Showing posts with label Tech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech. Show all posts

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Alleged Windows support scammer forfeits money earned by “fixing” PCs


Victims may not get their money back, though.

Well, maybe this guy wasn't quite as smart as Heisenberg.
A man accused of tricking PC users into thinking they had viruses and then offering to "fix" their perfectly fine computers has agreed to pay back every penny he allegedly received in the scam.

Navin Pasari is a defendant in one of six complaints that the Federal Trade Commission filed in September 2012 against people and entities accused of leading Windows tech support scams.

"According to the complaint against Pasari and his co-defendants, the defendants placed ads with Google, which appeared when consumers searched for their computer company’s tech support telephone number," the FTC noted in an announcement today. "After getting consumers on the phone, the defendants’ telemarketers allegedly claimed they were affiliated with legitimate companies, including Dell, Microsoft, McAfee, and Norton, and told consumers they had detected malware that posed an imminent threat to their computers. The scammers then offered to rid the computer of the non-existent malware for fees ranging from $139 to $360."

Pasari did not admit wrongdoing but agreed to a proposed final judgment and order in which he will forfeit $14,369, "which is the amount of money Mr. Pasari received from the other Defendants," the document states. The money is being held in escrow and will be transferred to the FTC, assuming the order is approved by a US District Court judge.


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Posted By: This and That

Alleged Windows support scammer forfeits money earned by “fixing” PCs

Spy satellite data? There’s an app for that


DOD's geospatial agency needs developers to stock its app store.

The GEOINT App Store: open to select customers, with out-of-this-world data.
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) is looking for a few good apps. In an effort to make the aerial and satellite imagery and other location-based data that the agency collects more accessible to the people who need it, NGA created the GEOINT App Store. Last week, the agency released an update to the store, which is available over the Web as well as on the Department of Defense's secret and top-secret classified networks. Now, it wants more developers to provide their wares there.

Work on the store kicked off in 2010 at the behest of Director of the NGA Letitia Long, who has pushed for the geospatial software industry to take on more of the burden of application development for the NGA's customers. The hope was that the NGA could leverage the "app economy" to make it easier and cheaper to get software into the hands of its customers and push forward development of mobile applications that would be applicable to a broader audience.

The store is open to anyone with a government or military e-mail address, or anyone with a government sponsor, such as state and local law enforcement officials and emergency first responders. There are a number of applications tailored to disaster response in the store, as well as iPad apps for military pilots that give them access to flight charts and details about airstrips around the world. Other apps, available only to users of the Secret Internet Protocol Routed Network or the top-secret Joint Worldwide Intelligence Communications System network, provide higher resolution imagery and an unknown array of things to do with it.


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Spy satellite data? There’s an app for that

After 15 years of llama-whipping, AOL shuts down Winamp for good


Former Winamp employees blame AOL mismanagement that began over a decade ago.

The Dulles-based Winamp team, as of 2012.
Winamp, the storied MP3 player bought by AOL in June 1999 for over $80 million, is set to shut down in exactly one month. According to a post that went live Wednesday at 12:00pm ET on the Winamp website:

Winamp.com and associated Web services will no longer be available past December 20, 2013. Additionally, Winamp Media players will no longer be available for download. Please download the latest version before that date. See release notes for latest improvements to this last release. Thanks for supporting the Winamp community for over 15 years.

On Wednesday, Ars confirmed the announcement with Geno Yoham, Winamp’s general director since October 2008. He declined immediate comment but said that he would try to arrange a future interview.

Ars wrote an extensive feature on the rise and fall of Winamp in June 2012, detailing AOL’s mismanagement of the property since its dotcom-boom acquisition. As we reported then, Winamp continued to receive updates and make a tiny amount of money for AOL throughout the last 15 years. AOL even released the first Android version in 2010 and a Mac version in 2011.


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After 15 years of llama-whipping, AOL shuts down Winamp for good

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

This Is the Absolute Worst Place on Earth to Spend Your Bitcoins


Most people suffering from irregular bowel movements visit their doctor and get some expert advice. But if that requires too much time or money, there are other options. Like, say, paying some random stranger a fraction of a Bitcoin to tell you what’s wrong.

Thanks to a new website called CoinMD, you can upload a photo of your latest bowel movement to the internet — together with a detailed description of your ongoing troubles — and obtain advice from an anonymous group of people who swear they’re doctors. If you like what you hear, you pay them in bitcoin, the world’s most popular digital currency. Or not. You can just take the advice for free. That’s what this guy did after uploading a picture of his stool to the new service.

Recently launched — and touted on Reddit — CoinMD combines three extremely hot internet trends: digital currency, crowdsourcing, and online healthcare. It’s a rather clever service — and it’s absolutely frightening. This is yet another reason to remember that, while the internet promises so much, it can also go horribly wrong.


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Posted By: This and That

This Is the Absolute Worst Place on Earth to Spend Your Bitcoins

Regulators See Value in Bitcoin, and Investors Hasten to Agree

Jennifer Shasky Calvery, left, with Mythili Raman and Edward Lowery
 on Monday at a hearing in Washington.
The virtual currency bitcoin took a big step toward the mainstream on Monday as federal authorities signaled their willingness to accept it as a legitimate payment alternative.

A number of federal officials told a Senate hearing that such financial networks offered real benefits for the financial system even as they acknowledged that new forms of digital money had provided avenues for money laundering and illegal activity.

“There are plenty of opportunities for digital currencies to operate within existing laws and regulations,” said Edward Lowery, a special agent with the Secret Service, which is tasked with protecting the integrity of the dollar.

Signs that the government would not stand in the way of bitcoin’s development, even as it has been cracking down on criminal networks that use the digital money, stoked a strong rally in the price of the crypto-currency.

By Monday evening, the value of a bitcoin unit soared past $700 on some exchanges. The total outstanding pool of bitcoin — which is created by a network of users who solve complex mathematical problems — is now worth more than $7 billion.


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Posted By: This and That

Regulators See Value in Bitcoin, and Investors Hasten to Agree

Yahoo's Marissa Mayer interrupted by Walmart protesters at Salesforce.com conference

Salesforce.com Chairman and CEO Marc Benioff talk with guest speaker Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer at the Salesforce.com annual trade show at Moscone Center in San Francisco on Nov. 19, 2013. (Josie Lepe/Staff)
SAN FRANCISCO -- A noisy protest on behalf of Walmart workers briefly disrupted a talk by Yahoo (YHOO) CEO Marissa Mayer during a major tech industry conference Tuesday night, but Mayer remained unfazed as she spoke of her efforts to refocus Yahoo on the mobile tech trend.

The protesters were quickly escorted out of the auditorium at Moscone Center after interrupting Mayer's talk on stage with Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff. Mayer explained that she serves on Walmart's board of directors but said she wasn't at the event to talk about Walmart issues.

Labor activists have been dogging Mayer at public appearances for the last year, although they usually have remained outside public events, while seeking attention for the company's treatment of Walmart workers who say they were fired for protesting unsafe practices at the retail giant.

Mayer, however, quickly returned to the subject of Yahoo's turnaround effort, telling Benioff that she believes the popularity of mobile Internet devices is a major industry shift that Yahoo can ride to success. Rebuilding Yahoo's popular web services for mobile users "was an immediate priority" when she took the job as CEO last year, Mayer said.


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Yahoo's Marissa Mayer interrupted by Walmart protesters at Salesforce.com conference

Here Are The Hottest Companies In Tech Right Now, According To Goldman Sachs


I think we’ve established by now that what happens in Vegas actually never stays in Vegas. And, as you can see by the agenda obtained by TechCrunch that’s embedded below this post, the Goldman Sachs Private Internet Company Conference scheduled to take place in Sin City over the next two days is no exception.

The Goldman Sachs conference for private web firms is one of the most high-end and hush-hush events in the tech world. It’s essentially like the Hackers Conference or dinners at Sheryl Sandberg’s house or Fight Club, except for tech executives who are likely to soon go through an IPO or big M&A deal. If you’re on the invite list, you’re in pretty good company — and the first rule is that you don’t talk about it to others.

This year, according to sources, it’s happening this week, on November 20th and 21st in Las Vegas. You can see the whole lineup in the image embedded below this post.

It bears mention that companies attending this conference have not necessarily engaged in an exclusive relationship with Goldman to manage their potential upcoming IPOs or M&A deals. In fact, most of them are free agents, fielding offers from any number of firms. Other investment banks such as Allen & Co. hold their own swanky events to court potential clients, too. I’m told that the competition amongst financial advisors to secure relationships with hot web companies is tougher than ever these days. But with Goldman Sachs coming off the high of having headlined the hugely successful Twitter IPO, this year’s event is sure to be a buzzy one.


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Here Are The Hottest Companies In Tech Right Now, According To Goldman Sachs

Magnetic nanoparticles could aid heat dissipation


Particles suspended in cooling water could prevent hotspots in nuclear plant cooling systems and electronics.


The MIT team's experimental setup is pictured above.
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE RESEARCHERS

Cooling systems generally rely on water pumped through pipes to remove unwanted heat. Now, researchers at MIT and in Australia have found a way of enhancing heat transfer in such systems by using magnetic fields, a method that could prevent hotspots that can lead to system failures. The system could also be applied to cooling everything from electronic devices to advanced fusion reactors, they say.

The system, which relies on a slurry of tiny particles of magnetite, a form of iron oxide, is described in the International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, in a paper co-authored by MIT researchers Jacopo Buongiorno and Lin-Wen Hu, and four others.

Hu, associate director of MIT’s Nuclear Reactor Laboratory, says the new results are the culmination of several years of research on nanofluids — nanoparticles dissolved in water. The new work involved experiments where the magnetite nanofluid flowed through tubes and was manipulated by magnets placed on the outside of the tubes.

The magnets, Hu says, “attract the particles closer to the heated surface” of the tube, greatly enhancing the transfer of heat from the fluid, through the walls of the tube, and into the outside air. Without the magnets in place, the fluid behaves just like water, with no change in its cooling properties. But with the magnets, the heat transfer coefficient is higher, she says — in the best case, about 300 percent better than with plain water. “We were very surprised” by the magnitude of the improvement, Hu says.

Conventional methods to increase heat transfer in cooling systems employ features such as fins and grooves on the surfaces of the pipes, increasing their surface area. That provides some improvement in heat transfer, Hu says, but not nearly as much as the magnetic particles. Also, fabrication of these features can be expensive.

The explanation for the improvement in the new system, Hu says, is that the magnetic field tends to cause the particles to clump together — possibly forming a chainlike structure on the side of the tube closest to the magnet, disrupting the flow there, and increasing the local temperature gradient.

While the idea has been suggested before, it had never been proved in action, Hu says. “This is the first work we know of that demonstrates this experimentally,” she says.

Such a system would be impractical for application to an entire cooling system, she says, but could be useful in any system where hotspots appear on the surface of cooling pipes. One way to deal with that would be to put in a magnetic fluid, and magnets outside the pipe next to the hotspot, to enhance heat transfer at that spot.

“It’s a neat way to enhance heat transfer,” says Buongiorno, an associate professor of nuclear science and engineering at MIT. “You can imagine magnets put at strategic locations,” and if those are electromagnets that can be switched on and off, “when you want to turn the cooling up, you turn up the magnets, and get a very localized cooling there.” 

While heat transfer can be enhanced in other ways, such as by simply pumping the cooling fluid through the system faster, such methods use more energy and increase the pressure drop in the system, which may not be desirable in some situations. 

There could be numerous applications for such a system, Buongiorno says: “You can think of other systems that require not necessarily systemwide cooling, but localized cooling.” For example, microchips and other electronic systems may have areas that are subject to strong heating. New devices such as “lab on a chip” microsystems could also benefit from such selective cooling, he says.

Going forward, Buongiorno says, this approach might even be useful for fusion reactors, where there can be “localized hotspots where the heat flux is much higher than the average.”

But these applications remain well in the future, the researchers say. “This is a basic study at the point,” Buongiorno says. “It just shows this effect happens.”

The team also included Thomas McKrell, a research scientist in MIT’s Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering, and Elham Doroodchi, Behdad Moghtaderi, and Reza Azizian of the University of Newcastle in Australia. The work was supported by the University of Newcastle, Granite Power Ltd., the Australian Research Council, and King Saud University in Saudi Arabia.
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Magnetic nanoparticles could aid heat dissipation

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Verizon surprises everyone by updating its Moto X to KitKat first


The worst carrier for Android updates turns the trend on its ear.


Of the big US carriers, Verizon is rarely the most punctual when it comes to Android updates. This is especially true for OEM phones from the likes of Samsung and HTC, but even the Verizon Galaxy Nexus is still waiting for its Android 4.3 update. That's why it was particularly surprising when Google and Motorola announced that the Verizon version of the Moto X would be receiving its Android 4.4 KitKat update beginning today, just a week after older Nexus phones and tablets began to get the new software.

While Motorola has been owned by Google for around two years now, its phones to date haven't really benefitted from being made by the same company that develops Android. Most Droids and other phones have continued to ship with slightly older versions of Android, and updates typically jump through the normal carrier approval hoops. It's impossible to say from this isolated example that Motorola's access to Android updates (or Verizon's approach to approving them) is changing, but it's an encouraging example at the very least.


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Verizon surprises everyone by updating its Moto X to KitKat first

You can’t beat politics with technology, says Pirate Bay cofounder Peter Sunde


He does comedy, thinks The Pirate Bay should shut down, and distrusts Netflix/Spotify.


People who are disenchanted with politics and the financial system should try to engage with the democratic process rather than turn to technology for alternative methods for doing things, says Peter Sunde, cofounder of The Pirate Bay.

"You can't beat politics with new technology all the time. Sometimes you have to actually make sure that politics are in line with what people want. A lot of people are giving up on politics and thinking they can solve issues with technology. These kind of arrogant behaviors towards the rest of the society are a bit disgusting," Sunde told Wired.co.uk in a Skype interview.

His response was provoked by a question about Bitcoin, a technology that he thinks is "interesting" and has a fascinating story behind it, but which he feels is symbolic of a depressing, widespread lack of trust in politics.

"We are a community of people; we have politicians that we elect; we can demand that they do things," he says. "But we are way too lazy to do that today."

His concern is that "we are just giving up." "We have this hatred of politicians who we just see as being corrupt, and we don't trust them any more so we try to do things outside of where they can bother us." This includes setting up cryptocurrencies that are difficult to monitor and tax (Sunde is a firm believer in taxation, since it allows communities to build shared infrastructure).


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You can’t beat politics with technology, says Pirate Bay cofounder Peter Sunde

Judge: “NSA exceeded the scope of authorized acquisition continuously”


New declassifed documents show legal arguments over bulk metadata collection.


Yet another Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) judge has blasted United States intelligence officials for disregarding the court’s guidelines for domestic surveillance of American e-mail metadata traffic, a program that ran for around a decade before ending in 2011.

“[National Security Agency’s] record of compliance with these rules has been poor,” wrote Judge John D. Bates in a 117-page opinion (PDF) whose date was redacted. The opinion is just one of a series of documents released and declassified late Monday evening by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI).

“Most notably, NSA generally disregarded the special rules for disseminating United States person information outside of NSA until it was ordered to report such disseminations and certify to the FISC that the required approval had been approved. The government has provided no meaningful explanation why these violations occurred, but it seems likely that widespread ignorance of the rules was a contributing factor.”

This set of documents, which include annual reports from the Attorney General to Congress, memos, presentations, and training documents, were released in relation to an Electronic Frontier Foundation and American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit. Earlier batches were released in September 2013 in August 2013. In total, ODNI says it has now released nearly 2,000 new documents in recent months.


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Judge: “NSA exceeded the scope of authorized acquisition continuously”

Smart TV from LG phones home with user’s viewing habits, USB file names

It's not the premise of a sci-fi novel. Internet-connected TVs are watching you now.


It sounds like the premise of a Philip K. Dick story, but it's not. A blogger has offered evidence that his Internet-connected television has been transmitting detailed information about his family's viewing habits, including the times and channels they watch and even the names of computer video files stored on connected USB drives.

The unidentified blogger, whose twitter profile described him as a "developer, tweaker and Linux enthusiast" living in UK county of Yorkshire, said the LG Smart TV model is LG 42LN575V and was manufactured May 2013. He provided screenshots of data packets he said he captured showing the information his TV sent unencrypted over the Internet. The data appeared to show a device ID unique to his set, along with the name of the channel it was tuned to. In his tests, the information was sent in the clear every time the channel was changed. Even more remarkable, he said, the smart TV sent the data even after he waded through the system preferences and set the "Collection of watching info" setting to "off" (it was on by default).


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Smart TV from LG phones home with user’s viewing habits, USB file names

10 Awesome Gadgets from the Dollar Store


Why break your budget at your local big box store when you can pick up a handful of tech toys on the cheap?

Like, real cheap.

Every once in a while on Yahoo Digital Crave we like to cover a few recommended gadgety products from your local dollar store (or, depending where you are in the country, the “$0.99 Cent Store”). In case you’ve missed some of our round-ups, you can find one here and here.

What’s that? You found some extra loose change in your pocket and are curious what you can get for a buck or two? The following are a handful of stingy suggestions found at various stores including Dollar Tree, Dollar King, Family Dollar, National Dollar, Buck Or Two or 99 Depot.

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10 Awesome Gadgets from the Dollar Store

Google Gadget Stores to Open Just for Holiday Shopping



Google is opening six temporary stores around the United States to showcase its latest high-tech gadgets, just in time for the Christmas holiday season.

The stores will be filled with Nexus 7 tablets, the latest Chromebooks, the Chromecast video dongle and more so that shoppers can check out the products and place online orders on the spot, according to a special Winter Wonderlab Website set up by Google.

"Play, Create, Chill," the company tells shoppers on the site. "This holiday season, you're invited to the Winter Wonderlab presented by Google. Check out new gadgets like the Nexus 7, make a slow motion video in the giant snow globe, or just escape the holiday hustle with endless games,
music, and videos."

The site is a "fun and interactive way for the public to experience all of Google’s gadgets," a spokesman said.

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Posted By: This and That

Google Gadget Stores to Open Just for Holiday Shopping

Meizu MX3 is world’s first 128 GB smartphone, now available only in China


Chinese device manufacturers might not have a reputation for originality, justified or not, but there is no denying that their crazy ideas sometimes hit the mark. Like the Meizu MX3, for example, which is possibly the world’s first smartphone to sport a large 128 GB internal storage.

Those who have been keeping an eye on Chinese smartphones will probably be quite aware of this device already. The Meizu MX3 first hit the rumor mill in July and was finally announced in early September. The one feature that was consistent in leaks and rumors was the smartphone’s large 128 GB storage capacity. And Meizu didn’t fail to deliver. Understandable but somewhat disappointing, the device lacked a micro SD card for even more storage.

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Meizu MX3 is world’s first 128 GB smartphone, now available only in China

Facebook Picks SportStream To Beef Up Its Real-Time Sports Data For News Outlets


You post “Goal!!!!11!!” but who scored? Facebook’s on a drive to host more sports talk and get its trends shown on the news, so today it’s partnering with SportStream to structure, enhance, and make sense of its messy real-time data.

SportStream will offer broadcasters and sports teams a search interface for Facebook’s Keyword Insights and Public Feed APIs that leverages its “SportsBase” of metadata on teams, players, leagues, and games to surface who’s saying what about the biggest moments in athletics.

Facebook knows chatter about real-time, global events like sports is a huge opportunity for engagement, but many people are bringing this talk to Twitter. By getting TV, print, and web news outlets plus the sports teams themselves sharing Facebook sports chatter trends, Facebook hopes users will make it their water cooler for the big game.

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Facebook Picks SportStream To Beef Up Its Real-Time Sports Data For News Outlets

Sling Media Releases SlingPlayer 3.0, Free Roku Channel


Sling Media on Monday released SlingPlayer 3.0 for iOS devices, as well as a free SlingPlayer channel for Roku for both iPhones and Android phones. The subsidiary of EchoStar also announced that a SlingPlayer app for PCs running Microsoft's Windows 8.1 operating system will be made available in December.

"With today's announcements, Sling Media has clearly brought the Slingbox experience into the living room, changing the way our customers discover, navigate, view, and socialize around content," Michael Hawkey, vice president and general manager of Sling Media, said in a statement.

"With SlingPlayer 3.0, we're giving customers the tools they need to turn traditional prime time into Prime Time Social Time. Our customers have been asking for Roku support and a Windows 8.1 app. We're pleased to deliver the Roku channel today and the Windows 8.1 app in the very near future."

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Sling Media Releases SlingPlayer 3.0, Free Roku Channel

Monday, November 18, 2013

Apple 'has bought Israel's PrimeSense, maker of first-generation Kinect sensor'

Deal points to functions in upcoming hardware as sensor could be used to detect gestures, faces or internal geography


Apple has bought PrimeSense, an Israeli company which provided 3D sensors for the first generation Microsoft Kinect, according to reports in Israel.

PrimeSense's systems generate a three-dimensional representation of the space in front of the sensors using reflected infrared light, so that digital devices can effectively "see" a scene and recognise elements in it. The first-generation Kinect uses it to locate players and observe their movements.

The deal, said to be worth $345m (£213m), was reported by Calcalist, an Israeli financial newspaper which has a good track record on acquisitions in the area. It was the first to report that Google had bought the Israeli traffic mapping company Waze in June.

Apple's decision to purchase the company will heighten expectation that it is working on some form of application for the living room, where a sensor could work with its Apple TV set-top box and allow users to control a TV remotely. Alternatively it could be fitted to a phone and used to recognise faces - perhaps as an adjunct to its fingerprint unlocking system introduced on the iPhone 5S in September, or a feature in an entirely new device.

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Apple 'has bought Israel's PrimeSense, maker of first-generation Kinect sensor'

Apple iPad Mini Retina Is the Best Mid-Sized Tablet


Virtually every good (and bad) thing you can say about Apple's iPad Air is applicable to the new iPad mini with Retina display. The 7.8-inch tablet's second edition is virtually identical inside and out to the 9.7-inch iPad Air, with the obvious exception of size and weight.

Both tablets have a powerful, dual-core A7 chip, an M7 motion coprocessor, a 1.2-megapixel, 720p FaceTime camera, a 5-megapixel, 1080p iSight camera, MIMO Wi-Fi technology, a single radio for all bands of LTE (if you buy the 4G model) and Retina display.

The iPad mini Retina also has the same resolution as the iPad Air, but naturally, in a smaller frame. What happens when you squeeze a 2,048 x 1,536-pixel resolution into a 7.9-inch display? You get a whopping 326 pixels per inch. In comparison, the iPad Air only offers 264 ppi. The mini’s resolution actually beats Amazon's Kindle Fire HDX 7-inch, which boasts 323 ppi in its 1,920 x 1,200-pixel resolution screen.

Of course, if you’re counting a few pixels, you may be missing the big picture, which is that all of these new tablets have high-resolution and very attractive screens.

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Apple iPad Mini Retina Is the Best Mid-Sized Tablet

Google pays up $17M for ignoring user privacy settings in Safari


Google settled another privacy lawsuit today, promising to pay $17 million for circumventing users’ privacy wishes.

The case centered around Apple’s Safari browser, which had certain default privacy settings concerning tracking and cookies. Google, according to this lawsuit, went around those settings and used cookies to track user activity, even where users had specified that they did not want to be followed.

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Google pays up $17M for ignoring user privacy settings in Safari

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