the government to protect the area’s 100 mosques in the period leading up to Ashura.

He believes this model should be expanded to all corners of Barchi.

“Who can defend the people of this area better than us? We know who is from here and who isn’t,” Habib said. “We need a special status, with our own uniforms.”

He acknowledged that the uniforms may put them more at risk, but said he was willing to accept that danger.

Whenever there’s an attack we have to call and see who was martyred. Sometimes we know the people, and sometimes we don’t, but honestly, that doesn’t matter. They’re Hazara. They’re Shia. They’re Afghan. They’re Muslim. They’re our people.

Mohammad Rahim, Dasht-e Barchi resident

The call to self-arm sidelines the two leading Hazara figures in Afghan politics, Mohammad Mohaqiq, current second deputy to the office of the Chief Executive and Karim Khalili, former second vice president to President Hamid Karzai.

All of the residents Al Jazeera spoke to said they are fed up with Mohaqiq and Khalili’s “political games”.

“They can’t protect us. They won’t protect us, why should we rely on them?” said Zia, the gym worker.

Government officials have, however, started to address the Barchi crisis.

The day after the gym attack, Hamdullah Mohib, the newly appointed national cecurity adviser to President Ashraf Ghani, met residents.

“Our people have suffered tremendously and the specific targeting of #Hazaras will not be tolerated,” he tweeted after the visit. “While I extend my sympathies and condolences to the victims and families, I know what they want is action to end this cycle of vicious attacks.

“On behalf of the NUG I am personally committed to ensuring we secure our country by adopting a people-centric policy to fight threats and bring peace and stability.”

At a meeting with representatives from Barchi in the Presidential Palace, Kabul Garrison chief, General Murad Ali Murad, said: “Good progress has been made in coordination with the civilian institutions, according to the clear guidance of the President on securing the West of Kabul.”

And on Tuesday, the Afghan intelligence agency said it has arrested 26 suspected ISIL fighters in Kabul – there had been fears after the gym bombing that up to 15 ISIL fighters were hiding in Barchi.

Still, for the people of Barchi, help can’t come fast enough.

“Whenever there’s an attack we have to call and see who was martyred. Sometimes we know the people, and sometimes we don’t, but honestly, that doesn’t matter. They’re Hazara. They’re Shia. They’re Afghan. They’re Muslim. They’re our people,” said Mohammad Rahim, the athlete, as he stood in the middle of the wrestling ground where his friends were killed.

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Stormy Daniel’s description of Trump’s penis ruins Mario games forever

Trump and Toad, a match made in our nightmares
Trump and Toad, a match made in our nightmares

Image: Mashable composite: Getty Images & NINetendo

2016%2f09%2f16%2f8f%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.f09f1By Marcus Gilmer

We all know by now to expect the completely unexpected in the day-to-day world of the Donald Trump administration. But nothing could have prepared us for this, the day we found out about the overlap between Trump and Super Mario.

A copy of Stormy Daniels’ tell-all Full Disclosure fell into the hands of The Guardian, who shared this nugget with the world, illuminating the tryst Daniels had with Trump and forever altering the way we interact with the most popular video game franchise in history.

She describes Trump’s penis as “smaller than average” but “not freakishly small.”

“He knows he has an unusual penis,” Daniels writes. “It has a huge mushroom head. Like a toadstool…

“I lay there, annoyed that I was getting fucked by a guy with Yeti pubes and a dick like the mushroom character in Mario Kart…

“It may have been the least impressive sex I’d ever had, but clearly, he didn’t share that opinion.”

It’s hardly the first time we’ve encountered a penis in Mario’s (allegedly) family-friendly world but it may be the most disturbing.

The reaction across the web this morning has been a casual mix of disgust, horror, fascination, and, occasionally, correction. 

SEE ALSO: 7 ways ‘The Simpsons’ predicted the chaos of Donald Trump’s presidency

SARAH SANDERS: The claim by Ms. Daniels that the president’s dick resembles Toad from Mario Kart is patently ridiculous. This administration has long ago demonstrated that if his dick looks like any character from that series, it’s Birdo. Thank you.

— Mike Tunison (@xmasape) September 18, 2018

Of course, we all know the way this inevitably ends, right?

the president is absolutely going to tweet about his Toad shaped dick

— 9 V O L T (@9_volt_) September 18, 2018

God help us, please. 

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‘Captain Marvel’ trailer takes us back to the superpowered ’90s: Watch

Marvel fans, meet the movie version of Captain Marvel.

Brie Larson’s MCU debut takes us back to the ’90s, and this first trailer makes that time twist clear in the very first shot: Hi Blockbuster Video. Long time no see.

This first Captain Marvel trailer doesn’t spend too much time indulging in lingering looks at the time period, however; that would get in the way of the action. There’s plenty of that to go around.

Things to watch for: Samuel L. Jackson’s eyepatch-less Nick Fury. The briefest imaginable flash of Jude Law, who plays Mar-vell. A glimpse of the beeper we all freaked out over at the end of Avengers: Infinity War. And a tiny moment with the shapeshifting alien Skrull (yes, that’s probably why Brie Larson punches an old lady in the face).

Brief flash. Glimpse. Tiny moment. There’s a pattern here, in case you didn’t notice. The Captain Marvel trailer isn’t very revealing. It’s just a teasing, long-awaited first look at the next entry in the MCU, which hits theaters on March 8, 2019.

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J.K. Rowling confirms a Hermione theory that we suspected all along

J.K. Rowling has always secretly known you don't know how to say 'Hermione'.
J.K. Rowling has always secretly known you don’t know how to say ‘Hermione’.

Image: Walter McBride/WireImage

2017%2f09%2f12%2fd7%2fsambwBy Sam Haysom

If you decide to give your character a name that’s any longer than two syllables, you had better believe that people are going to mispronounce it.

The Harry Potter books are no exception. People managed with Harry and Ron okay, but the second it came to Voldemort and Hermione, the problems started.

SEE ALSO: PSA: You can get Harry Potter ebooks. For free!

Long story short, by book number four, J.K. Rowling decided to do something about it.

Theory: @jk_rowling included that passage on how to pronounce Hermione’s name in Goblet of Fire just to school all of us who were saying HER-MY-OWN like Viktor Krum.

— Atulaa (@atulaak) September 17, 2018

If you were anything like me, the passage in The Goblet of Fire came in pretty handy (I’d definitely been pronouncing Hermione’s name wildly wrong up until that point).

My 7 year old brain read it as Her-Me-Own!! It wasn’t until I watched a Oprah interview that I understood I was saying it wrong all along.

— Nicole Dodson (@NKDsoooCoolyaya) September 18, 2018

Maybe Rowling should have worked in a similar passage about Voldemort?

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Lenny Kravitz can’t see what’s so funny about his giant scarf

By Laura Byager

Apparently Lenny Kravitz thinks that “ridiculously oversized” is a perfectly normal and reasonable size for a scarf on a chilly day.

Kravitz was a guest on The Tonight Show, where host Jimmy Fallon confronted him with the giant scarf that became a meme as soon as it was exposed to daylight. 

“I thought I’d put on a little scarf to protect my throat,” Kravitz said. “And now it is everything.”

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Suspect Charged with Murder in Death of Golf Champion Celia Barquin Arozamena

PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC - AUGUST 26:  The ball of Padraig Harrington of Ireland is seen on the 13th green during day four and final round of the the D+D REAL Czech Masters at Albatross Golf Resort on August 26, 2018 in Prague, Czech Republic.  (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)

Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images

Police have confirmed a 22-year-old man has been charged with murder in the death of amateur golf champion Celia Barquin Arozamena, who was found dead at a golf course in Ames, Iowa, on Monday.

According to ESPN.com’s Adam Rittenberg (via ABC News), the local police named Collin Daniel Richards as the suspect.

The police shared the statement via Twitter:

Ames Police @AmesPolice

***Update*** Ames Police charge Collin Daniel Richards, age 22 with 1st Degree Murder. Please keep the victim and her family in your thoughts and prayers. https://t.co/XmpSx9X0m0

According to the report, a cause of death has not been determined. Officers did determine an assault took place.

The 22-year-old Barquin Arozamena was a student at Iowa State, winning the 2018 Big 12 Championship and the Cyclones’ Female Athlete of the Year Award, per Rittenberg. She was completing a civil engineering degree.

Barquin Arozamena qualified for this year’s United States Women’s Open Championship and won the European Ladies Amateur Championship in Slovakia.

Athletics director Jamie Pollard mourned the Spain native:

Iowa State WGolf @CycloneWGOLF

“Celia had an infectious smile, a bubbly personality and anyone fortunate enough to know her was blessed. Our Cyclone family mourns the tragic loss of Celia, a spectacular student-athlete and ISU ambassador.” – ISU Athletics Director Jamie Pollard

🔗https://t.co/NmFiYlvvOV https://t.co/qHVaqFE2jS

Per the Cyclones’ official website, Barquin will be honoured during Saturday’s football game against Akron.

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Nargis, the Pakistani Hazara making strides in karate

Nargis Hameedullah has had to fight for her dreams all her life – both on and off the field.

The 19-year-old is a Pakistani karateka based in Quetta, capital of the western province of Balochistan.

Nargis belongs to the Hazara community, one of Pakistan’s most persecuted ethnic and religious minorities. But that has not stopped her from beating the odds.

At the 18th Asian Games in Indonesia last month, Nargis became Pakistan’s first female athlete to win an individual medal at the multi-sport competition when she won bronze in the plus-68 kilogramme event.

“I always wanted to be the one to bring about a change,” Nargis told Al Jazeera. “I’m very happy to be able to write my name in history.”

Nargis’ success lit up a marginalised community that has been a target of ethnic and sectarian violence for decades. 

At least 509 Hazaras, who are mainly Shia Muslims, have been killed in Quetta since 2013, according to the government’s National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR).

The killings have mostly been part of a sustained campaign of shootings and bombings by armed sectarian groups such as the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), an affiliate of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS).

But as Nargis returned to her hometown of Hazara Town, a low-income ethnic neighbourhood in the western outskirts of Quetta, she was showered with rose petals by school children who lined up on the streets.

The beat of the “dhol”, a drum, accompanied by the flute, was complemented by a beaming Nargis who was surrounded by dancing residents who gave her a hero’s welcome.

Nargis relished her time in the spotlight, but she said her rise to stardom in Pakistan has not come without bumps.

Hameedullah was given a hero’s welcome on her return home from the Asian Games [Nargis Hameedullah] 

February 16, 2013 is a day still etched in Nargis’ mind.

A bomb attack by the banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi group at a busy vegetable market in Hazara Town killed at least 84 people. Nargis’ maternal grandmother’s brother was among those who died.

“It [his death] really shook me and it affected the entire family,” she said. “I will never forget that day.”

At least nine members of the Hazara Shia community have been killed in a series of attacks since March this year.

According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), the Hazaras are particularly vulnerable, because of their distinctive East Asian ethnic features as well as Shia religious affiliation.

Nargis’ train journeys to Lahore and Islamabad for tournaments and training camps are always full of anxiety, with thoughts of the next target killing weighing on her mind.

“As a player, I train physically, my strength has increased, but emotionally and mentally, I have really been affected [by these bomb blasts].”

For the roughly 600,000 Hazaras living in Quetta, security is a major concern. With multiple checkpoints, blocked areas and only one road to enter and exit the community enclave, navigating around the city is not easy, said Nargis.

“A lot of the girls say that any day we could become victims of target killing, so what’s the use of playing? Mentally, I get really disturbed by the security situation.”

She grew up amid violence and security threats, picking up mixed martial arts aged five before making the transition to karate in 2010.

Nargis now juggles almost four hours of training each day with her studies and English tuition at an academy.

“I have got a lot of support from my family. Whenever I go [for tournaments], they make a lot of sacrifices, taking care of my travel expenses.”

Her father works at a local flower shop and mother is doing overnight shifts as a nurse to make ends meet. While there is a lot of opposition from outside the Hazara group, Nargis is all too familiar with the negative remarks from within the conservative community.

But her parents have continued to support their daughter’s athletic career.

“People tell us to focus on her education, and they criticise us and talk a lot,” her mother, Qamargul Hameedullah, said. 

Even if I win the world title, and my hijab is a bit off, the Hazara community will not appreciate that

Nargis Hameedullah, Pakistani karate player

“My relatives always say ‘why does Nargis need to play sports, she should select some other career or job and then support the family’,” Nargis said. “They say, ‘she just kicks and punches, what will she get out of it?’”

The hijab, a headscarf worn by many Muslim women who feel it is part of their religion, is also a “major issue for the Hazara people”, her mother added. Nargis wears one and is “very fearful” of it coming off during her fights.

“Even if I win the world title, and my hijab is a bit off, the Hazara community will not appreciate that.” 

Nargis (R) on the podium for the women’s karate 68kg medal ceremony in Jakarta, Indonesia [Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters]

Changing Mindsets

Despite the challenges, Nargis is striving to make her name in a country that has traditionally had success in sports like cricket, squash and hockey.

Nargis was not the first Hazara to make the country proud in karate. Her senior, 30-year-old Kulsoom Hazara, who also hails from Quetta, has won gold at the South Asian karate championships for the past three years.

“A few years ago, people had the mindset that what do girls have to do with sports or karate,” said Nargis. “Even now, some families say that, but there have been a lot of changes. Families are sending girls to different sports clubs for karate, taekwondo, wushu.

“We have a lot of martial arts clubs [in our community] and mostly, the participants are women.”

Hazara families are encouraging women to get into sports, Nargis said [Photo courtesy of Hazara Shotokan Karate Academy/Facebook] 

One of those clubs is the Hazara Shotokan Karate Academy on Kirani Road run by Nargis’ long-time coach and former national player Ghulam Ali.

The 2004 South Asian Games (SAF) gold-medallist, Ali, said he has noticed women from his community, making strides not only in sports, but other fields as well.

“Presently, in Hazara Town and Mari Abad [another predominantly Hazara suburb], there are more girls than boys participating in everything,” said Ali, who trains more than 80 girls at the club.

“After a long period of restrictions, they [Hazara women] are getting more freedom. In the past, we faced a lot of oppression, but now we are getting some chance. And we’re trying to get involved in every field – in universities, shops, businesses, sports. It’s really great.”

Ali is confident that more women will draw inspiration from Nargis.

The teenager, meanwhile, is now dreaming to qualify for the Olympics.

“I want to raise my country’s flag and would also like to hear the national anthem being played and everyone standing up in respect.”

Follow Saba Aziz on Twitter: @saba_aziz

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This Jeff Goldblum shower curtain will take your bathroom to the next level

2018%2f08%2f08%2f71%2f20182f082f062f5a2fphoto.898b3.66f81By Laura Byager

The last thing the internet needs is to get any thirstier for Jeff Goldblum. But isn’t it an intriguing thought to have him watch you shower?

Twitter user @notstevely recently posted an excellent reveal video of a truly beautiful shower curtain with Jeff Goldblum’s face on it. 

SEE ALSO: The top 10 most datable men in video games, ranked

If you thought your bathroom decor was complete without a Goldblum shower curtain, think again.

The tweet got a lot of attention fast, because Goldblum is still the internet’s number one. Currently the video has over 11,000 retweets and 800,000 views. And obviously, people took the opportunity to post sweet Goldblum gifs. 

Seriously though, did you get this at Bed, Bath and Beyond-Belief-Hot?

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It’s Reddit’s turn: The ‘front page of the internet’ should be next to face Congress

Earlier this month, the Senate Intelligence Committee’s fourth hearing on social media as it pertains to foreign influence in our elections took place on Capitol Hill. Representatives from Facebook, Google, Twitter, and YouTube have sat before Congress to answer questions regarding online interference from countries like Russia, and the spread of misinformation and fake news on their social media platforms. 

Missing from these hearings, however, is the fifth most popular site in the United States: Reddit

It’s time Congress invites Reddit to its next hearing.

SEE ALSO: Trolls thought I was a man. That saved me.

Founded in 2006, Reddit has grown into a behemoth. With 330 million users, more than 138,000 active communities, and 14 billion monthly page views, there’s no denying Reddit’s position on the web. The site, which bills itself as the “front page of the internet,” is so popular with its U.S. audience that it even surpassed Facebook to become the third most popular site in the country for a short time earlier this year, according to Alexa, the Amazon-owned web analytics company. In April, it was reported that Reddit’s active user base was now larger than Twitter’s.

The case for a Congressional hearing

Aside from its ever growing numbers of users, Reddit has admitted to being targeted by foreign actors attempting to exert influence. Five months ago, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman posted the company’s 2017 transparency report on the site. It detailed how the company has banned hundreds of accounts they believe to be connected with Russia’s Internet Research Agency. That’s the same Russian “troll farm” linked to many of the kinds of accounts that attempted to sow discord in the lead-up to the 2016 election. The organization has ties to Russia’s intelligence agency.

Of the 944 banned Reddit accounts, a few were fairly successful at gaining “karma,” Reddit’s metric for when a user “upvotes” a link, picture, or video submission to the site. More upvotes means more visibility on the site, and more karma for the account that submits the content. Karma signifies a prolific user of the site.

The most successful Russia-tied Reddit account presented in the company’s transparency report is u/rubinjer. That user received nearly 100,000 karma in about a year and a half before getting banned. Subreddits where u/rubinjer was most active include /r/The_Donald, Reddit’s controversial Donald Trump community, which boasts nearly 650,000 members. This active subreddit is well-known for its violent rhetoric, hate speech, and white supremacist content.

While we now know the details surrounding these banned accounts, the company wasn’t so open at first. It wasn’t until The Daily Beast published a report uncovering foreign influence on the platform that Reddit admitted to the Russian influence operation on its site, and shared what they knew with the public.

Most recently, Reddit announced that an Iranian influence operation recently uncovered to be targeting platforms like Facebook was also targeting them. In all, 143 accounts were identified as part of this operation, which Reddit said “focused on steering the narrative around subjects important to Iran, including criticism of U.S. policies in the Middle East and negative sentiment toward Saudi Arabia and Israel. They were also involved in discussions regarding Syria and ISIS.”

The way Reddit works — users congregate in issue-specific communities — makes it a perfect distribution platform for misinformation campaigns and beyond. Conspiracy theories thrive. Users bounce stories around within this walled garden of other like-minded individuals. And if you’re part of a specific community, those posts show up in your front page Reddit feed as if they’re some sort of top story. 

The way Reddit works makes it a perfect distribution platform for misinformation campaigns and beyond.

The subreddit for Pizzagate, the conspiracy theory which culminated in a man firing an AR-15 in a DC pizza joint he falsely believed was harboring child sex slaves, was banned days before the incident. At the time, the community of over 20,000 people was sharing personal information about actual people they believed to be involved in something that did not exist.

But, Reddit as a right-wing conspiracy outlet didn’t end there. Followers of the latest right-wing conspiracy theory, Qanon, considered a descendant of Pizzagate, made Reddit their de facto home up until just last week. 

Earlier this year, Reddit banned its first popular Qanon community, /r/CBTS_stream, for inciting violence months after the group was created. Immediately after, a new subreddit, /r/GreatAwakening, grew to take its place.  

Regardless of how hard /r/GreatAwakening’s moderators tried to police its new community (unlike the Pizzagate and Qanon communities that were previously banned), the new subreddit of over 70,000 users was banned just last week for “inciting violence, harassment, and the dissemination of personal information.” The problems on /r/GreatAwakening just didn’t arise last week though. One particularly stunning example of the issues on the subreddit stem back in April when /r/GreatAwakening mods issued a plea to the community to stop posting illicit images of children in an attempt to tie Hillary Clinton to a nonexistent child sex ring. Once again, Reddit finally decided to take action months and months after the problems persisted, long after the platform already acted as the central means to funnel the dangerous QAnon conspiracy into the mainstream.

Even before the latest right wing conspiracies, Reddit has long been plagued by toxic users fostering virulent communities. Many early users of the site were fans of /r/jailbait, a former community where redditors would share sexualized images of underage girls. The /r/jailbait subreddit even received “best of” accolades from the sites users before a CNN segment with Anderson Cooper forced the company to ban the community.

Like /r/jailbait, many of the worst subreddits, like /r/creepshots and /r/TheFappening — which both existed for the purpose of sharing nonconsensual sexual images of women — were large enough that it was inconceivable that the people running Reddit were unaware of them. The subreddit /r/incels, where self-proclaimed involuntary celibates stoked hatred against women with violent, pro-rape screeds, was an active community for over four years before being removed from the site. All of these subreddits were banned only after mounting public outrage.

In 2014, as the seeds were being planted for the harassment campaign known as GamerGate, the subreddit /r/KotakuInAction was born in an effort to promote the movement. The subreddit would regularly target feminists and “social justice warriors” and propped up racist and sexist personalities on the far right like Milo Yiannopoulos and Mike Cernovich. As one of the main online hubs for the movement, KotakuInAction quickly became popular. 

Realizing that the community was becoming a haven for some of the internet’s worst intentions, its creator, Reddit user David-me, attempted to shut it down. Reddit wouldn’t let him. The company’s guidelines allow them to do this “when it believes it in the best interest of the community or the website… Our goal is to keep the platform alive and vibrant, as well as to ensure your community can reach people interested in that community.” Basically, Reddit determined that the community was way too popular for the company to lose. It  now has close to 100,000 members.

And, when someone within Reddit tries to tame the monster, the site’s own users eat them alive. When Ellen Pao became CEO of the company, she attempted to make sweeping changes, like banning revenge porn outright and closing communities like /r/shitniggerssay and the nearly 150,000 member /r/fatpeoplehate for harassment. Redditors revolted, with moderators of some of the largest subreddits taking the communities private — effectively holding the website’s most popular content hostage in protest. Pao stuck around for a few more months, until the the firing of an employee popular with redditors fanned the flames to the point where there was no putting the fire out. Faced with a myriad of death threats and harassment, in July 2015, Pao resigned as Reddit CEO.

In the Senate Intelligence Committee’s most recent hearing with Facebook’s Sheryl Sandberg and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey, a few Senators brought up deepfakes, the AI technology that can convincingly manipulate video and images. It’s such a concern, the U.S. Department of Defense is already looking into ways to combat malicious uses of it.

From fake news to revenge porn, deepfakes are going to be an even bigger issue in the near future. The term and the problematic uses of the technology actually all began on Reddit, where a user created realistic-looking yet fake videos inserting mainstream female celebrities into porn clips. Once again, months afterward, due to increasing outcry from the public, the deepfakes community was banned from Reddit.

It’s one of the most popular sites in America, and it should be obvious that Reddit and its users would be targeted by malicious actors. Yet regardless of this and the fact that some of the very problems like deepfakes were birthed from the site, Reddit hasn’t even garnered a mention at Congress’ hearings on social media influence operations.

The issue here is likely demographic. Reddit’s majority male user base skews fairly young compared to everyone and your grandma using Facebook, for example. Twitter, which by many metrics is actually a smaller platform than Reddit, has found its niche among politicos and the media, which leads to an overestimation of its influence. It’s no surprise that the Senate, average age 62, would overlook such an influential site for mostly young men.

Days after the 2016 election, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg downplayed the company’s possible role in influencing the way Americans voted. “To think it influenced the election in any way is a pretty crazy idea,” Zuckerberg said. Less than a year later, Zuckerberg’s tune has drastically changed. As the U.S. government released evidence that sometimes completely contradicted Facebook’s statements on the role they played in the election, the company started to accept that its platform was used as a tool by malicious actors to sow discord and possibly even sway voters. Facebook executives would attend its first of many Senate hearings on the issue in October of 2017.

“After the election, I made a comment that I thought the idea misinformation on Facebook changed the outcome of the election was a crazy idea. Calling that crazy was dismissive and I regret it,” Zuckerberg said in a Facebook post nearly 10 months after the election of Donald Trump. “This is too important an issue to be dismissive.”

It’s time for Reddit and its current CEO and co-founder Steve Huffman to take these issues more seriously as well. Congress pushed Zuckerberg to act. Perhaps they can invite Reddit to the next set of hearings and be the push that Reddit needs, too.

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iPhone XS and XS Max review: Going for the gold

iPhone XS and XS Max:

Going for

the gold

Monstrous performance and cameras that will blow you away.

Review by Raymond Wong

iPhone XS and XS Max:

Going for

the gold

Monstrous performance and cameras that will blow you away.

Review by Raymond Wong

The biggest misconception about “S” model iPhones is that they’re just the “tock” to the previous “tick” release, and there isn’t much reason to upgrade because Apple recycles the same design.

That couldn’t be more incorrect. The iPhone 3GS brought speed, more storage, autofocus for the camera, and video recording; the 4S introduced Siri; the 5S gave us Touch ID; the 6S birthed Live Photos and 3D Touch (though its usefulness is debatable); and if you think about it, the iPhone 8, which easily could have been called the 7S, helped make wireless charging more popular.

Each S model pushed the iPhone forward in meaningful ways. The iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are no different.

iPhone XS and XS Max

$999 (starting for XS) and $1,099 (starting for XS Max)

The Good

  • Gorgeous design with premium materials
  • Best-in-class cameras
  • Fantastic screens (especially on the XS Max)
  • Face ID is more responsive
  • Performance still blows the best Android phones away

The Bad

  • Beyond pricey
  • Battery life is not a huge leap over the XS
  • Headphone jack dongle not included
  • No fast charger or USB-C-to-Lightning cable included

The Bottom Line

Don’t be fooled by the “S” label — the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are the best and most powerful iPhones Apple’s ever made.

Cool Factor4

Learning Curve5

Performance5

Bang for the Buck4

Both phones are Apple’s best combination of hardware and software. And they’re virtually identical, save for screen size and battery life.

I have no doubts the iPhone XS Max’s massive 6.5-inch OLED display will be the one everybody wants, but both it and the smaller iPhone XS have feature upgrades, like an all-new camera system that takes better photos than even the best Android phones. Those shouldn’t be overlooked because they’re mere internal improvements.

The new iPhones are just as expensive as the now-discontinued iPhone X, starting at $999 for a 64GB iPhone XS and $1,099 for a 64GB iPhone XS Max. Even more pricey is the new 512GB tier for both, which costs an insane $1,349 and $1,449, respectively.

But if you want the best iPhones — the ones with the most complete iPhone experience with zero tradeoffs (yes, iPhone XR, that was a reference to you) — the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are the the ones to get, and they’re worth the investment.

The iPhone X ushered in a new era for the iPhone: glass and stainless steel design, an edge-to-edge OLED screen, Face ID, wireless charging, and the controversial notch.

In a year’s time, the notch has gone from extremely disliked, to tolerable, to dare I say iconic. Nothing validates an initially questionable design choice more than the competition copying the crap out of it. Why change a design that’s already become immediately recognizable? So Apple didn’t.

As S models, the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max mirror the overall design of the iPhone X: They have the same surgical-grade stainless steel band, the same glass back, the same OLED display, the same satisfyingly click buttons, the same wireless charging (it’s a little speedier this time, but only barely so), and the same notch with TrueDepth camera system (Face ID is a smidge faster and more responsive, but it still doesn’t work in landscape mode).

The iPhone XS has a 5.8-inch screen, and the iPhone XS Max has a 6.5-inch display.

Lili Sams/Mashable

The iPhone XS is physically the same as the iPhone X, with one exception: It’s 0.1 ounces heavier. But it’s not like you’ll feel it.

The iPhone XS Max is a different beast altogether. It has about the same footprint as the iPhone 8 Plus (0.04 inches shorter, 0.2 inches narrower, 0.07 inches thicker, and 0.21 ounces heavier), but obviously fitted with a larger 6.5-inch OLED screen that stretches to the edges.

The thing that surprised me the most about the iPhone XS Max wasn’t just its massive screen, but how light it feels. Even though it’s heavier than the iPhone 8 Plus, it somehow feels lighter. I’ll probably have to wait until an iFixit teardown to see how the innards are arranged and if it has any bearing on this strange lightness, but whatever the cause is, I really like it.

It attracts fingerprints like crazy.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The iPhone XS and XS Max support gigabit LTE.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Lightness aside, the iPhone XS Max is still a very big phone. If you’re used to carrying any Plus-sized iPhone, the iPhone XS will be an easy adjustment. But if, like me, you’ve only ever used “small” iPhones like the 4.7-inch iPhone 8 or 5.8-inch iPhone X, you’re gonna either need to stop wearing skinny pants, get pants with bigger pockets (I hear cargo pants are trendy again), carry a purse or shoulder bag, or just deal with it.

I thought I’d hate having the iPhone XS Max jutting out of my front pocket (no back-pocketing for me since I don’t want to make it easy for pickpockets to nab a $1,100+ phone), but after a few days I didn’t mind it. If the size really was such a turnoff, nobody would’ve bought the Plus-sized iPhones and Apple would only be making smaller phones today.

The iPhone XS Max is heavier than the iPhone 8 Plus but somehow still feels really light.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Closer comparisons between my iPhone X and the two iPhone XS devices reveal two small changes.

One: There are two new antenna lines — one that cuts into the top right of the stainless steel band and the other into the lower left. And two: The speaker holes on the bottom are no longer symmetrical.

Design snobs, including myself, will cringe at these aesthetic tweaks, but these “pragmatic optimizations” as Jony Ive would describe them, were apparently necessary to boost the cellular data connectivity for gigabit LTE speed.

“Apple’s bumped up the IP-rated water-resistance even further.”

Another change that might pass right over most people is dual-SIM support.

While dual-SIM phones aren’t that popular in the U.S., there are many international users who want to manage two numbers or two data plans (or a mix of both from separate carriers) on a single phone.

On my U.S model, the SIM card tray has room for only one nano SIM card. If you’d like to activate a secondary SIM you’ll need to use an eSIM, which is basically a digital version of a SIM card. Apple says using the eSIM is as simple as scanning a QR code and accepting a few prompts. I didn’t get to try the eSIM feature since it won’t be available until a software update coming later.

In China, where dual SIMs are especially popular and people frequently switch between carriers and plans, the iPhone XS Max comes with two nano SIM card slots.

The iPhone XS and XS Max’s new gold color is pure luxury.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Lastly, Apple’s bumped up the IP-rated water resistance even further. The iPhone 7, 8, and X all came with IP67 water and dust resistance, which means the phones can be submerged in up to 3 feet of water for up to 30 minutes. The iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are IP68 rated, which doubles the water depth to 6 feet for up to 30 minutes of submersion.

Although these tweaks are small, practical, and mostly invisible, I’d have loved to see a smaller notch and less bulging rear camera. There’s always next year’s iPhones, I guess.

The iPhone XS and XS Max are IP68-rated, meaning they can be submerged in up to 6 feet of water for up to 30 minutes.

Lili Sams/Mashable

The iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max come in space gray, silver, and a new gold finish. Apple’s been making gold devices since the iPhone 5S, and the coloring process on each device has been just a little different.

On the new iPhones, the polished stainless steel band is shiny and the champagne gold underneath the glass back has a metallic-like sheen when viewed at different angles compared to the more matte aluminum band and creamy vanilla-ish gold on the iPhone 8 and iPhone 8 Plus.

I’ve never been a fan of gold or rose-gold gadgets — I’m more of a black or silver kinda guy — but even I have to admit the new gold iPhones will turn heads. They’re luxurious (but still classy) in a way my space gray iPhone X never will be — more like like something you’d expect to find at Tiffany’s than Best Buy.

Of course, most people will never appreciate a phone’s beauty after slipping it into a case. But for the few like me who adamantly eschew cases, you’re gonna feel a bit like a boss whenever you see it shimmer.

Audio and visual powerhouse

The advantages of OLED display technology — deep blacks, wider and more vibrant dynamic range, increased brightness, and greater power efficiency — weren’t lost on the iPhone X’s edge-to-edge screen.

Both the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max have the same OLED technology with Super Retina displays and HDR support.

The 5.8-inch iPhone XS has the exact same 2,436 x 1,125 resolution as on the iPhone X and the 6.5-inch iPhone XS Max has a slightly higher 2,688 x 1,242 resolution. Both screens clock in at the same 458 pixels per inch, which is just basically a lot of jargon to describe “a really sharp screen.”

The OLED screens on the XS and XS Max are the best ever on an iPhone.

Lili Sams/Mashable

Putting aside your feelings on the notch (it doesn’t bother me at all), the screen is just sublime. Viewing angles are great (although there’s still a hint of color shifting from warmer tones to blue tones when viewed from the edges) and colors really pop on the screen.

I already knew the screen was amazing since I’m an iPhone X owner, but everything — and I do mean everything — looks better on the iPhone XS Max’s bigger display. It sucks you in and then keeps your eyes locked on it until you’ve realized you’ve just spent far too many hours scrolling through Instagram Explore than normal.

Enough about the screen, though. I’ve reviewed all kinds of phones ranging from budget to super premium over the last decade and it’s been unfortunate to see display innovations constantly overshadowing sound quality.

The stereo speakers can produce a wider soundstage.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

Audio and picture quality go hand-in-hand and entertainment is much more immersive when both are given equal love. So it’s great to see the iPhones also pack in what Apple calls “wider stereo playback.”

Apple advertises an improved soundstage through the stereo speakers. If you really listen closely you can hear a little more separation between the left and right channels and more depth to the sound quality, but not dramatically so. Still, better sound is better sound and if you know how to sit still and appreciate music, you’ll welcome the upgrade.

Like the last two generations of iPhones, you won’t find a headphone jack on the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max. If you’re still upset over its removal, you’d best come to terms with it because it’s never coming back.

That the phones don’t come with a headphone jack-to-Lightning dongle only drives home the fact that AirPods and wireless headphones are the future and you should either get with the times now or suffer a slow and inevitable defeat later.

iOS 12 tuned perfectly for the A12 Bionic

Ever since the original iPad debuted in 2010, Apple’s been using its own custom-designed silicon in its iOS devices and the results (in both synthetic benchmarks and real life) tell only one story: iOS devices are in a league of their own when it comes to performance.

Powering the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max is a new A12 Bionic chip. The 64-bit system-on-a-chip (SoC) has six-cores, with two “performance cores” capable of up to 15 percent faster CPU power and the other four “high efficiency cores” using up to 50 percent less power than on the A11 Bionic. The A12 Bionic also has a four-core GPU that’s up to 50 percent faster for graphics-intensive apps.

A 15 percent performance boost seems like a minor upgrade, but that’s only compared to the iPhone 8/8 Plus/X. When compared to a device like Samsung’s Galaxy Note 9, which uses Qualcomm’s latest Snapdragon 845 chip, it’s clear the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max are beasts.

“The A12 Bionic also has a four-core GPU that’s up to 50 percent faster for graphics-intensive apps like games.”

Using my iPhone X running the latest version of the iOS 12 developer beta as a baseline, I ran the popular CPU benchmarking app, Geekbench 4, on the iPhone X, XS, XS Max, and Galaxy Note 9 to see how they compared.

My iPhone X scored 4,242 on the single-core test and 10,302 on the multi-core test. The iPhone XS scored 4,821 on single-core and 11,392 on multi-core — an increase of 13.65 percent and 10.58 percent compared to the iPhone X. Similarly, the iPhone XS Max scored a 4,774 on single-core and 11,380 on multi-core, which was a bit lower than the iPhone XS for some reason, but still in line with Apple’s performance claims.

These numbers are great for geeks, but how does it actually translate to in real-world applications? I’m glad you asked.

iOS 12 looks just like iOS 11, but runs faster and smoother.

Lili Sams/Mashable

With CPU and GPU improvements, everything from the general snappiness of iOS 12 to gaming to augmented reality is faster for sure.

To put these speed gains in perspective, I loaded up a 1 minute and 32 second video clip shot in 4K (3,840 x 2,160) resolution at 30 fps with my iPhone X. I AirDropped the file over to my iPhone XS Max, created a new project with just that one video clip in iMovie, and then timed how long it’d take for both to export the file to 1080p.

The iPhone XS Max took 31 seconds and the iPhone X took 35 seconds. The iPhone XS Max crunched the video 12.9 percent faster, and though a few seconds doesn’t seem like a huge leap, the next part surprised me.

After closing iMovie on both the iPhone X and iPhone XS Max and then opening both project files again, just as I selected “1080p” to restart the export process, the iPhone XS Max displayed a pop-up with: “The movie was exported to your Photo Library” and duplicated the exported file. In comparison on my iPhone X, the export process had started all over again.

I tried this multiple times with different video files and every time the A12 Bionic was able to intelligently understand that it had already performed this exact task and simply duplicated the previously exported file instead of re-rendering everything again. It shaved a whole 31 seconds off each additional export — if that doesn’t convince you the A12 Bionic is performance champ, nothing will.

I also saw some notable improvements while playing 3D games. Fortnite and Asphalt 9 run well on my iPhone X and even better on the iPhone XS and iPhone iPhone XS Max. I saw less choppiness during moments where lots of polygons are rendered on screen, like when you’re spinning your car to knock out a squad of cop cars.

Games especially look more stunning on the iPhone XS Max’s larger display and they sound just a bit louder and clearer thanks to the wider stereo speakers.

Good ol’ familiar grid of icons on the homescreen.

Lili Sams/Mashable

I’m not going to spend too many words on iOS 12. We’ve covered its feature extensively since the first developer beta was released following WWDC and we’ll have a full review for it soon.

The TL;DR: It’s excellent. iOS 12 really flies on the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max, which shouldn’t surprise anyone since Apple is known for tuning its software to perform optimally with the hardware.

There’s a lot to dig into on iOS 12, including the new group notifications, Screen Time, Memoji, redesigned Apple apps, Siri Shortcuts, and improved privacy and security.

One of the most fun new features in iOS 12 is Memoji.

Lili Sams/Mashable

Compared to my iPhone X, iOS 12 on the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max is smoother and navigating around the operating system is snappier. Suspended apps don’t need to reload content as often when the RAM fills up and apps launch quicker.

I do, however, want to call attention to some iOS 12 features exclusive to the iPhone XS Max. With its larger screen, Apple has added a couple of landscape views for some apps. For example, in Messages, you get a two-column view for your contacts and the conversation window. In the Weather app, you can see more forecasts. Apple Maps shows just a little bit more street information. Even websites like the New York Times and National Geographic show more content with columns.

NYT.com on iPhone X and XS

Screenshot: Raymond Wong

NYT.com on iPhone XS Max

Screenshot: Raymond Wong

Weather on XS Max

Screenshot: Raymond Wong

Messages on XS Max

Screenshot: Raymond Wong

Supercharged AI processing

Faster CPU, GPU, and power efficiency are all bumps we expect from a new chip. But what really makes the A12 Bionic a true breakthrough chip is its embedded Neural Engine. The A11 Bionic was the first Apple chip to come with a Neural Engine for processing Core ML on-device AI and machine learning.

The A12 Bionic has a Neural Engine with eight cores (up from two on the A11 Bionic) that runs Core ML up to 9x faster than the one in the A11 Bionic and it touches virtually every aspect of the new iPhones.

Siri is a couple of ticks faster compared to my iPhone X, the face-tracking for Animoji and Memoji is less fiddly as you turn your head, and the Stage Light shooting mode in the camera app now shows a real-time preview as the subject moves.

The Neural Engine allows stage lighting to be rendered in real-time.

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Augmented reality apps are also more responsive and capable of rendering even greater detail in real-time. Immediately after Apple’s Sept. 12 iPhone event, I got to check out two apps that really shine with the Neural Engine.

The first was Galaga AR, a next-gen remake of the classic arcade game where you have to shoot down aliens in 3D space. I was blown away by how well all of the AR ships and laser fire rendered even when the action got intense. It’s not uncommon to see AR objects “jitter” as you move your iPhone in different directions, but I didn’t notice any such hiccups in this new ARKit 2-powered game.

The second app was Shopify, where you could place AR products on a table and see how they’d look before buying. Now, I’ve seen these kinds of AR shopping features in apps for years, but with faster Core ML, they’re going to a new level with details. In one demo, I saw a reflection of my iPhone X placed on tablet rendered on the metal body of an AR crockpot. It looked so realistic that I reached out and grabbed the pot only to realize seconds later it wasn’t real at all.

The Homecourt app tracks a player’s shooting stats in real-time using just the iPhone XS’s camera and Neural Engine.

Apple

The most impressive app Apple demoed that really showed off the power of the Neural Engine was Nex Team’s Homecourt. Apple trotted out NBA Hall of Famer Steve Nash on stage to help demonstrate how the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max’s Neural Engine and Core ML could track a basketball player’s shots in real-time.

Whereas other solutions require myriad cameras and sensors (some of which might need to be worn by the player) to keep tabs on shootings stats, the Homecourt app’s use of Core ML to track of six types of shooting metrics (shot type, leg angle, release angle, release time, speed, and release height), just with the phone.

“Only on the new iPhone, we can run real-time player tracking, real-time post estimation, real-time ball detection, and trajectory estimation all at the same time,” said David Lee, CEO of Nex Team.

For many years, the iPhone had the best smartphone camera — no ifs, ands, or buts. Then Android phones caught up.

Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S and Galaxy Note phones started flexing hard with cameras that could scrounge up every ray of light in any challenging shot. Equipped with faster lenses (low aperture measured with a smaller f-stop number like f/1.7), their phones could take superior low-light photos than the iPhone could.

But Samsung wasn’t the only company gunning for best smartphone camera. Google launched the Pixels and used its AI and machine-learning prowess to beat the Galaxy and iPhone’s photography skills using algorithms. Using something called “computational photography,” Google’s Pixel phones merge several photos to create a single shot with greater detail and dynamic range.

The result: Many people have called the Pixel 2 and 2 XL’s cameras the best smartphone cameras despite having inferior image sensors to an iPhone or Galaxy phone. I agree to some degree; the software-based portrait mode shots using a single camera are miles better than the shots produced with the hardware-based shots using dual cameras on phones like the Note 9 and iPhone X, but I think the Pixel 2’s general photos are often too contrasty.

But that’s all gonna be in the past because the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max deliver arguably the best smartphone cameras yet again.

At first look, the dual rear cameras don’t seem to have changed from the iPhone X. Both cameras are still 12 megapixel shooters — one wide-angle lens with f/1.8 aperture and one 2x telephoto lens with f/2.4 aperture. Both cameras have built-in optical image stabilization to reduce shakiness. And the iPhone XS cameras still shoot 4K video at up to 60 fps and slow-mo 1080p video at up to 240 fps.

Both the XS iPhones have the same exact cameras: dual 12-megapixel cameras.

Lili Sams/Mashable

But like so many other things in the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max, the magic is not immediately visible to the naked eye. Though the megapixels are the same, the image sensors that absorb light are better than before.

With larger “micron pixels” (1.4 microns versus 1.2 microns on the iPhone X), the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max can collect more light, which results in sharper photos with even wider dynamic range, and low-light photos that don’t look so muddy and washed out.

The camera lens is also a little wider than on the iPhone X so you can fit more into frame. Autofocusing with the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max cameras is also noticeably faster — 2x faster according to Apple and so much speedier than on my iPhone X that I often didn’t even need to tap-to-focus or tap-and-hold lock autofocus (something I realized most people don’t do). The cameras just work to take the photos you want as soon as you fire it up.

Maybe one day Apple will make the camera flush with the body again.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

The improved camera hardware combined with a new automatic “Smart HDR” technology, powered again by the Neural Engine and the A12 Bionic’s ISP (image signal processor), mean you get the best of both the advanced camera optics and computational photography.

Smart HDR is very similar to the Pixel 2’s “HDR+”. Whereas HDR+ shoots and composites multiple underexposed shots to create one super photo, Smart HDR takes multiple underexposed and overexposed shots and merges them into a single photo to get more highlight and shadow details.

I wasn’t entirely convinced of Smart HDR+ until I took a whole bunch of photos and compared them to the exact same shots from my iPhone X, Google Pixel 2 XL, and Galaxy Note 9.

The extra clarity is subtle, but noticeable when you take a closer look at each shot. For outdoor photos, the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max cameras definitely produced wider dynamic range and better details in both highlights and shadows. Compared to the iPhone X, parts of a photo that would normally be overexposed or underexposed are more balanced.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

In almost all of the sample photos in this review, I didn’t even bother tapping to focus because I wanted to see how fast and responsive the autofocus was, and which phone could lock on subjects reliability so I could just worry about pressing the shutter button.

Low-light photography has also been significantly improved. Areas that would normally be blown out are more defined and exposed more accurately.

Take a look at the below photos of chandelier lights taken at New York City’s Grand Central Terminal station. In the iPhone X, the individual lightbulbs are blobs of white orbs. But on the iPhone XS Max shot they have more shape, and the rest of the photo is well-exposed.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Galaxy Note 9

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Pixel 2 XL

Raymond Wong/Mashable

In the skyline shot below photographed at sunset, you can see how much better the dynamic range is on the XS and XS Max. The blue sky is just the correct shade, not too saturated. With Pixel 2 XL, the sky is a dully gray instead of blue and look at how dark the foreground buildings are — all of the details are lost.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Galaxy Note 9

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Pixel 2 XL

Raymond Wong/Mashable

If you’re still not convinced of the leap in low-light shooting on the XS and XS Max, have a look at these other shots. These sets were shot 30, 40, and 50 minutes after sunset in the West Village with very little luminance coming from the street lights.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

In the above shots, pay attention to the smoke coming out of steam of the funnel and the brick details on the restaurant signage on the right.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Galaxy Note 9

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Pixel 2 XL

Raymond Wong/Mashable

For the above shot, I set the focus on the patch of green in the center. The setting was quite dark, but the iPhone still managed to take a very good shot.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Galaxy Note 9

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Pixel 2 XL

Raymond Wong/Mashable

I let the cameras autofocus on their own in the above shots. I couldn’t believe how bad the iPhone X camera was at focusing on the arch and properly exposing a photo. It’s like the X’s camera didn’t even try (believe me, I gave it several chances and it never autofocused on the Washington Square Arch) and as you can see the differences between the XS and X is stark.

“Portrait mode is much better on the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max than on previous iPhones.”

Apple introduced portrait mode on the iPhone 7 Plus. Though it was literally rough around the edges (right at the borders of the foreground and the background), portrait mode was a game-changer in 2016. I can say that matter-of-factly because every phone maker has copied it in one way or another.

Portrait mode on the iPhone X and 8 Plus were a little better and Apple added a bunch of “stage lighting” modes, but the shooting modes still left a lot to be desired.

Notably, Samsung had leapfrogged the Apple’s portrait mode with its Live Focus on the Galaxy Note 8, which lets you adjust the blurriness (“bokeh” in photography terms) of the background after the photo is taken. It’s a nifty trick and now the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max (and also on the soon-to-be released iPhone XR) can do the same too.

On iPhone XS and XS Max you can adjust the bokeh (background blur) on portrait photos.

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Using it’s pretty easy: Just take a portrait photo and then open the shot in the Photos app, tap the “Edit” button in the upper right and then slide the meter along the bottom to adjust the depth. As you slide the depth, it tells you what aperture is being simulated (from f/1.4 for really blurry to f/16 for no blur). This works for portrait photos shot with both the rear and front-facing camera.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong

Galaxy Note 9

Raymond Wong

Pixel 2 XL

Raymond Wong/Mashablea

While we’re on the topic of portrait mode, I should say that it’s much better on the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max than on previous phones with both front and rear cameras. The Neural Engine helps better separate the depth information captured from the dual rear cameras and the TrueDepth camera on the front.

Selfies from the 7-megapixel front-facing camera are better as well. In classic Apple style, selfies aren’t artificially airbrushed like on many Android phones — you can do that yourself using a photo editing app.

iPhone XS Max

Raymond Wong/Mashable

iPhone X

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Galaxy Note 9

Raymond Wong/Mashable

Pixel 2 XL

Raymond Wong/Mashable

I could sit here all day and pore over comparison photos between the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max versus other Android phones (hit me up on Twitter @raywongy or on Instagram @sourlemons if you wanna nerd out more), but in the interest of just showing instead of rambling on, check out some of my favorite #ShotOniPhoneXS photos below. Like all the photos in this review, these are all straight out of the camera with no edits whatsoever.

Although I mostly focused on shooting and comparing the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max’s still photos, the upgraded cameras also shoot better video.

The Quad-LED True Tone flash on the rear has been tuned to better detect light flickering than on the iPhone X so you don’t get that eerie banding effect in your footage.

There are also four microphones to capture stereo sound. If you’re a mobile videographer or blogger, this’ll be a plus. I didn’t do a comprehensive test between the built-in stereo recording compared to an external microphone like the Rode VideoMic Me-L, but let me know if you want to see that and if there’s enough demand, I’lll make it happen.

I couldn’t be more impressed with what Apple’s done to improve the cameras. I thought last year’s iPhone 8 Plus was enough to replace real cameras for most people, and now I’m even more sure the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max cameras are capable of doing so.

I couldn’t stop thinking about the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus during the week I’ve been using both of the new iPhones. Besides differences in screen size and battery life, the two models, first released in 2014, were pretty much the same.

That pattern continued with the iPhone 6S/6S Plus. Then Apple started to increase the gap between the small and big iPhones with the iPhone 7/7 Plus and 8/8 Plus by giving the Plus models a second rear camera for taking portrait photos and 2x telephoto pics.

But whereas the previous Plus-sized iPhones had hours more battery life than the smaller iPhone, the iPhone XS Max lasts only an hour more than the iPhone XS and 1.5 hours more than the X. I got my typical day to day-and-a-half battery life on both the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max as I normally get on my iPhone X.

Without any huge jump in battery life between the two, choosing the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max really comes down to screen size.

The iPhone XS and XS Max charge wirelessly just a little faster.

Dustin Drankoski/Mashable

One thing I will nitpick that’s related to the battery is the included power adapter and charging cable: It’s the same 5-watt charger and USB-A-to-Lightning cable as before. There were rumors Apple would finally include a faster adapter and USB-C-to-Lightning cable to enable faster charging without needing to buy these accessories separately, but that didn’t turn out to be the case, which is more than a little disappointing.

On the one hand I get why Apple make the switch: USB-A is still more widely available in places like airports, coffee shops, and in-flight infotainment systems on planes. But on the other hand, come on. A trillion-dollar company can’t toss the faster power adapter and newer cable (or include both USB-A and USB-C to Lightning cables) in the box for an even better customer experience?

Isn’t that the most important thing when it comes to products as Tim Cook and company loves to repeatedly remind everyone all year round?

Looking under the metal and glass

Had the iPhone XS Max come with a larger screen and a larger body than the iPhone 8 Plus, my thoughts on it would be different. Any larger than the iPhone 8 Plus body and the iPhone XS Max would’ve stepped into iPad mini (pour one out for this guy which’ll probably never see another update again) territory.

The iPhone XS Max is a size many iPhone users and even Android users have already adapted to. After spending nearly a week with both the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max, I found myself reaching for the larger device more often for its bigger screen for reading, gaming, watching videos, and typing.

It’s arguably a more comfortable iPhone for work and play, despite not being very pocket-friendly (unless you’re Shaq-sized, then it’s probably small but at least not mini-sized).


“The time has come for us to look beyond the surface of the iPhone — they’re all gonna look like the iPhone X from here on out.”

As I said when I reviewed the Galaxy Note 9, some people will look at the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max and shrug at its same-old design. And that’s fine if you want a device that looks brand new, but you’d be missing all of the internal improvements that will always be less sexy to write about, but more practical in day-to-day use.

If you’ve got an iPhone X and don’t care about a larger screen or better camera performance, you’ll survive just fine another year or two with it, especially with iOS 12.

If the prices are still a turn-off, consider holding off until the iPhone XR launches in late October; it starts at $749 and has virtually all of the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max features minus the superior OLED screens and secondary rear camera. Plus it comes in colors like blue, red, yellow, and coral.

The time has come for us to look beyond the surface of the iPhone — they’re all gonna look like the iPhone X from here on out. Maybe the notch and the bezels shrink over the next couple of years, but the real game-changing innovations are all happening inside. So start paying more attention to them, because they’re “boring” but will increasingly matter more.


  • Senior Tech Correspondent

    Raymond Wong

  • Tech Editor

    Pete Pachal

  • Video producer

    Michelle Yan

  • Photography

    Lili Sams and Dustin Drankoski

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