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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Facebook breaches Korean privacy laws, has 30 days to respond to complaints

Facebook has been accused of breaching data privacy laws in South Korea, with regulators unhappy with the way the social network is handling its users’ personal information.

The Korea Communications Commission has also criticised Facebook’s provision of personal information, as well as its privacy policy, saying it “violates the regulations on protection of privacy in information networks”.

The commission also suggested Facebook needs to do a better job of gaining consent from users when using personal data.

Mark Zuckerberg and its company will have 30 days to respond to the claims, the KCC said.

Disclaimer: All information on this news has been compiled from their respective official websites or through public domain sites and leading newspapers. Although, we have taken reasonable efforts to provide you with accurate information, but we assumes no responsibility for the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of the Information and would advise you to verify it from the official product provider. We cannot guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct. If you would like to advertise on our site please contact us

Google unwraps Chrome PCs too late for holidays

The first laptops powered by Google Inc's Chrome operating system will reach store shelves months later than expected and miss the holiday shopping season as the Internet company fixes software issues.

The Web-centric computers, intended as an incursion into territory dominated for years by Microsoft Corp and Apple Inc, will ship around the middle of 2011.

Google is holding off launching the Chrome-based PCs until it can fix some software bugs and make sure that the computers are compatible with other devices such as digital cameras, Google product manager Sundar Pichai said on Tuesday.

"Amazing progress, but we aren't fully done yet," Pichai told reporters at a press briefing in San Francisco.
"If I'm shooting for one holiday season, I wouldn't be working on it. This is a journey," Pichai told Reuters.

Once they arrive, the computers will embody Google's strongest foray into consumer and business computing.
Prices of the laptops have not been determined, executives said when asked if the Web-centered notebook computers might cost less than traditional PCs which brim with storage and processing hardware.

"You will see a variety of notebook price units," Pichai said.
Samsung Electronics and Acer will make the first laptops. Intel Corp will make the processors in the first batch.

The first laptops will come with 100 megabytes of free wireless data transfers per month for two years, courtesy of Verizon Wireless. According to Verizon, streaming video for just two minutes every day amounts to 260 megabytes of data downloads in a month.

The laptops promote Web-centric computing, in which people use online applications instead of software loaded onto PCs.As part of that effort, the company on Tuesday opened an Internet store selling about 500 games, news and other software applications for Chrome, carving out a bigger role in Internet media and entertainment.

BLACK IS BACK

The company did not explain how the Chrome operating system would contribute to profits. With Google's Android operating system for smartphones and tablets, Google offers the platform for free, but earns revenue from mobile advertising.As with Android mobile phones, the Chrome software is expected to spur people to use the Internet more often, and likely to search for more things. That could boost Google's Internet ads business.

"Success is tens of millions of users using these products. That's what we work towards," Pichai said.
Google will earn 5 percent on every application sold through its online store, enough to cover costs, while most of the revenue goes to its developers.

Apple, maker of iPhone and iPad, said in October that it would open an applications store for its Macintosh computers as it tries to replicate the success of iPhone apps. That store is expected to go live early next year.

Google has begun a pilot program distributing prototypes to schools, businesses, developers and other users with the intent of collecting feedback.The all-black "CR 48" prototypes come with 12.1-inch screens, 3G connectivity and webcams, but do not have any logos or branding.

The Chrome Internet browser, on which the operating system is based, has 120 million users, Google executives said. In May, it had 70 million.Google shares closed up 1.5 percent at $587.14.

iPad 2 to start shipping as early as Feb

Apple Inc's next iPad tablet will start shipping as early as the end of February from electronics maker Foxconn Electronics' factories in China, DigiTimes reported on Tuesday.

The report, citing unnamed sources from Taiwan-based components makers, said Apple originally planned to start mass production of the new device, known as iPad 2, in January.

Those plans were postponed since the device's firmware, or set of software instructions that are programmed into the device's hardware, was still being tested, according to the report.

The iPad 2 will mainly be supplied by plants in Shenzhen belonging to Foxconn, the parent company of Hon Hai, DigiTimes reported. An initial shipment of 400,000 to 600,000 units are expected.

An Apple spokesman declined to comment.

Apple sold 4.19 million iPads in the fiscal fourth quarter. That was lower than markets expected, but analysts expect sales to ramp up this holiday season as Apple resolves supply glitches.

Disclaimer: All information on this news has been compiled from their respective official websites or through public domain sites and leading newspapers. Although, we have taken reasonable efforts to provide you with accurate information, but we assumes no responsibility for the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of the Information and would advise you to verify it from the official product provider. We cannot guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct. If you would like to advertise on our site please contact us

FaceBook founder rolls out changes to profile pages

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has unveiled changes to member profile pages and said the movie "The Social Network" got "hugely basic" things wrong about the origins of the site.

Zuckerberg, in an interview yesterday, said he turned down an opportunity to sell Facebook to Yahoo! for one billion dollars four years ago and made it clear he is in no hurry to take the company public.

The 26-year-old Facebook chief executive also defended his approach to the privacy of the social network's more than 500 million users, saying "we never sell your information."Advertisers who are using the site never get access to your information," he said. "It's against all of our policies for an application to ever share information with advertisers.

"Now, do we get it right all the time? No!" he said. "But it's something that we take really seriously."

The new profile pages highlight recent pictures in which a member has been "tagged" in a bar at the top of the page along with biographical information such as where a member is from, where they went to school, their relationship status and where they work.

"People love photos," Zuckerberg said. "Photos originally weren't that big a part of the idea for Facebook, but we just found that people really like them, so we built out this functionality."

The new profile pages should be available to all of Facebook's users by early next year, Josh Wiseman, a Facebook engineer, said in a blog post.

Facebook members can highlight their most important friends on their new profile, create new groups of friends or share activities and interests such as favourite musicians and sports teams.

Speaking of "The Social Network," Zuckerberg said "we took the whole company to go see the movie" and "I actually thought it was pretty fun.

"It's pretty interesting to see what parts they got right and what parts they got wrong," he said. "I think that they got every single T-shirt that they had the Mark Zuckerberg character wearing right. And they got sandals right and all that.

Disclaimer: All information on this news has been compiled from their respective official websites or through public domain sites and leading newspapers. Although, we have taken reasonable efforts to provide you with accurate information, but we assumes no responsibility for the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of the Information and would advise you to verify it from the official product provider. We cannot guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct. If you would like to advertise on our site please contact us

Google Targets Laptops

Google Inc. demonstrated the first laptops running on the company's coming Chrome operating system, a move by the Internet giant that challenges Microsoft Corp.'s lucrative Windows franchise.

The computers use operating-system software that is based largely on Google's Chrome Web browser. The computers are designed primarily to run Web-based applications, as Google hopes to shift software development away from applications anchored to personal-computer operating systems such as Windows.
Because they rely on Web-based apps, the Chrome devices boot up in a matter of seconds. But the laptops will have limited capability when users aren't online. "We're delivering nothing but the Web," said Sundar Pichai, a Google vice president who led the Chrome team, at a launch event in San Francisco.
Laptops running what Google calls Chrome OS will first be manufactured by Acer Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. and will go on sale in mid-2011, Mr. Pichai said. He didn't offer pricing information. Other manufacturers are also building devices running the software, he said.
Perfecting Chrome OS has taken longer than expected, and Google executives said the company was fixing various problems and implementing features that are currently missing. The company previously said its hardware partners planned to introduce Chrome devices to consumers by the end of 2010.
Google said it is launching a pilot program where it will give out test notebook PCs running Chrome to qualified users, developers, schools and businesses. "We're not done yet" refining the software, "but Chrome OS is at the stage where we need feedback from real users," wrote Mr. Pichai and Linus Upson, a Google vice president of engineering, in a blog post.
Chrome-powered laptops, which sport conventional keyboards, bear some resemblance to low-priced laptops called netbooks that emerged in the past few years. That category has cooled considerably of late, in part because of buyer enthusiasm over tablet-style devices such as Apple Inc.'s iPad.
The Google Android software used on smartphones, which can be commanded with touch gestures on a screen, is being adapted by some manufacturers for use in tablets. Andy Rubin, the Google vice president who heads the Android effort, on Monday demonstrated a Motorola Inc. prototype tablet powered by a coming version of Android—dubbed Honeycomb—that is being tailored for tablets.
To ensure that Chrome laptops always stay online, Google said it is working with Verizon Wireless to offer free wireless Internet connectivity—allowing users to send and receive up to 100 megabytes of data every month for two years. More robust Verizon data plans are available for purchase starting at $9.99 a month, Google said.
Like its Android operating software for mobile devices, Google is licensing Chrome OS to hardware makers for free. Microsoft typically charges hardware makers a fee to sell devices with Windows. A Microsoft spokesman declined to comment.

Google also launched an online applications market called the Chrome Web store that includes apps from news organizations, game makers such as Electronic Arts Inc., e-commerce companies including Amazon.com Inc. and other developers that can run on the Chrome browser. The apps make use of the latest browser technology to offer richer graphics, among other things.
Some of the Chrome apps are free while others are available for a fee, similar to the app markets for Apple and Android mobile devices.
The company will take 5% of revenue generated by app developers, less than the typical 30% revenue share for Android and Apple app stores.
Though the new software will not directly generate revenue, the Google search engine is built into the Chrome browser so distribution of the operating software could help maintain Google's core business. And the Chrome Web store will feature Google's own online applications such as Google Docs, a word-processing program, and Google Maps. Mr. Pichai said Google also was considering selling Chrome OS directly to companies for a fee.
With Chrome, Google is also making a play at the corporate market. It showed how workers could access their companies' software such as Microsoft Excel directly through the Chrome browser on Chrome devices.
For example, Citrix Systems, which helps banks, retailers and other companies access their business software from the Internet, said on Tuesday that its customers could reach their Microsoft data and documents through Chrome.
Google already challenges Microsoft in the area of business software by selling a suite of programs such as its email product Gmail and Google Docs, among others, to try to compete with Microsoft's Office suite of programs.
Greg Sterling an analyst with the research firm Sterling Market Intelligence, said Chrome OS laptops, which are expected to cost less than many other laptops, could be "very appealing" to businesses.
"The speed of Internet access is compelling," says Jeff Barney, a vice president at Toshiba America Information Systems, which is building a Chrome laptop. "Chrome is a vision of always being in touch" and is a fast way to access online content, he said.

Disclaimer: All information on this news has been compiled from their respective official websites or through public domain sites and leading newspapers. Although, we have taken reasonable efforts to provide you with accurate information, but we assumes no responsibility for the accuracy (or inaccuracy) of the Information and would advise you to verify it from the official product provider. We cannot guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct. If you would like to advertise on our site please contact us