Tech Nuggets with Technology: This Blog provides you the content regarding the latest technology which includes gadjets,softwares,laptops,mobiles etc
Tuesday, July 2, 2019
What's worrying Indians about smart tech
US chipmakers lobbied hard to ease Huawei trading curbs
Telcos may have to spend extra Rs 3000 crore in capex for 5G play: Analysts
Limit import duty on phones above Rs 20,000 to Rs 4000: Handset makers
Flipkart in full compliance with FDI Norms, ready for audit: CEO
How Sony and Dolby are Taking the Home Sound Experience to the Next Level
Redmi Note 7 Pro Set to Go on Sale in India Today via Flipkart, Mi.com
Vivo Z1 Pro to Launch in India Today, Here's How to Watch Live Stream
Myanmar's government forces an internet blackout on parts of the country "for the benefit of the people", raising fears that atrocities will now go unreported (Hannah Beech/New York Times)
Hannah Beech / New York Times:
Myanmar's government forces an internet blackout on parts of the country “for the benefit of the people”, raising fears that atrocities will now go unreported — RATHEDAUNG, Myanmar — The security forces, with their geriatric rifles, formed a wary patrol, scanning the forested hills …
Grubhub denies allegations that it created websites for restaurant partners without their permission, says the service was included in their contracts (James B. Cutchin/Los Angeles Times)
James B. Cutchin / Los Angeles Times:
Grubhub denies allegations that it created websites for restaurant partners without their permission, says the service was included in their contracts — It looked like the perfect David and Goliath story. A tech giant was secretly buying up large swaths of the internet …
LG W10, W30 to Go on Sale for First Time in India Today via Amazon
Apple reveals App Store takedown demands by governments
For the first time, Apple has published the number of requests it’s received from governments to take down apps from its app store.
In its latest transparency report published Tuesday, the tech giant said it received 80 requests from 11 countries to remove 634 apps from its localized app stores during July 1 and December 31, 2018.
Apple didn’t list the apps that were removed but noted in most cases why the apps were pulled. China made up the bulk of the requests, seeking to remove 517 apps claiming they violated its gambling and pornography laws. Vietnam and Austria also requested the takedown of several apps which violated its gambling laws, while Kuwait asked Apple to pull some apps that fell foul of its privacy laws.
Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Lebanon were among the countries that requested the removal of some apps, along with The Netherlands, Norway, and Switzerland.
The move comes more than a year after the company promised to publish the figures starting with this latest transparency report.
Apple said it will in a future transparency report — slated for mid-2020 — will report on appeals received in response to government demands to remove apps from the company’s localized app stores.
The tech giant also for the first time posted several national security letters it received permission to publish.
National security letters (NSLs) are controversial subpoenas issued by the FBI with no judicial oversight and often with a gag order preventing the company from disclosing their existence. Since the introduction of the Freedom Act in 2015, the FBI was required to periodically review the gag orders and lift them when they were no longer deemed necessary.
Apple first revealed it received an NSL in 2017 but never published the document. In its latest transparency report, the company finally published the letter — along with four others from 2018 which had the gag order lifted in April and May 2019.
The first national security letter Apple disclosed but never released — until now. (Image: Apple)
As for the rest of the report, most of the government demands went down during the six-month period compared to the previous reporting period.
Apple said it received 29,183 demands from governments — down almost 10 percent on the last reporting period — to access 213,737 devices in the second half of last year.
Germany issued the most legal demands for the six-month period ending December 2018 with 12,343 requests for 19,380 devices. Apple said the large number of requests were primarily due to police investigating stolen devices.
The U.S. was in a distant second place with 4,680 demands for 19,318 devices.
Apple also received 4,875 requests for account data, such as information stored in iCloud — up by 16 percent on the previous reporting period — affecting 22,503 accounts.
The tech giant also saw a rise in the number of government requests to preserve data for up to three months. Apple said it received 1,823 requests, up by 15 percent, affecting 5,553 accounts, during which law enforcement sought to obtain the appropriate orders to access the data.
Rise of merchant payments as companies burn cash on P2P txns
In a letter to Senator Chris Coons, Amazon says it keeps Alexa transcripts and voice recordings indefinitely, only removing them if manually deleted by users (Alfred Ng/CNET)
Alfred Ng / CNET:
In a letter to Senator Chris Coons, Amazon says it keeps Alexa transcripts and voice recordings indefinitely, only removing them if manually deleted by users — If you have hangups about Amazon and privacy on its smart assistant, Alexa, you're not alone. Even after Amazon sent answers …
Anthropic cuts its list of unauthorized secondary market sellers from eight to four after the initial notice caused panic and pushback from investors (Yazhou Sun/Bloomberg)
Yazhou Sun / Bloomberg : Anthropic cuts its list of unauthorized secondary market sellers from eight to four after the initial notice cau...
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Sohee Kim / Bloomberg : South Korean authorities are investigating a data leak at e-commerce giant Coupang that exposed ~33.7M accounts; ...
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The first project we remember working on together was drawing scenes from the picture books that our mom brought with her when she immigrate...