Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
I've sent him links to all the Google help documents twice. I'm not driving to Wisconsin to work his phone for him.
The China correspondent for the public radio show Marketplace tracked down the interpreter that Daisey hired when he visited Shenzhen China. The interpreter disputed much of what Daisey has been saying on stage and on our show. On this week's episode of This American Life, we will devote the entire hour to detailing the errors in "Mr. Daisey Goes to the Apple Factory."
Daisey lied to me and to This American Life producer Brian Reed during the fact checking we did on the story, before it was broadcast. That doesn't excuse the fact that we never should've put this on the air. In the end, this was our mistake.
He claims that the company doesn’t use backdoor vulnerabilities in the devices created by the manufacturer, but rather seeks out security flaws in the phone’s software just as jailbreakers do, one reason why half the company’s 75 employees are devoted to research and development.
Wait, you mean companies will act in a way that maximizes their profits!?!?!? I'm shocked!
Wait, you mean companies will act in a way that maximizes their profits!?!?!? I'm shocked!
If California or the US wants Apple's (or any other company's) tax revenues they can lower their tax rates to more reasonable levels.
Good luck with that. They'll simply become a non-American company if you try to put the screws to them. So, if you want to drive companies out of the US and lose jobs that's a great strategy.Or plug the gaping holes in the code that let a (fundamentally) American company to pull crap like this.
A better question is, why isn't that stuff encrypted by default?
iCloud Security
iCloud secures your content by encrypting it when sent over the Internet, storing it in an encrypted format, and using secure tokens for authentication.
Both versions are available with Cricket's $55 "unlimited" everything plan. This includes talk, text, and data, but of course with a catch based on their fair use policy, which is 2.3GB of data.
Marco Arment (@marcoarment)
6/5/12 9:54 PM
Surprise: LinkedIn, the king of spamming the crap out of people with no complete opt-out, transmits calendar data: http://thenextweb.com/insider/2012/...-notes-from-your-calendar-back-in-plain-text/