tibidy-business.com

Cross-read the freshest news on business and global market places.

Articles tagged with appleoxoxox internetoxoxox serviceoxoxox

oxo Remove a tag from the tag selection   xox Keep a tag in the selection and remove others

Google’s Android Target of New Antitrust Complaint

BRUSSELS — A group of companies led by Microsoft have called on European authorities to launch an antitrust investigation into Google‘s dominance of mobile Internet usage on smartphones. The “FairSearch” initiative of 17 companies — which includes Microsoft, Nokia, and Oracle — claims Google is acting unfairly by giving away its Android operating system to mobile device companies on the condition that the U.S. online giant’s own software applications like YouTube and Google Maps are installed and prominently displayed. “Google is using its Android mobile operating system as a Trojan horse to deceive partners, monopolize the mobile marketplace, and control consumer data,” said Thomas Vinje, the group’s Brussels-based lawyer. (MORE: Was Instagram Really Worth $1 Billion?) Android operating systems are installed on about 70 percent of new smartphones, according to analyst estimates, handing Google the largest market share worldwide, followed by Apple‘s iOS platform. Systems ...

android antoine apple application authorities billion blackberry brussels brussels-based calif colombani commission conditions devices distribution dominance europe european fairsearch google maps instagram internet investigation investment ios microsoft mountain nokia oracle practices service services settlement statement thomas trojan verney vinje youtube

Found 1 month ago on channel TIME Business

U.S. ‘Hacker’ Crackdown Sparks Debate Over Computer Fraud Law

In June 2010, Andrew Auernheimer, a well-known Internet security expert, discovered a gaping hole in AT&T’s website that exposed 114,000 email addresses belonging to the wireless giant’s Apple iPad customers. After a colleague downloaded the data, Auernheimer passed the information to a journalist at the wesbite Gawker. The episode was a major embarrassment for AT&T because the list included thousands of high-profile individuals, including New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and then-White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel. AT&T quickly patched the hole. The FBI promptly launched an investigation, and last November, Auernheimer was convicted of two felony counts under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), a 1980s-era law originally designed to punish and deter intrusions into government and financial industry computer systems. His colleague, Daniel Spitler, pleaded guilty last year. On Monday, Auernheimer, 27, was sentenced to 41 months in prison and ordered to pay $73,000 ...

aaron act activist andrew angeles anonymous apple auernheimer authorization cfaa city daniel emanuel embarrassment fbi gawker government house information institue internet intrusion investigation ipad journalists jstor los massachusetts matthew mayor michael bloomberg million rahm restitution reuters securities sentence service spitler swartz technology then-white times york

Found more than 1 month ago on channel TIME Business

Google and IBM Post Strong Earnings as the Tech Sector Heats Up

Technology titans Google and IBM delivered surprisingly strong earnings results Tuesday, in a positive sign for the tech sector following several quarters of lackluster performance across the industry. Google showed progress addressing one of its key challenges: the steady migration of users to mobile search, which generates less ad revenue for the company than desktop search. Google reported strong revenue growth, in a sign that the overall online advertising market keeps growing, as marketers continue their seemingly inexorable shift away from traditional ad platforms — including print — and toward Internet advertising. Google shares soared 5% after the results were announced. IBM reported record profits, driven by the company’s ongoing, decade-long transition toward software and services, as net income increased by 6%. IBM’s results were propelled by what CEO Ginni Rometty called “higher-value businesses,” including cloud computing and data analytics. Because of IBM’s vast ...

achievements apple billion brian business ceo conference ginni google ibm internet jeffries larry migration opportunity performance pitz rometty service services solution statement technology transition

Found more than 1 month ago on channel TIME Business

Amazon takes up whispering in class

Thursday, October 18, 2012 - 04:28 David McNew/Getty Images Press a button and your students suddenly have new textbooks in their hands. Amazon thinks it can do this using its Kindle electronic reader. Teacher's fantasy: Press a button your students suddenly have new textbooks in their hands. Amazon thinks it can do this using its Kindle electronic reader. The company has just unveiled something called Whispercast , a free wireless system that lets a teacher's Kindle communicate with student tablets and new books materialize from the ether. Amazon hopes to use this to gain a foothold in the education market where Apple has a head start. Unlike the free-for-all that is the internet, Whispercast is about control. You can block Facebook andTwitter, important for schools," says Brian Barrett, managing editor of the tech news site Gizmodo . "You can make sure that no purchases can be made from the device. You can regulate the Internet so that only approved websites are visited." Amazon isn't ...

amazon andtwitter apple barrett brancaccio brian business cordero david development education facebook flipboard generation getty images gizmodo internet ipads ipod jay jersey kindle kindles lowe marine marketplace mcnew podcast preference ray service slacker soundcloud story syndication title type unlike whispercast

Found more than 1 month ago on channel Marketplace.org

China's Foxconn worker riot and Iran's shadow Internet

Tuesday, September 25, 2012 - 03:02 MIKE CLARKE/AFP/Getty Images A group of protestors from SACOM (Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehaviour) demonstrate outside the Foxconn annual general meeting (AGM) in Hong Kong on May 18, 2011. With all this information technology at our disposal, it's striking how getting to the truth of a matter can still be so tough. Two tech stories from opposite sides of the world today remind us how even in 2012 the flow of information is still tightly controlled. First, Iran, where authorities seem to be restricting access to some big websites . Cyrus Farivar is an editor at the online technology publication, Ars Technica.  "There were reports that Iran had blocked Gmail and Google," says Cyrus Farivar, an editor at Ars Technica, "thereby cutting off Iranian internet users from using those popular internet services." The reason for the interruption? Some Iranian media report the temporary restriction was in response to protests over the inflammatory ...

afp agm apple ars authorities barboza brancaccio bureau business california china chinese clarke corroboration cyrus david dell disruptions facility farivar flipboard foxconn getty images gmail google government hong kong information innocence internet interruption iphone iran iran-specific iranian iranians korea locations marketplace microsoft mike misbehaviour muslims north options podcast possibility production publication restrictions sacom securities service services shanghai slacker soundcloud statement syndication taiyuan technica technology times title type york

Found more than 1 month ago on channel Marketplace.org