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Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Thursday, 6 March 2014

Getty’s Images Are Now Free for Twitter, Tumblr and Personal Blogs

Since its founding, Getty Images has charged for its photos. If a media company wanted to use a Getty photo, the company paid Getty for the rights to that photo. But the Seattle stock-photo agency noticed its photos increasingly appearing on social media and blogs that hadn’t paid for the rights—one result of images being easy to find in Google Image searches and on news sites.
So the Seattle-based stock-photo agency has decided to make a huge portion of its photos free. On Wednesday, the company unveiled the embed tool, which will allow users to include images on websites, such as non-commercial WordPress blogs. The eligible images also come with buttons for Tumblr and Twitter, where a link to the image can be shared. (The image itself doesn’t appear on Twitter, however.)
Here’s how it works for blogs:


  1. Select the image you want to use in your blog or social-media post from the huge portion of images available to embed.
  2. Click on the <> symbol.

  • In the embed window that pops up, copy the embed code
  • Paste the HTML code into the source code of a website or blog or wherever you want it to appear.

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Sunday, 23 February 2014

Samsung replaces Galaxy Gear with their own Tizen-powered Platform

If it wasn't clear to first-generation Galaxy Gear owners that they were beta testing a new product category for Samsung, it should be obvious now: the company has just announced not one but two follow-ups to its original smartwatch. Both the Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo drop Samsung's Galaxy branding and follow the original Gear by a bare five months.

Neither watch's key specs differ all that much from the first Gear. Both of them have 1.63-inch 320×320 AMOLED displays, 4GB of internal storage, 512MB of RAM, Bluetooth 4.0, and an IR blaster, all identical to the first-generation watch. The biggest internal difference is probably a 1.0GHz dual-core SoC of unspecified make (one of Samsung's own Exynos chips seems like a good bet), an upgrade from the 800MHz single-core chip from the first Gear. The extra performance should help to smooth out some of the performance jitters we noticed in the first Gear. Despite the extra CPU core and a somewhat smaller 300mAh battery, Samsung claims that both Gear 2 watches will last two or three days between charges, roughly doubling the runtime of the original Gear.
Samsung has made even larger changes to the software, jettisoning the original Gear's customized Android 4.2.2 in favor of its own home-grown Tizen operating system. Tizen is a Linux-based mobile OS that rose from the ashes of the MeeGo project back in 2011, and counts Samsung and Intel among its major backers. Engadget notes that the Gear watches are two of the very first commercial products to run Tizen, after Samsung's NX300M camera.
Visually, the new software is similar to the old—Samsung's promotional shots all show light white text and images on a black background, saving power by keeping as few of the AMOLED panel's pixels active as possible. However, using Google's debug tools to hack around with the Gear will no longer be possible (not a huge loss, unless you enjoy minuscule games of Angry Birds and Candy Crush). We'll need to wait to get some hands-on time before we can talk any more about how the new software differs from the old. It's also unclear whether the Tizen watches mean that the old Android one will stop getting new updates and apps, or if Gear apps will be compatible with all three watches.

The differences between the Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo are relatively small. Both include a new hardware Home button on the face, and both will be offered with replaceable wristbands in a variety of colors ("Charcoal Black, Gold Brown and Wild Orange" for the Gear 2 and "Charcoal Black, Mocha Grey and Wild Orange" for the Neo). The Gear 2's face is metal while the Gear 2 Neo's is plastic, making the Neo a little larger but a little lighter (37.9 x 58.8 x 10.0mm and 55g for the Neo compared to 36.9 x 58.4x 10.0 mm and 68g for the Gear 2). Finally, the Gear 2 will include a 2.0 MP camera integrated into the body of the watch, while the Gear 2 Neo includes no camera option. The original Gear used a strap-mounted camera that added extra bulk and made the strap impossible to replace.
Both the Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo will be available worldwide in April for as-yet-undisclosed prices (expect the Neo to be the cheaper of the two options). Like the first Gear, the watches will only interface with compatible Galaxy phones and tablets and not products from other OEMs or software ecosystems. Thanks to the Android 4.3 and 4.4 updates Samsung has been distributing to its various devices over the last few months, that list should be much more expansive than it was when the original Gear launched.
Ars will be on the ground at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week, and we should be able to spend some hands-on time with the new watches there.
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Sunday, 16 February 2014

Kickstarter Hacked, Credit Card and some Personal Data Stolen

Hackers breached the crowdfunding website Kickstarter and made off with some user information, the site revealed on Saturday.
In a blog post, Kickstarter's CEO Yancey Strickler wrote that though the hackers didn't obtain any credit card data, they did gain access to other information about Kickstarter's members, such as usernames, email addresses, mailing addresses and phone numbers. The site did not divulge details about the hackers' methods.
"On Wednesday night, law enforcement officials contacted Kickstarter and alerted us that hackers had sought and gained unauthorized access to some of our customers' data," the blog post reads. "Upon learning this, we immediately closed the security breach and began strengthening security measures throughout the Kickstarter system."
Kickstarter "strongly" recommends that all users change their passwords. The site, which allows people to fund projects ranging from independent films to gadgets for custom rewards, has over 5 million members.
"We're incredibly sorry that this happened," Strickler wrote in the post. "We set a very high bar for how we serve our community, and this incident is frustrating and upsetting. We have since improved our security procedures and systems in numerous ways, and we will continue to do so in the weeks and months to come."
Read an email regarding the hack from Kickstarter CEO Yancey Strickler to the site's members below:



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Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Bitcoin’s ‘Honest Nodes’ Are Under Attack

Attack of the dishonest nodes? One of the key features of bitcoin, one of the things that makes it a stable system, is this idea that there are a majority of “honest nodes” in the system that could prevent any attack by malefactors. This was explained by Satoshi Nakamoto in his October 2008 white paper that first laid out bitcoin’s parameters, the so-called proof-of-work feature. So long as a majority of CPU power was controlled by the honest nodes, he said, “the honest chain will grow the fastest and outpace any competing chains.”

That may well still hold true, but it’s being put to the test this week. On the heels of the problems at Mt. Gox, which it blamed on a security “glitch,” another bitcoin exchange,Bitstamp, said on Tuesday that it, too, was halting withdrawals, and for the same reason: a software quirk that allows attackers to alter a transaction’s details. It’s being called the “Mt. Gox exploit,” but apparently, it’s now being used beyond Mt. Gox. Bitstamp said no funds have been lost, it’s fixing the problem, and expects to “shortly” restore its systems.
It may be an even wider attack, though. Andreas Antonopoulos, the chief security officer of Blockchain.info, told CoinDesk’s Emily Spaven that the whole system is under a “massive and concerted” DDoS attack. In response, an industry-wide counterattack has been instituted, CoinDesk said, including the exchanges, mining pods, and core developers.
None of this should really be surprising. Given the frequency of data-breaches in the “real” world — witness what happened to Target over the holidays — it was inevitable that somebody, somewhere would eventually probe bitcoin to test its vulnerabilities. Mr. Antonopoulos stressed calm, noted no funds have been lost, and expects this will pass. That isn’t really the issue, though. It’s not going to be enough for bitcoin, or any digital currency for that matter, to be faster and cheaper than cash. It has to be as reliable as cash. More reliable, actually, since it has a bigger burden of proof to present to a skeptical public.
Nobody’s going to stop using fiat currencies just because hackers stole their credit-card information. It doesn’t matter how many times the stock exchanges are hit by trading glitches. The habits are too deeply ingrained in people. However, no such store of collective memory and habit and goodwill yet exists for bitcoin. ”The whole fiasco is just another case study of why it is so important to strengthen ties between bitcoin services and banks and other institutional investors,” Ryan Selkis wrote in his Two-Bit Idiot newsletter.
Nakamoto’s honest nodes are being put to the test. They have no choice but to pass that test. (Paul Vigna)
Despite all the bad news lately, bitcoin is not only here to stay, but the world is “on the cusp of a revolution in payments systems,” Edmund Moy, the former director of the U.S. Mint, told MoneyBeat. Mr. Moy stopped by the Journal’s offices this morning to talk about cyrpto-currencies, and he sees huge potential for them, both from a commercial and social standpoint. He also thinks, emphatically, that governments should support bitcoin’s development, and that bitcoiners need to take an active role in shaping the government response.
It’s one thing to listen to bitcoin’s apostles preaching. It’s another to listen to somebody like Mr. Moy, who worked in D.C., who ran the Mint and is now chief strategist at metals brokerage Morgan Gold. But Mr. Moy, who has a bitcoin wallet, is enthusiastic about crypto-currencies. He really thinks bitcoin and other digital currencies represent an entirely new way of doing commerce, and he expects very big things to start happening.
With his background in payment systems (you know, the U.S. dollar) and public service, he’s in a unique position to comment on bitcoin’s development, and he’s been vocal in supporting it. “I believe the government should be encouraging this,” he said. Advances in cryptography are leading to more secure, cheaper, and faster payments systems than anything that existed before, he said, and the “social ramifications are huge, and positive.”
Digital currencies offer a huge advantage to workers looking to send remittances back overseas, he pointed out. “If you want to help people on the lowest rungs,” he said, “I can’t think of a greater transfer of wealth,” than by removing the heavy fees workers are charged now to send money back home.
The next few years are going to be key for bitcoin and digital currencies, he said, on both a policy level and on an individual level. He employed the unusual metaphor of roads and flying cars. The oldest roads, like those in lower Manhattan, for example, were basically paved-over footpaths. As the years went on, the government built up and maintained systems based on those old footpaths. Now, he said, imagine somebody invented a flying car. “Do we make it use the existing roads, or do we build a new regulatory system?”
To that end, he said it’s critical that bitcoiners take an active role, right now when the currency’s at an inflection point,  in helping to shape whatever regulations governments come up with. In fact, he thinks of one the biggest risks is that government regulations kneecaps digital currencies, although he doesn’t expect it.
Ultimately, he thinks the potential of this revolution will be realized, whether the system that emerges is bitcoin or some other currency. “I think people are going to have an ‘oh, crap’ moment,” when they realize the potential of the new systems, he said, and while he was laughing when it said, he wasn’t joking. (Paul Vigna)
Speaking of the old world engaging the new, we had a chance to catch up with the team at the Chicago Sun-Times that tried that bitcoin micropayments paywall experiment two weeks ago. While they aren’t about to install an actual bitcoin paywall, and aren’t sure in fact what their next move will be, they were greatly encouraged by the test.
“I think it was very good,” Jim Kirk, the Sun-Times publisher, told us. “We thought the test exceeded our expectations.”
They said they received 713 bitcoin donations (all of the money paid went to the nonprofit Taproot Foundation, so every hit on the paywall was in fact a donation). The size of those donations was very wide, from a penny all the way up to $1,000. What jumped out at them, though was that the vast majority of donations (63%) were for 25 cents. “It tells me there is a very special place in someone’s mind that a quarter is something of value,” said Julian Posada, an executive vice president at the paper’s parent company, Wrapports.
The executives said the only complaint they heard was that the paywall wasn’t available on their mobile site, and said they’ve heard from a few other media outlets curious about the test, to0. “We’re all trying to get to the same place,” Mr. Posada said.
So while there aren’t any definitive next steps, it seems like that there will be a next step, Mr. Kirk said. “This gives us confidence that we could try a couple of different things.” (Paul Vigna)
Fiverr, an online marketplace, has partnered up with Coinbase and will start accepting bitcoin. Fiverr is an online site where people offer up their services, with prices starting at $5 (naturally). Some of the services are straightforward, like graphic design. Some are odder, like the person who says they’ll record a voice over “in the awesome voice of Sean Connery” (that’s worth $5, for sure).
“Our community is passionate about innovation and creativity and bitcoin represents this spirit of innovation,” said Constantine Anastasakis, Fiverr’s director of business development. (Paul Vigna)
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Saturday, 8 February 2014

Mozilla launches Accounts, an improved Sync feature, and a customizable UI to Firefox Aurora


Mozilla has announced several new features today designed to continue the Firefox browsing experience to any device you use. The company has announced that Accounts will be coming to the browser, along with an improved Sync feature and the ability to customize the user interface. All of these things are available to test now in Firefox Aurora.
With Firefox Accounts, users will be able to capture their login credentials for various services, their bookmarks, history, and any open tabs and bring it with them to any device. This new feature is a part of Firefox OS and is said to match Mozilla’s mission of helping the Web become a more mobile platform. The work on Accounts stems from programs that the company set up last year as a means of making things more accessible in the cloud.
Firefox Accounts has some marked similarities with Google’s Chrome OS in that both companies now offer users a way to carry their preferences over to multiple devices without having to waste time worrying about setup logistics.
Mozilla has also released an update for its Sync feature — the service that lets you take your bookmarks, tabs, and personal information with you. It’s now been made more secure — users will find that it has client side key stretching, end-to-end encryption, and a public key cryptography and the BrowserID protocol. All of these measures are intended to protect user information in the event the computer or Mozilla’s servers have been compromised.
The updated security measures are currently being added to Firefox, and will soon be incorporated into Firefox OS.
Lastly, Firefox Aurora has received a nifty feature that allows users to customize the user interface. With its Windows, Mac, and Linux versions, you can prioritize features in the menu, toolbar or tab bar by dragging them to wherever you want. You can also remove any browser buttons, including add-ons, based on your preference.
In addition, the entire interface has been redesigned in order to help make finding things easier:
Firefox Aurora includes a redesign of the browser interface to help you get things done, faster. Tabs have a new fluid and streamlined shape and non-active tabs blend into the background to make it faster for you to find and focus on the tab you want. A new menu contains the most popular features including copy, paste, zoom, as well as add-ons all in one spot with easy to identify visual icons.
All of the above features are available today in Firefox Aurora.
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Google+ photos get more 'pop' with new dynamic range tool


So far, you've had to use Snapseed on your phone to add high dynamic range effects to Google+ photos after you've taken them -- not very convenient if you're at your computer. That won't be a problem after today, though. Google has brought its mobile apps' HDR Scape tool to the web-based photo editor in Google+, letting you brighten shadows and tone down highlights in a single step. And if you're fussy about your edits, it's now easy to zoom in and verify that everything is just right. The new tools are already available for some Google+ users, and they should reach the rest of the social network in the near future.

https://plus.google.com/u/0/112917227800051850597/posts/PAmJCRAerxf

1. HDR Scape

With HDR Scape you can apply high dynamic range (HDR) effects to a single image, with a single click. HDR Scape is currently available in the Snapseed apps for Android and iOS, and today’s update brings the filter to Google+ on the web. You can see some examples here: https://plus.google.com/s/hdr%20scape.

2. Zoom

Seeing your images up close is an important part of the editing process — from checking the focus point, to seeing how the “Drama” filter has changed your pixels. With today’s update, you can now use the magnifying glass to zoom in or out.

To give either feature a try, simply open one of your photos in Google+ (using the Chrome browser), and click “Edit.” We’re rolling out these updates gradually, so check back soon if you don’t see them yet.
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Thursday, 30 January 2014

Paper, Facebook Official iPhone App


This morning, Facebook is announcing a new standalone iPhone app called Paper. Contrary to earlier rumors, it's much more than just a news-reading app — it's a complete reimagining of Facebook itself. Once you've used it, you may never want to open the standard Facebook app again. It may not replicated every feature of Facebook's main app, but it does fulfill the majority of people's needs. Simply put, it's much, much better.
Paper takes the standard Facebook News Feed and recreates it as an immersive, horizontally scrolling set of screens. It also provides a new way to post to Facebook (and Paper) with an elegant WYSIWYG editor that borrows the styling of Medium's and Svbltle's blogging systems. Finally, yes, it's a news-reading app that owes some of its looks to Flipboard. It will be available for the iPhone in the US (and only the iPhone in the US) on February 3rd. It's also ad-free, at least for now.
That's all more than we were expecting when we sat down with product designer Mike Matas and product manager Michael Reckhow. Neither would quite take the bait when asked whether this should serve as a replacement for the original Facebook app (or, as I put it during our interview, a virtual indictment). Reckhow says that there are "tools that were out there for sharing high-quality stuff and also the tools where you could reach an audience," but that too often they aren't the same thing. "We felt you shouldn't have to choose between one or the other," he says.

Paper cuts away virtually all buttons and other UI elements to make every status update, photo, and news story appear full-screen. To get around, you will need to learn a basic set of gestures, but the app will gently remind you what they are if it thinks you're stuck. Wide photos pan as you tilt the phone (the team cheekily calls it the "Ken turns" effect), UI elements often just fade away, and news stories are presented in Twitter-esque cards.
The lack of chrome to help place you in the app and tell you how to navigate can be a little disorienting. On the bright side, the UI is fast and fluid, thanks to the nine months the team has spent working on the app. Loren Brichter, the creator of Letterpress and Tweetie, also chipped in on the coding. The result is an app that shares a family resemblance to Facebook Home on Android, but is much faster and more full-featured.
Each section in Paper has a main screen with a cover photo and a list of small cards at the bottom. You can scroll through or drill into the cards, at which point you'll be swiping through one card at a time. Matas hopes that you'll flip through slowly. "You really want people to spend a little bit of time with it and appreciate that content," Matas says, "almost like when you go to a museum and you spend a little bit of time with each thing."
If you aren't put off by the idea of considering a photo of your friend's dog an art piece, you might call it a lean-back experience (albeit on a tiny screen). As a UI philosophy, this stands in direct opposition to the high-volume, high-noise vertical feeds we're used to on Twitter and Facebook. It definitely means it will take longer to grind through content like you can on Twitter — but for Facebook, that's exactly the point. If, like me, you're a news addict and an information fiend, Paper may be a little too relaxed for you.
The interface for news reading is exactly the same, with the exception that links are automatically turned into small, Twitter-esque media cards with branding from the publication. Swiping up to read the full story takes you to the source site — there's no offline mode like you might find in a more full featured news app. You also can't add any site you want, as with a traditional RSS reader. Instead, Facebook has hired a team of content curators to pick stories for you in one of a dozen or so categories ranging from basic news to cute animals.
You can post to Paper (and thus Facebook) in a new kind of compose screen. It shows you exactly what the final post will look like, and Reckhow isn't shy about his hope that people will think of Paper as a new kind of thing — even though the plumbing underneath is still Facebook. "Think about when Instagram came out and you now had this new way to share," he says. Facebook’s ambition with Paper is to have it become its own thing, not just a different way of accessing Facebook. Matas goes so far as to say that "it’s a publishing tool, a way of publishing great content, and a way of viewing great content."
Paper is the first product to come out of Facebook Creative Labs, a unit within the company tasked to "innovate and build new things," as Reckhow puts it. That's likely a sign that Paper will be just one of what CEO Mark Zuckerberg called "new and engaging types of mobile experiences" on yesterday’s earnings call. Since its embarrassing Snapchat clone called Poke failed, Facebook seems closer to figuring out the right formula for its single-use apps. Facebook knows that mobile users are gravitating towards such apps, and it intends to create more of them.
That’s probably a good thing, and perhaps a necessary one. From a user's perspective, Facebook’s current app is beset by dozens of options, nooks, crannies, and features that most people don’t really use. The recent "tab-centric" redesign helped simplify things, but it wasn’t radical change. Facebook has a billion users, and so any alterations it wants to make to its core app need to be tested — extensively. That kind of testing can get in the way of creative design. "You can’t be innovative if you’re encumbered by worrying if you’re going to disrupt what hundreds of millions or a billion people are doing," Reckhow says.
The team wanted "to have the creative freedom to go outside of what we’ve done and not worry about if it’s going to impact metrics [on] day one." For Reckhow, Matas, and the rest of the team, Paper is less a replacement for Facebook’s app than a chance for the company to try out something very different from what it’s done before — and get another icon on your iPhone’s home screen in the process.
If Paper does score a slot on your main home screen, another app will probably have to be buried away somewhere else. For a lot of people, Facebook itself will be a prime candidate.
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Wednesday, 29 January 2014

Samsung Glass A Google Glass competitor - Rumours

A report in The Korea Times has added further weight to the prospect of a direct Google Glass competitor, with an unnamed Samsung employee claiming that development of a smart eyewear device is well underway.
Samsung reportedly eyeing off smart specs market with "Galaxy Glass"
A Google Glass (pictured) competitor, tentatively called 'Galaxy Glass,' could be unveiled at this year's IFA consumer electronics show in Berlin

Word of Samsung's smart eyewear to rival Google Glass first emerged in October last year, when the company registered a design patent for what it categorized as a type of sports glasses. According to The Korea Times, the eyewear is tentatively called "Galaxy Glass," and is set to be unveiled at this year's IFA consumer electronics show in Berlin.
Much like Google Glass, the eyewear would connect to the user's smart phone and enable them to take calls, listen to music, as well as display text message and email alerts in their field of vision.
"The new smart glass to be introduced by Samsung is a new concept of wearable device that can lead to an exciting culture of communication," the employee is quoted as saying. "Because wearable devices are kind of accessories, design is a major factor. Samsung smart glasses should be simple and appealing on the surface."
The commercial release of Google Glass is expected later this year, but with the company yet to specify a launch date, there's a possibility that Samsung's version could beat it to market.
Source: The Korea Times
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British government reportedly tracking YouTube and Facebook data without permission


While the NSA has been busy scouring the Angry Birds leaderboards, newly leaked documents report that its British counterpart -- the GCHQ -- has been monitoring the flow of social media in real-time. The General Communications Headquarters can apparently keep track of YouTube traffic, which links are liked on Facebook and even which Blogger or Blogspot pages are visited. This all comes viadocuments taken by Edward Snowden that were obtained by NBC NewsNBC's sources also say that the British spies have been able to physically tap the lines carrying global web traffic to extract key data about specific users as well. This initiative, called Squeaky Dolphin, intends to put broad data trends into context with world events and give the intelligence community a heads up for future anti-government happenings -- not for spying on a person-by-person level. What's more, the GCHQ reportedly shares this information with the US.
The GCHQ has issued a statement claiming that all of its work is carried out within the limits of the law, while the NSA says that it's only interested in the communication activities of valid foreign intelligence targets. For their part, Google and Facebook say that the spying on unencrypted information was done with out their respective knowledge, and neither company had given the UK government permission to access the data -- something we've heard before.
Source : NBC News (1), (2) (PDF), engadget.com
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Tuesday, 28 January 2014

Microsoft 'Office Online' set to replace existing Word and Excel Web Apps


Microsoft is readying a launch of new "Office Online" branding for its existing Office Web Apps. Sources familiar with Microsoft’s plans have revealed to The Verge that Office Online will roll out in the coming weeks, and Microsoft’s office.com site will be refreshed to accommodate the changes. The name change follows a similar rebrand for SkyDrive, which is now being christened OneDrive after a trademark case. While the Office Online branding is not related to legal issues, we understand it’s largely focused on making the online versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote more accessible and easy to find. ZDNet first reported on Office Online earlier this week.
We’re told that Microsoft will start using "Excel Online" and "Word Online" monikers instead of the slightly more confusing "Excel Web App" and "Word Web App" names that exist today. Office Web Apps are currently buried away in SkyDrive (OneDrive), where it’s not always obvious to consumers. We understand that Office Online will still be available through SkyDrive, but that office.com will serve as an easy way to access the various web apps. The main focus is to ensure consumers are aware of the apps and they’re easy to find. Microsoft is testing versions of Office Online internally, and Yan Zhu, founder oflivesino.net, has supplied The Verge with several screenshots of the new branding and interface.

Microsoft is currently refreshing its existing Office Web Apps ahead of the rebrand, and the company revealed that a new navigation bar in Outlook.com will also surface online versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. While the software maker has taken the odd step of removing this information from its original blog post, the navigational bar will roll out shortly alongside Office Online. It’s another part of making Microsoft’s Office Web Apps more visible to consumers.
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Global smartphone shipments top one billion for first time in 2013: IDC


Global smartphone shipments topped 1 billion units for first time in 2013, climbing 38.4 percent from the previous year to 1.004 billion units, research firm IDC said.
Smartphones made up 55.1 percent of all mobile phone shipments last year from just over two-fifths in 2012, IDC said.
Samsung Electronics Co's market share edged up one percentage point year-on-year to 31.3 percent to keep its place as the world's biggest smartphone vendor, while second-place AppleInc's fell from 18.7 percent to 15.3 percent, according to IDC.

Huawei Technologies Co, LG Electronics and Lenovo Group were third, fourth and fifth largest respectively, each with a market share of just under five percent in 2013.
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Monday, 27 January 2014

Google and Samsung Sign 10 Years Global Patent Agreement


Google Inc and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, which are frequently involved in patent infringement lawsuits but not against each other, announced on Sunday that they have reached a global patent cross-licensing agreement.
The deal covers patents currently owned by the companies, as well as any filed in the next 10 years, the companies said in a release. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The companies said the deal "would lead to deeper collaboration on research and development of current and future projects."
"By working together on agreements like this, companies can reduce the potential for litigation and focus instead on innovation," said Allen Lo, deputy general counsel for patents at Google, in a statement.
Samsung's Seungho Ahn, head of the company's intellectual property center, said the deal showed "the rest of the industry that there is more to gain from cooperating than engaging in unnecessary patent disputes."
"Samsung and Google are showing the rest of the industry that there is more to gain from co-operating than engaging in unnecessary patent disputes," Seungho Ahn, head of Samsung's Intellectual Property Center said in the statement.
The companies have been at the center of the smartphone patent wars, though more as allies than foes. The majority of the litigation - which has sprawled across three continents, has been between Apple and the various companies involved in making smartphones based on Google's Android software, including Samsung and Google subsidiary Motorola Mobility.
Few other details were provided in a statement posted online.

(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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Sunday, 26 January 2014

US 'Revenge porn' website owner charged with hacking email and stealing nude photos


LOS ANGELES: A notorious revenge porn website operator and another California man have been charged with stealing nude photos from hundreds of hacked email accounts and posting the images online.
Hunter Moore, 27, who has been dubbed by some media outlets as "the most hated man on the internet," was arrested on Thursday at his home in Woodland. FBI agents also arrested Charles Evens, 25, of the Studio City area of Los Angeles.
Evens pleaded not guilty in a Los Angeles court while Moore appeared in court in Sacramento but didn't enter a plea, US attorney's spokesman Thom Mrozek said.
Both remained jailed.
A 15-count federal indictment issued this week in Los Angeles charges the men with conspiracy, computer hacking, aggravated identity theft, and aiding and abetting. They could face up to five years in federal prison if convicted.
From 2010 to 2012, Moore ran a website called isanyoneup.com that posted nude and explicit photos, including some submitted to the site by former lovers and spouses without the permission of the people in them. Alongside the photos, Moore included the name and other details of the people depicted.
The photos included an American Idol finalist, the daughter of a major Republican donor, and a woman in a wheelchair, according to a 2012 article on Moore in Rolling Stone magazine.
According to the indictment, Evens was paid for providing Moore with nude photos that he obtained by hacking or using other means to accessing hundreds of email accounts.
In an email to Moore, Evens said what he was doing was illegal, and in other emails, Moore offered to pay Evens $200 a week and asked him to use an anonymous PayPal account to avoid detection of the scheme, according to the indictment. Evens was paid as much as $900 at one time, prosecutors contend.
Moore told BBC that he made as much as $20,000 a month in advertising revenue. He ignored cease-and-desist orders and scoffed at challenges to the ethics of his site, although in 2012 he finally sold the website to an anti-cyberbullying organization, saying his notoriety had resulted in people sending him a flood of child pornography and other images.
But he defended the site as well, even though he acknowledged in the 2012 BBC interview that posting the photos could "definitely affect someone's livelihood."
"I just monetize people's mistakes that they made, and it's kind of a shady business. But if it wasn't me, somebody else was going to do it," he said.
In a 2012 interview on CNN's Dr Drew show, a woman who called in to the show chastised Moore for refusing requests to remove naked selfies of her daughter and alleged they came from a hacked account.
"I'm sure she sent the pictures to a million different guys and just ended up on my site just like everybody else," Moore said, although he added that he didn't want to hurt her daughter.
"I'm sorry that your daughter was cyberraped. But, I mean, now she's educated on technology," he added.
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MTNL customers to get WiFi services

MTNL customers to get WiFi services

Mumbai: Ailing state-owned telecom company MTNL plans to launch high speed WiFi services in Mumbai and Delhi, which will provide Internet services to customers at different locations, apart from their homes.
MTNL will be tying up with malls, coffee chains and food courts to provide this unlimited WiFi service to its customers.
"We are planning to provide our customers Wi-Fi services at indoor locations such airports, cafes, food courts, apart from their homes. We will be offering 8 Mbps speed", MTNL Executive Director Peeyush Agarwal told reporters here over the weekend.
On the tariff side, he said a customer will have to use a line-bonding modem to avail of this service, adding that customers already using the MTNL Wi-Fi services on mobile devices will be charged an additional Rs 50-100 apart from their existing monthly rental.
He said MTNL, which operates only in Mumbai and Delhi, has already tied up with city's new terminal T2 to provide this wi-fi service and is in talks rest of the two airports for the same.
MTNL will be targeting the Mumabi and New Delhi airports and all the food courts and malls for this service.
Agarwal said an MTNL customer who uses Wi-Fi on multiple devices like laptop, mobile, personal computers and tabs at home will also have access to internet on such locations.
A customer will have to register himself at such places, and just by using his unique login id and password can have access to internet there, he added.
He said there are certain authentication process required before launching the service and as soon it gets complete, the service will be launched. MTNL has partnered with C-bot to provide this Wi-Fi service.
MTNL which currently has 6 lakh broadband customers, sees addition of another 2 lakh to its customer base once this service is launched.
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