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London Formula E track revealed

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 22 Februari 2015 | 23.22

19 February 2015 Last updated at 18:09

The route for the London race of the first Formula E season has been announced.

The world's first fully electric motor racing series will finish in London with two rounds held on 27 and 28 June.

A specially created 15 turn, 3km circuit will be created to run through Battersea Park in south London.

British racing driver Sam Bird said the track had "fast straights, high-speed bends, as well as some challenging chicanes and braking zones."

Bird, who competes for the UK-based Virgin Racing team, added: "The track is in the beautiful Battersea Park, right next to the River Thames, just across from Chelsea and with some of the most famous features of London's skyline in the background.

"I think the London ePrix spectators will be treated to some close, fast racing with plenty of action and overtaking."

The FIA Formula E Championship began last September in China and the season will include races in Argentina, Monaco and Germany.

Alejandro Agag, CEO of Formula E, said: "Having two races in London - the final two of the season - was an option we discussed at length with Wandsworth Council and means that London could well be where the inaugural champion is crowned, making it a fantastic spectacle for the city and a great platform to showcase sustainable mobility and clean energy.

"We will now begin preparations for bringing urban electric racing to London but of course that means working closely with all parties and local residents' groups to ensure that we remain sympathetic to all park users."


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US and UK 'hacked Sim card firm'

20 February 2015 Last updated at 14:32

US and British intelligence agencies hacked into a major manufacturer of Sim cards in order to steal codes that facilitate eavesdropping on mobiles, a US news website says.

The Intercept says the revelations came from US intelligence contractor turned whistleblower Edward Snowden.

The Dutch company allegedly targeted - Gemalto - says it is taking the allegations "very seriously".

It operates in 85 countries and has more than 40 manufacturing facilities.

The Intercept says that "the great Sim heist" gave US and British surveillance agencies "the potential to secretly monitor a large portion of the world's cellular communications, including both voice and data".

It says that among the clients of the Netherlands-based company are AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint and "some 450 wireless network providers around the world".

Full investigation

The Intercept alleges that the hack organised by Britain's GCHQ and the US National Security Agency (NSA) began in 2010, and was organised by operatives in the "Mobile Handset Exploitation Team". Neither agency has commented directly on the allegations.

However GCHQ reiterated that all its activities were "carried out in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate".

How does the hack work?

Each Sim card has an individual encryption key, installed by the chip manufacturer, that secures communications between the handset in which it inserted and mobile phone masts.

This means that if anyone were to snoop on conversations or text messages, they would receive garbled, unintelligible data.

That is, of course, unless those carrying out the surveillance get hold of the encryption key. With that information, they can even decrypt previously intercepted communications.

However, this tactic only works for phone conversations and text messages. Communications through mobile applications such as Whatsapp, iMessage and many email services have separate encryption systems.

The stolen encryption allowed the agencies to decode data that passes between mobile phones and cell towers. They were able to decrypt calls, texts or emails intercepted out of the air.

A Gemalto spokeswoman said the company was unable to verify whether there had indeed been a breach, and highlighted that other Sim manufacturers could also have been targeted.

She added: "We take this publication very seriously and will devote all resources necessary to fully investigate and understand the scope of such highly sophisticated techniques to try to obtain Sim card data".

Global ripples

Reacting to The Intercept's revelations, Eric King, deputy director of the campaign group Privacy International, said the NSA and GCHQ had "lost sight of what the rule of law means and how to weigh what is necessary and proportionate".

He said trust in the security of our communications systems is "essential for our society and for businesses to operate with confidence". And the impact of these latest revelations will have "ripples all over the world."

Privacy International is currently engaged in legal action against GCHQ over its alleged hacking practices.

Gemalto makes Sim cards for mobile phones and furnishes service providers with encryption codes to keep the data on each phone private.

The Intercept claims that by first cyber-stalking employees at Gemalto and then penetrating their emails, the spy agencies were able to steal thousands of encryption keys at source.

This would allow them to eavesdrop easily on phone calls and texts without seeking permission from telecoms companies or foreign governments, and without leaving a trace.

The Intercept cites as its source documents leaked by Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who is currently living in Russia.

'Weakest link'

Karsten Nohl, a security researcher who has exposed previous Sim card vulnerabilities, told the BBC the leak showed that "it is still not terribly difficult" to circumvent encryptions on mobile phone communications.

He added that since it was Gemalto, and not the mobile providers, which sets Sim encryption codes, this makes the Dutch firm the "weakest link of the security chain".

Other Gemalto clients, such as passport agencies, buy blank chips and set the codes themselves.

"A lot of telecom companies will be scrambling to find out what went wrong," said Mr Nohl.

Analysis: Joe Miller, BBC technology reporter

If The Intercept's report is to be believed, the most striking discovery is how easily those wanting to engage in mass surveillance can eavesdrop on our mobile communications.

Gemalto, the company which was allegedly targeted, manufactures an estimated 30% of all Sim cards worldwide. And crucially, it creates the security key for each item. All security agencies needed to do was obtain (by hacking, allegedly) the list of security keys from the firm. Then, as security expert Karsten Nohl says, they could snoop on phone calls with a "few hundred dollars worth of radio equipment in strategically important locations".

This contrasts with security procedures used, for example, for chips in passports. Many are are also manufactured by Gemalto. These are delivered to the relevant authorities as a blank chip, and the Passport Office - not the company - creates the security key.

Many of Edward Snowden's allegations have shone a light on complex surveillance tactics by the NSA. But perhaps this latest leak has done more to highlight how a single company is in control of millions of people's private data.


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Lenovo offers fix for hidden adware

21 February 2015 Last updated at 15:55

Chinese computer maker Lenovo is offering customers a tool to help them remove pre-installed software that experts warned was a security risk.

The Superfish adware program - which offered shopping tips - was shipped on some of the company's notebook devices.

Lenovo said on Thursday it had disabled it because of customer complaints.

But a later statement said the company was also aware of a security risks about the software, and the company was "focused on fixing it".

"We apologise for causing these concerns among our users - we are learning from this experience and will use it to improve what we do and how we do it in the future," the company said.

Lenovo said it had acted "swiftly and decisively" and that users could download a patch to remove Superfish.

Superfish was designed to help users find products by visually analysing images on the web to find the cheapest ones.

Users had initially complained about intrusive pop-up ads appearing on their browsers.

Computer experts later warned that the software was potentially compromising their security.

Superfish appears to work by substituting its own security key for the encryption certificates used by many websites.

This would allow it - or anyone who hacked Superfish - to collect data over secure web connections.


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Motorola boss at odds with Jony Ive

18 February 2015 Last updated at 16:05 By Leo Kelion Technology desk editor

Motorola's president has defended its "build-your-phone" programme after harsh words from Apple's lead designer.

Jony Ive appeared to attack the Moto Maker scheme in an interview in which he criticised the idea of giving consumers huge choice over how their handsets were made to appear.

Rick Osterloh, president of Motorola, told the BBC his company had a "different philosophy".

And he criticised Apple in turn, calling its prices "outrageous".

Sir Jonathan specifically asked the New Yorker magazine not to name the company he had been "scathing about", but a campaign launched by Motorola in late 2013 matches the description he gave.

"Their value proposition was, 'Make it whatever you want. You can choose whatever colour you want,'" Sir Jonathan is quoted as saying.

"And I believe that's abdicating your responsibility as a designer."

Motorola promotes Moto Maker as offering shoppers "thousands of ways" to customise its Android-powered Moto X handsets. Choices include the colour of the model's back, the type of metal trim used and the option to include a variety of leathers in its design.

Mr Osterloh of the scheme: "Our belief is that the end user should be directly involved in the process of designing products.

"We're making the entire product line accessible.

"And frankly, we're taking a directly opposite approach to them [Apple]."

He added that he believed this difference in strategy went wider than design.

"We do see a real dichotomy in this marketplace, where you've got people like Apple making so much money and charging such outrageous prices. We think that's not the future," he said.

"We believe the future is in offering similar experiences and great consumer choice at accessible prices.

"The mobile phone industry's greatest failure is also its greatest opportunity: to make really good, affordable devices for people who don't want to spend a lot of money.

"A great smartphone, and a great mobile internet experience, shouldn't be an expensive luxury. It should be a simple choice for everyone."

Motorola launched Moto Maker while owned by Google, but it has since become a division of China's Lenovo.

'Insipid' cars

Sir Jonathan - who was knighted in 2012 for his services to design - was also critical of another brand, in the New Yorker article, suggesting Toyota's Echo model was "shocking".

"It is baffling, isn't it? It's just nothing, isn't it? It's just insipid," he said of the vehicle, which is also sold as the Yaris.

A spokeswoman for Toyota declined to comment.

Sir Jonathan did, however, praise Bentley's vehicles, saying he "loved" their designs.

According to reports by the Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal, Apple is working on a car as a possible follow-up to its forthcoming smartwatch.


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'Revenge porn' mogul pleads guilty

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Oscars films see online piracy surge

19 February 2015 Last updated at 15:09 By Leo Kelion Technology desk editor

American Sniper would win best picture and Birdman's Alejandro Inarritu best director if the Oscars were determined by online piracy rates, a study says.

It suggests being nominated in one of the four major categories has a particularly profound effect on illegal downloads of indie and art house films.

The authors suggest that producers of such movies become more flexible about how and when their titles are released.

But one industry expert said that was easier said than done.

The report was carried out by Irdeto, a Netherlands-based company that sells piracy controls to the pay-TV sector.

It used "crawler" software to monitor downloads via Bittorrent peer-to-peer file-sharing services around the world and says its figures represent the minimum number of illegal downloads.

As part of the study, the company compared the amount of piracy in the week before nominations with the week after.

Selma, Wild, American Sniper, Still Alice and Birdman saw some of the biggest swings in popularity, and each accounted for more than 100,000 downloads.

By contrast, two other films that had been tipped for the awards but failed to secure nominations in the major categories did not experience similar demand: Mr Turner has been downloaded 9,086 times since 15 January, and Inherent Vice has been downloaded 53,008 times, according to the study.

Title Illegal downloads since nomination Piracy rate increase Major nominations

Source: Irdeto, covering the period running up to 14 February

American Sniper

1,389,819

230%

Picture, actor

Gone Girl

1,252,074

83%

Actress

Birdman

796,697

192%

Picture, director, actor

The Theory of Everything

776,239

161%

Picture, actress, actor

The Grand Budapest Hotel

636,292

41%

Picture, director

The Imitation Game

467,700

175%

Picture, director, actor

Whiplash

325,782

171%

Picture

Boyhood

244,270

23%

Picture, director

Wild

163,652

(pre-nomination piracy not detected)

Actress

Selma

144,075

1033%

Picture

Foxcatcher

118,323

78%

Director, actor

Still Alice

108,660

194%

Actress

Two Days, One Night

85,166

73%

Actress

For comparison's sake, the study also provided download figures for three big-budget mainstream films over the same post-nomination period:

  • Interstellar - 1.4 million downloads
  • The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies - 1.3 million downloads
  • John Wick - 1.3 million downloads
Collapsed windows

Irdeto suggests the Oscar nominations and resulting media coverage drove many users to search for the films on illegal sites, and it noted the DVDs used to let Academy Awards voters watch and judge the movies sometimes became the source of the pirated files.

The company acknowledged that not every download represented a lost sale, but it suggested the activity was particularly damaging to films that would not be classed a conventional "blockbusters".

"The Oscars are traditionally a time for independent and less mainstream movies to generate significant revenues," said Rory O'Connor, the company's vice-president of services.

"In the past, such high quality movies could be funded through the Oscars mechanism by reaching a broader public - [distributors] might not have had such a big budget to publicise the films first time round, but they could then piggyback the Oscars media campaign.

"But that mechanism is breaking down because of piracy."

He added that a solution would be for "windows" - used to stagger a film's initial cinema release and its later screenings in other countries and sale on other formats - to be "collapsed".

So, if a film was nominated, it could be offered for rent or sale around the world shortly after, to provide an alternative to piracy.

"People are willing to pay premium pricing for good quality and early availability [on their home TV], so I think there is an opportunity to compensate for the revenue that may be lost from a cinematic release," Mr O'Connor said.

'Caught in a bind'

However, an adviser to the Independent Film and Television Alliance said its members had less latitude to act than the major studios, which control their own films' releases.

Bertrand Moullier said smaller movies often relied on funding from local distributors who bought the release rights before filming started.

These distributors might be unwilling to suddenly change their plans, he said, because of concerns the films would then clash with others coming out locally at the same time.

"We are caught in a bit of a bind because [the idea of] beating piracy by releasing a movie everywhere in a saturation-release pattern to beat the peer-to-peer sharers is logically right," said Mr Moullier.

"Unfortunately, it also goes against the grain of how independent films must be assembled and put together.

"But [relying on local distributors] is also a very effective way of making sure a film gets the right adapted marketing strategy in each of the cultures where it's shown."


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Google Street View maps Greenland

19 February 2015 Last updated at 17:11

Google has extended its Street View feature to take in the scenes of sparsely populated Greenland.

The internet giant has published immersive images of some of the island's most impressive landscapes, including the Ilulissat Icefjord and the Nuutoqaq harbour.

The country is the 66th to be incorporated into the feature.

One of the images was taken from the top of a hill in Kujalleq, southern Greenland.

The images are immersive, meaning the user can rotate them in any direction. Another was of Brattahlid, the settlement founded by Erik the Red, who set up the first Viking colony on Greenland.

Erik the Red was a Norwegian, who discovered Greenland after being banished from Iceland.

He is said to have spread word of "the green land" among people living in Iceland on his return there in 985. Some Icelanders subsequently made the trip and decided to settle in Greenland.

His son Leif Eriksson later voyaged to North America - 500 years before Christopher Columbus.

Another centuries-old human site to be documented was the Hvalsey church, in the south of Greenland.

Alex Starns, Street View's technical program manager, wrote in a blog post: "At the abandoned settlement Hvalsey, you can visit Hvalsey church, the best preserved Norse ruins in Greenland. The church was also the location of the last written record of the Greenlandic Norse in 1408."

The Street View team also used boats to capture images of Ilulissat Icefjord.

"Floating by Ilulissat, you can see why the breathtaking Ilulissat Icefjord is the country's most popular tourist destination. Also an Unesco World Heritage site, the stunning ice wall seems to defy gravity as it reaches up into the clear, blue sky," wrote Mr Starns.

Another image was of the statue of Hans Egede, the Danish-Norwegian explorer who founded the town of Nuuk.


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Glitch trips up top computer school

19 February 2015 Last updated at 17:27

Carnegie Mellon University has apologised after it mistakenly sent out 800 admission letters via email to its prestigious computer science programme.

Applicants to the top-ranked graduate programme received the erroneous email that they were "one of the select few" admitted, on Monday morning.

Emails correcting the computer glitch went out almost seven hours later.

The US university said the error was the "result of serious mistakes" in generating acceptance letters.

Carnegie Mellon said it was "currently reviewing our notification process to help ensure this does not happen in the future".

Based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Carnegie Mellon ranks alongside the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University in California as one of the top schools for computer engineering in the US.

"We understand the disappointment created by this mistake, and deeply apologise to the applicants for this miscommunication."

Ben Leibowitz said he called up his relatives to share the good news when he got the initial email, then went out to dinner to celebrate with his parents.

But hours later, he got a second email, informing him he was not actually among one of 100 students accepted to the computer science programme.

"It was brutal. I didn't get much sleep last night,'' Mr Leibowitz told the Associated Press news agency. "Now I have to clean up the mess. I'm calling all my relatives, I'm going, 'I'm sorry it's not happening.'"

The university is not the first to send out acceptance letters to those not actually admitted to competitive programmes.

In December, Johns Hopkins University mistakenly sent nearly 300 undergraduate applicants welcome messages when they were actually rejected or deferred.

And in 2009, the University of California at San Diego sent acceptance emails to their entire applicant pool that year - 46,000 students.


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YouTube to launch kids' app

20 February 2015 Last updated at 12:21

YouTube will launch a new app specifically for children on Monday in a bid to make using the service safer.

It is understood that YouTube Kids will have parental controls and restrictions on who can upload content.

The app will run separately to the main YouTube service and it will initially be available in the US only, but it is understood that it will be rolled-out in the UK later.

The move has been welcomed by the NSPCC child protection charity.

A spokesman for the charity said: "Keeping children safe online is the biggest child protection challenge of this generation. So it's good to hear about the launch of YouTube Kids.

"I'm sure it will be embraced by parents wanting increased reassurance that their younger children won't be exposed to inappropriate material."

The parental controls will include the ability to limit the amount of time children can spend watching videos, as well as a tool allowing the search function to be switched off, it is understood.

YouTube Kids will have channels and playlists organised into four categories: Shows, Music, Learning and Explore. Users will also be able to search for individual topics.

The app will be free, but it will be available on Google's Android devices only.

DreamWorks TV, Jim Henson TV and Mother Goose Club will be some of the content providers, the BBC understands.

YouTube Kids product manager Shimrit Ben-Yair said: "Parents were constantly asking us, can you make YouTube a better place for our kids.

"We've seen 50% growth year over year in viewing time on YouTube, but for our family entertainment channels, it's more like 200%."


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Google-backed genetic test approved

20 February 2015 Last updated at 17:05 By Joe Miller Technology reporter

A Californian start-up will be allowed to advertise a mail order DNA test that screens for a rare genetic condition, after a U-turn by the US regulator.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), said the 23andMe product would "provide people with information about possible mutations in their genes that could be passed on to their children".

It had previously banned similar tests.

The 23andMe kit screens for Bloom syndrome, an inherited disease that is most common among Ashkenazi Jews.

It can detect whether a healthy person is a carrier of the genetic variant that causes the disorder, and therefore at risk of passing it on to their offspring.

'No test is perfect'

In a statement, the FDA also said it would provide the "least burdensome regulatory path" for future projects from 23andMe and similar companies.

"In many circumstances it is not necessary for consumers to go through a licensed practitioner to have direct access to their personal genetic information," the regulator added.

The decision contrasts with the FDA's stance in 2013, when it ordered 23andMe to "immediately discontinue" selling its saliva collection tests after failing to provide information to back its marketing claims.

The $99 test had offered users a readout of their genetic code, including a detailed analysis of their health risks.

However, despite giving the Bloom syndrome kit a green light, the FDA cautioned that "no test is perfect" and suggested that the kit should only be used by those likely to carry a relevant gene.

Informative labelling and information on how to follow up with a medical professional must be provided by 23andMe, the FDA said.

Equipment used during the 23andMe DNA test

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Anne Wojcicki, of 23andMe: "We're really partnering with the consumer"

'Major milestone'

While welcoming the FDA's decision, 23andMe said it would "not return health results on individually cleared reports" until it had a "comprehensive product offering" in place.

The health tech company, which is backed by Google, has been operating since 2006 and was co-founded by Anne Wojcicki, its chief executive, who married Google co-founder Sergey Brin in 2007.

"This is a major milestone for our company and for consumers who want direct access to genetic testing," she said in a blog post.

"We have more work to do, but we remain committed to pursuing a regulatory path for additional tests and bringing the health reports back to the US market.


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Virgin to invest £3bn in broadband

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 15 Februari 2015 | 23.22

13 February 2015 Last updated at 11:02

Virgin Media has announced it is to invest £3bn in improving its fibre optic broadband network, increasing the network's reach from 13 million to 17 million homes.

It says it is the biggest investment in broadband infrastructure in the UK for more than a decade.

Virgin said the investment would also create 6,000 new jobs of which 1,000 would be apprenticeships.

Virgin Media currently has five million customers.

The company is already in the process of expanding its network to 110,000 homes across east London, Glasgow, Sunderland and Teesside.

Tom Mockridge

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Virgin chief executive Tom Mockridge: "Top speed broadband is essential to economic performance"

Virgin Media said the additional £3bn in broadband investment would be worth £8bn in terms of stimulating UK economic activity.

However, the money will be spent on filling in gaps in its existing network rather than widening the network to rural areas, which critics say has long been neglected by communications companies such as Virgin and BT.

Speaking to the BBC, Virgin chief executive Tom Mockridge said it was BT's job to do more to bridge the so-called "digital divide".

Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, technology correspondent

Virgin Media chief executive Tom Mockridge compares the expansion of its broadband network to the building of the railways by the Victorians or the rollout of the motorways in the 20th Century.

That sounds just a touch hyperbolic, but this is indeed one of the biggest investments we've seen in the UK's internet infrastructure, made possible by the deep pockets of Virgin's owners, Liberty Global.

What the money will do is fill in the gaps left in the network when the old cable companies ran out of money in the 1990s. That will mean that streets in urban areas where BT's superfast broadband is the only game in town should now get a choice of supplier.

What it won't do is bring high-speed services to what's known as the final third - rural Britain, where it is hard to make the economics of laying fibre cables to every home add up.

That job is being left to BT - aided by public funds, mainly money set aside from the TV licence fee. BT, which is preparing to take over EE and become the dominant player in fixed and mobile broadband, may quietly welcome today's announcement.

A stronger Virgin Media network may make regulators less inclined to worry about its dominance.

He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "I think an investment of this size is unambiguously helping to close the digital divide. Everything can't happen at once so we are really focusing on the areas where we can bring ultra fast broadband as quickly as possible and as effectively as possible."

He also called on BT to do more to invest in improving existing infrastructure to help speed up internet services in the countryside.

The investment comes at Virgin Media announced a 2.3% increase in total revenues to £4.214bn for the year to the end of December compared with a year earlier.

Virgin said the increase in revenue was largely the result of increased cable subscription revenue, which grew 3% last year.


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Facebook offers after-death controls

12 February 2015 Last updated at 15:49

Facebook has added a new setting that gives users the option of having their account permanently deleted when they die.

Or, if they wish, they can choose to appoint a friend or family member to take control of some aspects of the account after their death.

These features were among the most requested by users who gave feedback on its memorial page policies.

Facebook's legacy contact feature will initially only be available in the US.

Announcing the new feature, Facebook said: "When a person passes away, their account can become a memorial of their life, friendships and experience.

"By talking to people who have experienced loss, we realised there is more we can do to support those who are grieving and those who want a say in what happens to their account after death."

If a user chooses to allow someone to manage their page in the event of their death, that person will be able to

  • write a post to display at the top of the memorialised timeline
  • respond to new friend requests
  • update the profile picture and cover photo

People can also choose to give their legacy contact permission to download an archive of the photos, posts and profile information they shared on Facebook.

Other settings will remain the same. The legacy contact will not be able to log in as the person who died or see their private messages.

Facebook has been looking at ways to help families remember loved ones following a series of high-profile cases in which people wanted to access dead relative's pages.

In one a father wanted to create a video using Facebook's Look Back feature, which brings together popular moments on a person's profile.

But because he could not access his son's profile he was unable to make one.

Facebook said it would create one on behalf of his dead son and promised that they would look again at how to help families in similar circumstances.

In 2009, Facebook introduced a memorialising process which meant that a user who had died would no longer appear alongside advertising, or in contextual messages - and friends would not be reminded of a person's birthday.


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Apple bans worker 'bonded servitude'

12 February 2015 Last updated at 13:48

Apple has banned the practice of bonded labour - where new recruits are charged a fee - from its factories.

In its latest audit of factory conditions, the iPhone maker said that any such fee must be paid by its supplier and not the employee.

Apple began the audits following criticism of the working conditions in some of its factories.

It comes as a report from labour rights group China Labor Watch questioned the low wages earned by some Apple workers.

Deeply offended

Its 2015 Supplier Responsibility Progress report said it had told its suppliers in October that it was outlawing bonded servitude from the beginning of this year.

"That fee needs to be paid by the supplier, and Apple ultimately bears that fee when we pay the supplier, and we're OK doing that," said Jeff Williams, Apple's senior vice-president of operations.

Bonded servitude or labour sees new workers charged a fee - sometimes equivalent to a month's salary or more - for being introduced to a factory, typically by third-party recruiters.

It means many employees will begin work in debt. Some have their passports confiscated.

A BBC Panorama programme investigation last year highlighted the poor treatment of workers in Chinese factories.

Undercover filming at one of Apple's factories - Pegatron - showed new recruits handing over ID cards, in breach of Apple's standards.

Apple, which declined to be interviewed for the programme, denied the allegations of poor working conditions and long hours and said it was deeply offended by the allegations.

On the same day that Apple published its audit, labour rights group China Labor Watch (CLW) released a report saying the company was unable to effectively monitor standards in some of its supply chain, allowing companies such as Pegatron to keep base wages below local living expenses.

CLW based its findings on 96 pay stubs submitted by an unknown number of employees. It suggested that low pay compelled workers to put in more hours.

Conflict minerals

Conditions in Chinese factories were first highlighted in 2010 after 14 workers killed themselves at a factory run by Apple's biggest supplier, Foxconn.

Long hours, harsh working conditions and low wages were said to be partly to blame.

In February 2012 the hardware giant announced that its factories would be inspected by the Fair Labour Association (FLA).

This is its ninth annual audit, and Apple was keen to show off the progress it has made in improving conditions.

It said that it had tracked more than 1.1 million workers on average per week in 2014 and that suppliers had achieved 92% compliance with its 60-hour maximum working week.

"We consistently report suppliers' violations of our standards," Mr Williams wrote in Apple's report. "People sometimes point to the discovery of problems as evidence that our process isn't working. Nothing could be further from the truth."

Apple has previously cracked down on excessive recruitment fees that foreign contract workers pay to labour brokers. It ruled that anything more than one month's wages had to be repaid.

Last year suppliers repaid $3.96m (£2.57m) in excess fees to more than 4,500 foreign contractors, according to the audit.

It also said that it continued to take steps to stop the use of minerals from mines in conflict regions such as those in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The company said it had more than doubled the number of verified conflict-free smelts to 135 last year. Another 64 were in the process of being verified.


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Attack downs Dutch government sites

12 February 2015 Last updated at 13:28

A cyber-attack took down most of the Dutch government's websites on Tuesday, it has been confirmed.

The attack, which also took down some private sites, highlighted the vulnerability of public infrastructure.

It came as the US beefed up its defences, and followed warnings that sites belonging to the French authorities had been targeted.

Dutch MPs demanded that the government ensures state sites were capable of withstanding similar attacks in future.

In a statement, the Dutch government confirmed that it had been the victim of a distributed denial of service attack (DDoS), in which servers are flooded with traffic, causing the sites to fail to load.

Investigators were looking into the attack "together with the people from the National Centre for Cyber-Security", said Rimbert Kloosterman, an official at the Dutch Government Information Service, which runs the affected websites.

In a statement, the government said that the sites had gone down at 10:00 local time (09:00 GMT) on Tuesday and "lasted into the evening".

Complex problem

Other websites, including GeenStijl.nl, a popular portal that mocks politicians and religions, had been hit by the DDoS, said Mr Kloosterman.

Communications provider Telford had also been affected.

The complexity and size of the government's many websites had rendered the back-up useless, he added.

The problem affected most of the central government's major websites, which provide information to the public and the media, but phones and emergency communication channels remained online.

Prolocation, the government website's host, said the attack had been a "complex" problem and that its phone lines had also gone down.

"The initial symptoms pointed first to a technical problem, but it then emerged we were facing an attack from the outside," the company said in a statement.

'Greater risk'

But one computer security expert doubted that such an attack could have been hard to identify. "If you face a DDoS, you know it," said Delft Technical University cyber-security specialist Christian Doerr.

Dave Larson, of Corero Network Security, said: "As enterprises increasingly rely on hosted critical infrastructure or services, they are placing themselves at even greater risk from these devastating cyber-threats - even as an indirect target."

He added that DDoS attacks were "increasingly being used as a smokescreen to hide even more malicious activity on the network".

Defences

On the same day as the Dutch attack, the US government announced the launch of an intelligence unit to coordinate analysis of cyber-threats, modelled on similar efforts to fight terrorism.

The Cyber Threat Intelligence Integration Center would fill "gaps" in the country's defences by rapidly pooling and disseminating data on breaches, it said.

In January, following attacks by Islamist militants in Paris, in which 17 people were murdered, French authorities said they had "decided to boost... security vigilance" after a series of cyber-attacks directed at French army regiments among others.


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Fitbit says Surge can cause rash

12 February 2015 Last updated at 18:54

Fitbit, the maker of wearable fitness trackers, has acknowledged that its latest device, the Surge, can cause a rash for some users.

It told news website TechCrunch that a "limited percentage" of users reported skin irritation and advised users to take a break from the device.

Fitbit was forced to recall its older Force wristband when a large number of users claimed it had caused skin rashs

It comes as a report compares the accuracy of fitness trackers.

"The reactions we are seeing with new products are not uncommon with jewellery or wearable devices that stay in contact with the skin for extended periods," Fitbit said in a statement.

"According to our consulting dermatologists, they are likely from wearing the band too tight, sweat, water, or soap behind held against the skin under the device: or from pressure or friction against the skin and should resolve quickly when users take a break from the device, usually within hours or days."

The Fitbit Surge - which costs $250 (£199) - was launched four months ago and soon after, users began posting photos of skin rashes caused by wearing the device on social media sites.

Shaun Ewing posted a picture of his rash on Twitter with the message: "Having a break from my @fitbit Surge. Might need to stop wearing it - nice rash (and my skin isn't usually sensitive)."

The firm had blamed nickel for causing the rashes for Force users although some reported that they previously had no such allergies.

"Fitbit's top priority in developing its new products was to eliminate the issues we had with Force. The reactions we are seeing with new products are different from the allergic reactions we saw with Force," a spokeswoman told the BBC.

More than 200 instances of skin irritation complaints on social media have been collected in a Google document started by one affected user.

Wearable accuracy

Meanwhile, a study comparing wearables to the fitness apps on smartphones suggests that the latter could be more accurate when it comes to measuring physical activity.

The study, led by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania tested a range of gadgets including the Fitbit Flex, Fitbit One, Nike's Fuelband, the Jawbone UP24.

Fourteen participants walked on a treadmill for 500 steps and then 1,500 steps, twice each, for a total of 56 trials.

Each wore a pedometer and two accelerometers on their waist, three wristbands and carried two smartphones in their pockets loaded with fitness apps.

The data from the smartphones was only slightly different than the observed step counts (with a range of -6.7 to 6.2% relative difference) compared to a -22.7 to 1.5% difference for the wearable devices.

Some wearables though - such as the Fitbit One and the Jawbone UP24 - proved to be very accurate. The study did not include smartwatches.

"Compared to the 1% to 2% of adults in the US that own a wearable device, more than 65% of adults carry a smartphone," said report author Mitesh S Patel.

"Our findings suggest that smartphone apps could prove to be a more widely accessible and affordable way of tracking health behaviours."

None of the wearables tested included heart rate sensors. The addition of such components has helped some of the latest generation of activity trackers become more accurate.


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Xiaomi to open online US store

12 February 2015 Last updated at 23:00

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi has announced that it will open an online store for US customers.

However, the company said it will not sell its popular smartphones and will instead offer lesser-known products such as headphones.

Xiaomi cited logistical issues like hardware certification as a reason why it wasn't yet ready to bring handsets to the US.

It said it hoped to instead build brand awareness with the Mi.com store.

Xiaomi has enjoyed a meteoric rise in China, where it has been hailed as the country's Apple for its popular smartphones which it sells at a fraction of the cost of an iPhone.

It's the world's most valuable privately held company, and its third biggest smartphone maker, selling 61 million handsets last year.


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Net pioneer warns of data Dark Age

13 February 2015 Last updated at 11:25 Pallab GhoshBy Pallab Ghosh Science correspondent, BBC News, San Jose
Vint Cerf

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Watch Pallab Ghosh's full interview with Vint Cerf, internet pioneer, on his "digital Dark Age" warning

Vint Cerf, a "father of the internet", says he is worried that all the images and documents we have been saving on computers will eventually be lost.

Currently a Google vice-president, he believes this could occur as hardware and software become obsolete.

He fears that future generations will have little or no record of the 21st Century as we enter what he describes as a "digital Dark Age".

Mr Cerf made his comments at a large science conference in San Jose.

Continue reading the main story

Even if we accumulate vast archives of digital content, we may not actually know what it is"

End Quote Vint Cerf Web pioneer and Google VP

He arrived at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science stylishly dressed in a three-piece suit. This iconic figure, who helped define how data packets move around the net, is possibly the only Google employee who wears a tie.

I felt obliged to thank him for the internet, and he bowed graciously. "One is glad to be of service," he said humbly.

His focus now is to resolve a new problem that threatens to eradicate our history.

Our life, our memories, our most cherished family photographs increasingly exist as bits of information - on our hard drives or in "the cloud". But as technology moves on, they risk being lost in the wake of an accelerating digital revolution.

Old computer

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What is the digital Dark Age? The BBC's Pallab Ghosh reports

"I worry a great deal about that," Mr Cerf told me. "You and I are experiencing things like this. Old formats of documents that we've created or presentations may not be readable by the latest version of the software because backwards compatibility is not always guaranteed.

"And so what can happen over time is that even if we accumulate vast archives of digital content, we may not actually know what it is."

'Digital vellum'

Vint Cerf is promoting an idea to preserve every piece of software and hardware so that it never becomes obsolete - just like what happens in a museum - but in digital form, in servers in the cloud.

If his idea works, the memories we hold so dear could be accessible for generations to come.

"The solution is to take an X-ray snapshot of the content and the application and the operating system together, with a description of the machine that it runs on, and preserve that for long periods of time. And that digital snapshot will recreate the past in the future."

A company would have to provide the service, and I suggested to Mr Cerf that few companies have lasted for hundreds of years. So how could we guarantee that both our personal memories and all human history would be safeguarded in the long run?

Even Google might not be around in the next millennium, I said.

"Plainly not," Vint Cerf laughed. "But I think it is amusing to imagine that it is the year 3000 and you've done a Google search. The X-ray snapshot we are trying to capture should be transportable from one place to another. So, I should be able to move it from the Google cloud to some other cloud, or move it into a machine I have.

"The key here is when you move those bits from one place to another, that you still know how to unpack them to correctly interpret the different parts. That is all achievable if we standardise the descriptions.

"And that's the key issue here - how do I ensure in the distant future that the standards are still known, and I can still interpret this carefully constructed X-ray snapshot?"

The concept of what Mr Cerf refers to as "digital vellum" has been demonstrated by Mahadev Satyanarayanan at Carnegie Mellon University.

"It's not without its rough edges but the major concept has been shown to work," Mr Cerf said.

Follow Pallab on Twitter


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Police shut 2,000 'fake goods' sites

13 February 2015 Last updated at 12:02

Two thousand websites selling fake luxury goods have been removed since the start of the year, UK police say.

Counterfeit goods from brands such as Burberry, Longchamp and Abercrombie & Fitch were among the products offered.

The raids were the result of a collaboration between brand-protection groups and internet registries.

The Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit, run by City of London Police, also warned the sites could be harbouring malicious software.

"The criminals behind these websites will often take advantage of your personal details, such as financial information, and so people may find their card has been compromised and used for other fraudulent scams," said Det Ch Insp Danny Medlycott, who heads the unit.

"The sites themselves can also be harmful, as they contain malware and viruses that can infect your computer.

As a general rule, "if it looks too good to be true, then it probably is", he said.

And heavily discounted products were "often a telltale sign that something isn't right", he added.

Top tips

The current police operation, known as Ashiko, has shut nearly 5,500 websites selling fake designer clothes, handbags, sunglasses, shoes and jewellery since it launched in October.

Oliver Guimaraes, MD of Globaleyez, which helps jewellery retailer Thomas Sabo to target counterfeiting, said there had been "a tremendous decrease" in websites selling fake products.

Police also issued some guidance:

  • Check the spelling and grammar on the website, as well as the URL - people running such sites often do not pay a lot of attention to that
  • Look to see where the trader is based and whether they provide a postal address - just because the web address contains "UK", do not assume the seller is based there
  • Only deal with reputable sellers - use sites that you know or which have been recommended to you. Check online reviews if you have not bought from the seller before.
  • Check the website is a legitimate stockist by visiting brand-i.org
  • Ensure the website address begins "https", which indicates it is secure
  • Don't access links in unsolicited emails; always type in the website address or use a search engine to find a site.

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Rural groups angry over Virgin plans

13 February 2015 Last updated at 16:01

Campaigners have expressed disappointment that Virgin Media's £3bn investment in broadband will not benefit rural areas.

The company said it had no plans to extend the network into the countryside, concentrating instead on expansion in towns and cities.

The decision could "exacerbate the rural-urban digital divide", said the Country and Land Association (CLA).

But a group that represents rural broadband providers was unsurprised.

"With £1.7bn of public funding going almost entirely through BT, it isn't surprising that an investment of this scale is focusing on areas that Virgin expects to see delivering better results," said Malcolm Corbett of the Independent Networks Co-operative Association.

Virgin Media currently has five million customers and its latest investment, which it claims is the biggest in broadband infrastructure in the UK for more than a decade, is expected to extend its network from 13 million to 17 million homes.

'Look beyond cities'

The CLA acknowledged it was not always profitable for private businesses to invest in remote areas.

However, a spokesman said it was "a pity that private companies are not putting the infrastructure in place to benefit rural business".

"What is clear is that rural areas will not be able to access speeds in excess of 30Mbps or 50Mbps for some time to come. All this does is show that the rural economy is neglected once again," he added.

Many rural business and families would like to be able take advantage of Virgin Media's Fibre to the Home technology, he said.

"BT's rollout of superfast broadband under the government's rural broadband programme relies on fibre to the cabinet (FTTC). This further disadvantages rural communities and businesses from effective connection speeds, because the further away a business is from the cabinet, the slower the speed."

Meanwhile the Countryside Alliance's head of policy, Sarah Lee, said it was "disappointing that the improvements will not be seen in rural areas, but we welcome this challenge to BT's monopoly".

"We hope this investment will encourage all broadband providers to look beyond the cityscape and invest in our countryside communities, to enable them to compete economically and socially in this digital world."


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Tech firms urged to share data with US

13 February 2015 Last updated at 22:19
President Obama speaks during a summit on cyber security and consumer protection

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President Obama: ''We have to make cyber-space safer''

Private tech firms should share more information with government and with each other to tackle cybercrime, according to US President Barack Obama.

"We have to work together like never before" Mr Obama said during a speech at a White House cybersecurity summit hosted in Silicon Valley.

The issue has become a White House priority since a widely publicised hack of Sony Pictures at the end of 2014.

But some key tech firms are concerned about government surveillance.

Senior Google, Yahoo and Facebook executives turned down invitations to the summit, held at Stanford University.

Relations between the US government and tech firms have been strained relations since electronic surveillance practices were exposed by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.

Mr Obama is backing the creation of information sharing and analysis organisations (ISAOs) to help firms and government share material on potential threats.

The plan calls for the development of a common set of voluntary standards for organisations to follow to ensure civil liberties protection, according to the White House.

Mr Obama has also launched an intelligence unit to co-ordinate cyber-threat analysis.

"Just as we're all connected like never before, we have to work together like never before, both to seize opportunities but also meet the challenges of this information age," Mr Obama said.

"Government cannot do this alone. But the fact is that the private sector can't do it alone either because it's government that often has the latest information on new threats."

But one cybersecurity analyst said the proposals "face significant headwinds" from both Congress and large US tech companies.

"Based on the Snowden leaks, these companies believe they've already been badly burned by the government, and have very little to gain by publicly backing the president's proposals," Ben Desjardins, director of security solutions at cybersecurity firm Radware told the Associated Press.

Analysis, Richard Taylor, North America technology correspondent

President Obama is bringing a message of inclusive collaboration to beat cyber threats, and a co-ordinated federal approach, superseding the patchwork of state laws, might seem sensible.

But the absence of Silicon Valley's most senior figures hints at a deep division between it and Washington. They are uneasy about allying strongly with an administration tarnished by Edward Snowden's revelations the NSA has spied extensively on their customers.

More than 18 months on, the tech goliaths are still struggling to rebuild users' trust and they are as keen to protect themselves from prying official eyes as they are from external malevolent hackers.

Mr Obama' own intelligence officials now say cybercrime poses a more pressing threat to national security than terrorism.

But the ongoing tension and mistrust between the security and tech communities does not auger well.

According to Bloomberg, Mark Zuckerberg and Marissa Mayer - chief executives of Facebook and Yahoo, respectively - and Google's Larry Page and Eric Schmidt all declined invitations.

Facebook, Yahoo, Google and Microsoft have all sent less senior executives to the conference.

Obama's cybersecurity push follows similar efforts by British Prime Minister David Cameron, who said in January that forms of communication that are resistant to surveillance measures should not be allowed.

His comments were interpreted as a direct attack on encrypted communications, such as Apple's FaceTime and Microsoft's Skype, among others.

The conference also took place in the aftermath of the hacking scandal that hit Sony Pictures and which the US authorities blamed on North Korea.

America and China have also taken more aggressive stances towards each other over cybersecurity recently, with the US charging a series of Chinese people with hacking last year.

The French authorities beefed up their security efforts after claiming to have detected attempts to launch cyber-attacks in the aftermath of the Paris terror attacks.

And this week the Dutch government fell victim to a distributed denial of service attack, which took many of its websites down by flooding them with traffic.


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Emoticons can rack up huge bills

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 08 Februari 2015 | 23.22

5 February 2015 Last updated at 16:11 By Jane Wakefield Technology reporter

People using the little icons that denote happy, sad or other emotions in their text messages could be racking up big bills, the BBC has learned.

Consumer website MoneySavingExpert has received a large number of complaints about the issue.

It seems to affect older models of phones, including some Samsung and Apple handsets.

In Scotland, a woman ran up bills totalling over £1,000 after adding emoticons to text messages.

Sad face

The issue revolves around how the handset interprets the icons, known as emoticons or emojis.

In some cases, especially on older handsets, the emoticons are converted into MMS (multi-media service) messages, which can cost up to 40p each depending on the network.

MoneySavingExpert also found that, in some cases, users creating their own icons from full-stops, commas and brackets found they were converted into emoticons, running up the same charges.

"We have seen many complaints from our users who have racked up huge bills for sending what they thought were text messages," Guy Anker, managing editor, told the BBC.

Paula Cochrane told the Daily Record that she had no idea that the emoticons were being charged as picture messages.

She complained to her provider EE and also plans to take her case to the Scottish ombudsman, an independent organisation that settles consumer complaints.

"There are a number of factors which can affect whether customers are charged for sending an emoji usually by the settings on the handset and so it is a manufacturer - rather than a network - issue," an EE spokesperson told the BBC.

Unlimited texts

Mr Anker thinks that operators need to take some of the blame.

"It is worth complaining to mobile phone providers if this was not made clear enough to you when you would be charged for a picture message," he said.

"Why on earth would someone sending a text message think it would be sent as a picture message?"

Many people will have a contract which allows unlimited texts but this may not apply to picture messages, he added.

"If you send a lot of these you may exceed your allowance very quickly," he said.

O2 said it had seen other examples of text messages converting into picture messages.

"If a customer is using a smartphone to send text messages to more than one person at the same time, they could be charged the cost of sending an MMS. It can also happen when the message contains icons, emoticons and symbols or an email address.

And some apps (such as Facebook) that integrate with a customer's contact list in their smartphone may result in an MMS charge too," it said in a statement.

"To stop this happening, customers should make sure they don't include symbols, icons or emoticons and also disable the integration between their contact list and apps like Facebook."

Some smartphones will alert customers when an SMS has converted to an MMS, it added.

Mr Anker advised users to regularly check their bills and also to consider using free text messaging services such as Apple's iMessage (which is free when sent to another Apple device) or WhatsApp.

Clear rules

In the autumn, Ofcom conducted a survey looking at all the reasons why people received higher-than-expected bills.

Emoticons being billed as picture messages had affected 4% of those who responded to the survey.

"Mobile network providers decide how these messages are charged, and Ofcom has clear rules in place to ensure prices are transparent.

"We would expect operators to make clear how much MMS messages cost under your tariff, and when those charges would apply," a spokesman told the BBC.


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Twitter earnings beat expectations

5 February 2015 Last updated at 22:56
Twitter profile on computer screen

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Can Twitter solve its user problem?

Twitter reported a net loss of $125m (£82m) in the fourth-quarter, beating analyst expectations.

It also said revenue grew faster than expected, increasing by 95% to $479m during the October to December period.

Total monthly active users were 288 million, an increase of 20% from the year earlier.

However, growth from last quarter was significantly slower: the site managed to add only four million users in the past three months.

Twitter tried to explain away the slowing growth, saying it lost approximately four million users during the period as a result of integrating various third-party applications.

Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo sought to allay fears about user growth, saying in a statement accompanying earnings: "The trend thus far in [the first quarter] leads us to believe that the absolute number of net users added in [the first quarter] will be similar to what we saw during the first three quarters of 2014."

In a memo to staff leaked earlier on Thursday, Mr Costolo warned that bullying behaviour on Twitter was turning away users.

Worryingly for investors, user growth in the US has all but slowed - the company said it had 63 million monthly active users in the lucrative US advertising market, the same as in the previous quarter.

However, so far the slowing user figures have not deterred advertisers.

Twitter said its advertising revenue increase to $432m in the fourth-quarter, an increase of 97% from the year before.

On a conference call to discuss earnings, Mr Costolo also confirmed that Twitter and Google had struck a deal, but remained coy on the details.

"I do want to confirm that we have a relationship that we have agreed to with Google," he said, but declined to provide specifics.

Bloomberg and the New York Times had earlier reported that Twitter had struck a deal with the search giant to possibly make Twitter's messages more visible in search results.

Shares in Twitter rose more than 9% in after-hours trading.

Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC technology correspondent

Twitter was born two years after Facebook, and its stock market debut happened about 18 months after the rival social network's IPO. But so far it has failed to match Facebook's trajectory in growing its user numbers and pleasing investors.

Revenue growth may have outpaced analysts' expectations, but Twitter investors know that a loss-making business can only justify an outlandish valuation if it promises to have a much wider audience in years to come.

20% annual growth in users might sound okay - but it represents a marked slowdown, and means that Twitter's audience is still just a fifth of the size of Facebook's.

A leaked memo from chief executive Dick Costolo expressed frustration at the fact that high-profile users were leaving because of abuse, and promised action to deal with trolls.

What is clear is this is now a vital financial as well as reputational issue. If users begin to see Twitter as an unfriendly place to spend their time, advertisers won't want to be there either.

For Dick Costolo and his senior team, the heat is on - they have much to prove in the coming months.


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Sony boss quits after email hack

6 February 2015 Last updated at 08:10

Sony Pictures' Amy Pascal has stepped down as co-chair of Sony's movie studio following a debilitating cyber attack that revealed her private emails.

Ms Pascal will start a production company that will launch in May 2015.

She has already apologised for certain revelations that came as a result of the leaked emails.

Last month, Sony condemned the "vicious" attack, which led it to suspend the release of the film 'The Interview'.

"I have spent almost my entire professional life at Sony Pictures and I am energized to be starting this new chapter based at the company I call home," said Ms Pascal in a statement.

She added that her transition to a production role had been discussed "for some time".

'Insensitive and inappropriate'

As part of the agreement, Sony will fund her production company for at least the next four years, and it will retain distribution rights.

Sony did not immediately name a successor to Ms Pascal, leaving Michael Lynton as the sole head of one of Hollywood's biggest production studios.

Ms Pascal was one of the highest profile Sony names whose emails were leaked as part of the hack.

She reportedly commented on the viewing habits of President Barack Obama in a derogatory manner in an email to producer Scott Rudin.

Ms Pascal and Mr Rudin both subsequently apologised for the emails, with Ms Pascal saying in a statement at the time: "The content of my emails to Scott were insensitive and inappropriate but are not an accurate reflection of who I am.

"Although this was a private communication that was stolen, I accept full responsibility for what I wrote and apologize to everyone who was offended."

Hack fallout

On 24 November, Sony revealed that it had been the subject of a hack by a group calling themselves Guardians of Peace (GOP).

GOP was later traced back to North Korea, who US authorities believe instituted the attack in retaliation for Sony's decision to produce 'The Interview', in which North Korea's leader Kim Jong-Un is killed.

The group gained access to the firm's network and stole huge amounts of internal information, including emails and copies of films, such as Annie, that had not yet been released.

Although Sony did withdraw The Interview before its planned release, it ultimately made it available to view online and allowed it to be shown at some cinemas.

The film made about $15m (£9.6m) through downloads alone over its first three days of distribution.


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Madonna releases video on Snapchat

Madonna on Snapchat

Madonna premieres the first music video from her new album, Rebel Heart, on Snapchat.

The singer's shared the video for Living for Love, the album's first single, on the new Snap Channel alongside a behind-the-scenes clip from the video shoot.

It all follows a leak of the star's 13th studio album ahead of its planned release on 10 March. This is the first music video to be published since the launch of SnapChat's "Discover" service.

We were hoping it might look like this...

Snapchat logo
Rebel ghost? How Madonna might have Snapchatted....

But it all looked a bit more like this...

Madonna

Snapchat has partnered with media companies to feature videos and news articles on the app.

After 24 hours the stories disappear, in keeping with Snapchat's trademark feature of private messages that vanish a few seconds after being viewed by users.

Snapchat, which reportedly turned down a $3bn (£1.2bn) buyout offer from Facebook, has been valued at around $10bn (£6.2bn).

Madonna is set to perform at the Grammys on 8 February and at the Brit Awards on 25 February.

Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter, BBCNewsbeat on Instagram and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube


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China rejects health hack accusation

6 February 2015 Last updated at 11:19

China has rejected accusations it was behind an attack that stole data from health insurer Anthem.

Personal details of up to 80 million people are believed to have been stolen in the hack.

Investigators looking into the breach told US newspapers the methods used in it resembled earlier attacks blamed on China.

China said it was "careless" to blame it when the origins of hack attacks were hard to pinpoint.

On Thursday, Anthem - America's second largest health insurer - revealed that it had been the victim of a "very sophisticated external cyber-attack" in which data about millions of its customers had been stolen.

If the figure of about 80 million people is confirmed, it will be the biggest theft of medical-related customer data.

Investigators looking into the breach told Bloomberg that early indications suggest China was behind it. They said the attack had the "fingerprints" of a nation-state and some of the techniques used were seen in earlier attacks that had been blamed on China.

'No evidence'

The fact that many of those insured by the company work for government contractors or in sensitive industries has led investigators to speculate it was done to gather information about potential targets rather than for financial gain.

Bloomberg said another health insurer in the US had been hit in the same way as Anthem and an investigation into that attack revealed its aim was to gather data about defence contractors working on advanced avionics and weapons systems.

In response, China said accusations against it by the US were "groundless".

"It is unreasonable to make an accusation without enough evidence," a foreign ministry spokesman said during a briefing in Beijing.

"It is very difficult to determine the source of hacking activities, especially when it is carried out across borders," said the spokesman.

The scale of the attack has now led attorneys general from five states to start their own investigations. In addition, California's Department of Insurance is assessing how Anthem has responded to the attack.

Today, senior staff from Anthem are scheduled to tell the Energy and Commerce Committee of the US House of Representatives about the hack attack and how it is being handled.

Michael Daniel, who was recently appointed to be President Obama's cybersecurity adviser, said the attack was "quite concerning".

"It's particularly disturbing especially when it hits that many people," he said and advised people to change passwords and keep an eye on their credit ratings.


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Lawyers bite over 'Left Shark' model

6 February 2015 Last updated at 13:18 By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

A website has been ordered to remove a design for a 3D-printed model of the "Left Shark" dancer from the Super Bowl half-time show.

Lawyers for singer Katy Perry contacted Fernando Sosa, who had sold the design via an online directory of blueprints.

Left Shark became a viral hit after appearing to forget its steps during a routine with the 30-year-old artist.

3D-printing is becoming an increasing headache for companies trying to protect their intellectual property.

Falling costs of 3D printers, coupled with a growing community of model designers, means many small products can be made to a relatively high quality.

In a letter, the lawyers said Perry had not consented to the use of the shark, which was being sold through Shapeways.com.

"Your unauthorised display and sale of this product infringes our client's exclusive rights," read the letter, posted on Instagram by Mr Sosa.

Mr Sosa was selling the design for $24.99 (£16). After the item was removed by Shapeways, Mr Sosa submitted the design to a different site, Thingiverse, and offered it free-of-charge.

Facilitating demand

On the site, Mr Sosa wrote: "Apparently sharks, palm trees and beach balls are all now copyrighted... anyways I'm making this available to everyone.

"Now you can 3D print your very own Left Shark. Just make sure you download this file ASAP since just in case it's taken down."

Intellectual property lawyer Dai Davis told the BBC he expects disputes like this to become more common, and that industry must adapt to facilitate demand.

"In the same way copyright is difficult to protect in music because of the way the internet has allowed piracy sites, in the same way you already have lots of sites popping up which will increasingly allow unlawful copies of design rights [for objects]."

He suggested that companies would perhaps be wiser to offer their own official 3D-printed designs, rather than putting effort into removing designs by others.

The man inside the Left Shark costume, professional dancer Scott Myrick, said of the performance: "The visibility was terrible. I ran into a palm tree but the camera missed it."

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC


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Google to 'start again' with Glass

6 February 2015 Last updated at 13:31

Google is starting again from scratch with its Glass project, reports the New York Times.

Sales of the controversial smart spectacles were halted in January and development of the prototype was also believed to have been stopped.

Glass development is now being driven by former Apple gadget designer Tony Fadell, who has "reset" the project.

The new version will be developed internally and only released when finished, the newspaper said.

Poor performer

First revealed in 2011, Google Glass made a big impact in mid-2012 when the company demonstrated it at its developers' conference using skydivers and stunt cyclists.

But, said the Times in a lengthy article about the project's life, many working on the device were unhappy with this exposure because it meant its final development had to take place in public.

The newspaper said the controversy the project gained gave rise to tensions among the development team, forcing some key researchers to leave.

Now Glass is being overseen by Mr Fadell, who helped to bring Apple's iPod and other gadgets to market.

Mr Fadell became a Google employee last year when the search giant bought his home automation company Nest.

Development on Glass was now reportedly all going to happen in-house with nothing released until it was ready.

Technology news site Ars Technica speculated that Mr Fadell's "rebooting" of the project might take a long time because of the poor performance of the earlier versions.

"There is very little that Glass does well, so with a reboot, there isn't much to currently work from," it said.


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Destiny game gets 16 million players

6 February 2015 Last updated at 14:20

More than 16 million people registered to play sci-fi shooter Destiny, creator Activision Blizzard has revealed.

The player numbers were made public as the gamemaker unveiled its annual earning figures.

In the 12 months to the end of 2014, Activision Blizzard had revenues of $4.81bn (£3.14bn), slightly less than the $4.85bn it made in 2013.

However, revenue for the final quarter was slightly up on 2013 at $1.58bn.

Surprise success

Last year was a busy one for Activision Blizzard which saw it launch several new titles, expansions of long-running games and spin-offs from established properties.

The big launch of 2014 was futuristic shooter Destiny, the development and marketing of which cost the company about $500m.

Blizzard boss Mike Morhaime said 16 million people had registered to play the game but did not give a figure for how many were regular players.

Also launched last year was Hearthstone, a card-based combat game linked to the long-running Warcraft series of titles. About 25 million players had signed up for that, the company said.

A World of Warcraft (WoW) expansion - Warlords of Draenor - made its debut in November and helped to push subscribers back above 10 million.

Prior to the release of the game, WoW player numbers had been on a long-term decline. About 3.3 million copies of Warlords were sold in the game's first 24 hours on sale.

The gamemaker said it also enjoyed success with Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, which was the top-selling console game in 2014.

Eurogamer deputy editor Wesley Yin-Poole said the omission of sales figures for Destiny and Advanced Warfare had "troubled analysts" and said it was becoming clear that the CoD series was past its peak.

"Now it's looking to new markets, such as China, to boost Call of Duty revenue with a special free-to-play version," he said.

With no mention of how many people were still playing Destiny it was hard to judge its popularity and staying power, he said, but Activision was doubtless "satisfied" with its success so far.

Hearthstone was the surprise hit, said Mr Yin-Poole.

"Twenty-five million players is a massive number nobody, least of all Blizzard, predicted when the game was being developed," he said, adding that the card-based game could end up as a big revenue earner for the company as the venerable WoW declines.

Looking forward to 2015, it said it planned to launch two new titles - a futuristic squad-based shooter called Overwatch and a team-based "brawler" called Heroes of the Storm.

The company issued a warning about future earnings, saying that the weakness of the dollar could hit its 2015 revenues as about half of its income is generated outside the US.


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Ubuntu phone has alternative to apps

6 February 2015 Last updated at 14:30 By Leo Kelion Technology desk editor

An Ubuntu-powered smartphone is coming to the market a year and a half after a previous attempt to launch a model via crowdfunding failed.

The Aquaris E4.5 Ubuntu edition relies on a card-like user interface that is not focused on apps.

Unlike the original proposal, the handset does not become a desktop PC when plugged into a monitor.

It is initially being targeted at "early adopters", who developers hope will become advocates for the platform.

The British company Canonical, which developed the Linux-based operating system, said it hoped to emulate the success of Chinese companies including Xiaomi with its launch strategy.

This will include holding a number of "flash sales" in Europe beginning next week, in which the device will be sold for short periods of time - giving the developers an opportunity to gauge demand and respond to feedback before committing to a bigger production run.

"It's a proven model - we're making sure that the product lands in the right hands," Cristian Parrino, vice-president of mobile at Canonical, told the BBC.

"We are way away from sticking this in a retail shop in the High Street. [But] it's where we want to get to."

Millions of PCs used by schools, governments and businesses already run the desktop version of Ubuntu.

"The Ubuntu fan base will clamour to buy the phone just because they will be curious to see what it is, how it works and how they can develop for it - they'll want to be one of the few that have it," said Chris Green, from Davies Murphy Group Europe.

"But for the broader, more mainstream, early adopter market, I think demand will be constricted because people are more app-focused."

Scope cards

The Ubuntu handset can run apps written in either the HTML5 web programming language or its own native QML code.

However, its operating system effectively hides them away. Instead of the traditional smartphone user interface - featuring grids of apps - it uses themed cards that group together different facilities.

Canonical calls these Scopes, and they are reminiscent of the swipe-based card system used by the Google Now personal assistant.

The phone's home screen is the Today Scope. It presents a selection of widgets based on the user's most frequent interactions on the phone.

These can include the local weather forecast, the headlines of the day from third-party news services, Twitter trends and a list of the owner's most commonly contacted friends.

By swiping to the right, the owner can make a call or access some of the other default Scopes, including:

  • A Music Scope, with favourite tracks sourced from Soundcloud and other streaming music providers, as well as offering details of forthcoming concerts via Songkick
  • A Video Scope, which presents clips from YouTube and other services
  • A Photos Scope, which collects together images stored on the phone as well as pictures stored on Flickr, Picasa, Facebook and elsewhere
  • A Nearby Scope providing location-specific details, including traffic conditions, public transport options and restaurant recommendations
  • An Apps Scope, which provides access to the camera, calendar software and programs from other companies

Users can create and configure their own Scopes, and individual services can also be set to have Scope cards of their own.

Mr Parrino suggested that the benefit to the user was an "unfragmented" experience, while developers would gain by being able to make their products available via Scopes at a fraction of the cost of creating full apps.

"If you come out with a new [OS] that's based on apps and icons then you're just a 'me too' platform," he said.

"You'll only be as relevant to developers as the number of users you can bring to them, because you're adding the burden of supporting a new platform. And for users you'll only be as good as the apps that you have.

"We've had to switch that model around and deliver an experience that is valuable in its own right - clearly the more services that plug into it the better it becomes, but it's not fully dependent on them from day one, and for an early adopter audience it's a great product."

Certain services will, however, be missing at launch, including Whatsapp, Skype and several of Instagram's core features.

'Stopgap' features

Canonical makes money by charging organisations for support services.

The phones themselves are being made and sold by a Spanish company, BQ, which already has an Android variant of the hardware.

They include an eight-megapixel rear camera, a 5MP front one and one gigabyte of RAM memory. They will cost about 170 euros ($195; £127).

"It's a good-looking device and a very slick interface at a realistic price," commented Mr Green.

"Scopes are an interesting stopgap between a full third-party app environment and a fixed feature phone.

"However, they are just that - a stopgap. They will interest very early adopters and the Ubuntu faithful in the short term. However, it won't take long before people start wanting a full add-on app experience akin to the other existing platforms on the market today."


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