Friday, October 31, 2014

news texh

news texh


Amazon's Fire Phone Product Efforts Will Continue Despite Early Stumbles - TechCrunch (blog)

Posted: 31 Oct 2014 06:03 AM PDT


TechCrunch (blog)

Amazon's Fire Phone Product Efforts Will Continue Despite Early Stumbles
TechCrunch (blog)
Amazon is taking the long view on the Fire phone, despite poor early sales, a huge price cut and $83 million in surplus inventory that resulted in a $170 million charge for the excess hardware and supplier costs combined. Amazon's SVP of Devices David ...
Amazon exec: We priced the Fire phone wrong Fortune
Amazon admits it priced the Fire Phone wrongly TechRadar UK
Amazon Exec on Fire Phone: "We didn't get the price right" DailyTech
TechSpot  - New York Times  - Popular Mechanics
all 119 news articles »

The FBI's Secret House Meeting to Get Access to Your iPhone The FBI's Secret ... - National Journal

Posted: 30 Oct 2014 02:52 PM PDT


The FBI's Secret House Meeting to Get Access to Your iPhone The FBI's Secret ...
National Journal
A 1994 law, the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, forces telephone companies to build surveillance technologies into their networks to allow law enforcement to install wiretaps. But the law hasn't been updated and doesn't cover new ...

and more »

AT&T, Verizon Use 'Perma-Cookies' To Track Phone Web Browsing - CIO Today

Posted: 30 Oct 2014 01:26 PM PDT


CIO Today

AT&T, Verizon Use 'Perma-Cookies' To Track Phone Web Browsing
CIO Today
... have been doing this for quite some time, so why is this news?' Other carriers have been confirmed to be using similar technology, most notably Vodaphone, which was actually caught sending customer mobile phone numbers and IMSI (SIM) card numbers.
Verizon ad tech raises privacy concerns WDIV Detroit
Sneaky Verizon is tracking activity of mobile customers with invisible cookie Tech Times

all 88 news articles »

NoPhone will kill your tech separation anxiety - Wired.co.uk

Posted: 28 Oct 2014 07:31 AM PDT


NoPhone will kill your tech separation anxiety
Wired.co.uk
You tuck your phone into your bag or your pocket, only to find it back in your hand again a few moments later. You don't even know why you're holding it, but you are. You're compulsively running your fingers over it, flipping between apps, checking ...

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