Connect to share and comment

Australia man sentenced to jail for posting nude photos of ex-lover on Facebook

A jilted boyfriend who put nude pictures of his former lover on Facebook has been sentenced to six months' jail in a landmark case

Google mistakes satirical April Fool's Day story for news

Google mistakenly placed a Forbes.com April Fool's Day blog post about Mitt Romney as a top news story.
Clone of Mitt romney debate new hampshire ron paul rick santorumEnlarge
U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX), former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA), at the Republican Presidential Debate debate at Saint Anselm College January 7, 2012 in Manchester, New Hampshire. (Win McNamee/AFP/Getty Images)
"It's obviously April Fool's Day and obviously satire."
More

Google maps the wind (VIDEO)

Wind map, which was developed by Google computer scientists, shows currents in a stunning real time visualization.

Google to sell tablet by the end of the year

A Google tablet may be arriving this year, reported the Wall Street Journal Thursday, citing sources familiar with the company.

Nelson Mandela archive, backed by Google, goes online

JOHANNESBURG — Thousands of documents, photos and videos about Nelson Mandela are being made available for free online in a new digital archive of the South African anti-apartheid hero's life.

Google to be investigated for bypassing privacy settings on Safari

Google is being investigated by US and European Union authorities for undermining privacy settings on Apple's Safari web browser.

China's Great Firewall shows signs of cracking

China's internet firewall went down temporarily, allowing users to access social media and discuss human rights.
Great firewall of china 2012 02 28Enlarge
Chinese users spam Barack Obama's Google+ page in a temporary breach in the Great Firewall of China (Screengrab)

It what seems to have been a temporary fissure in the Great Firewall of China, users of the heavily-censored Chinese internet were able to access usually barren Google+ yesterday, spamming US President Barack Obama’s official page with messages of freedom, dissent and requests for green cards.

Exactly how Chinese users were able to breach the great firewall is unknown. According to Reuters, Google took no action as to make the social networking site available to Chinese users while others speculate that the site became available through mobile phone networks that may have been overlooked by censors.

Time magazine has reported that an internal glitch in China’s incredibly robust censorship system was to blame for the breach. 

Some of the commenters took the security breach as a rare opportunity to address the West, pleading for Obama to “free us." Such comments seemed to irk China's Foreign Ministry spokesmen Hong Lei, according to Voice of America, the US government’s foreign news agency. After stating that Chinese citizens should express themselves according to Chinese law, the spokesman was then asked if he be believed that the Chinese government considers citizens who criticize it on the internet as violating the law.

He refused to answer.

More

Google gets more personal with search results

Google just got even more personal. The search engine — which processes two thirds of all searches made in the US — rolled out personalized search results on Tuesday with its "Search, plus Your World" addition, the Associated Press reported.

Consumer Electronics Show 2012: Ultrabooks, smart TVs and waterproof gadgets

The world's thinnest laptop, smartphone and TV set were among the products debuted at today's pre-launch press events.
Syndicate content