Here’s why I think Apple should buy Tesla.
Auteur/autrice : noflux (Page 326 of 632)
« By 2018 sales from e-commerce in China will exceed those in the rest of the world combined » (via By 2018, China will spend more online than the rest of the world combined – Quartz)
Chinese government hackers are suspected of breaching the computer networks of the United States Postal Service, compromising the data of more than 800,000 employees — including the postmaster general’s.
L’Américain Jeff Barr, l’un des responsables d’Amazon Web Services, a adressé à tous un message conciliant : « Vous pouvez à présent construire des applications multirégions en ayant l’assurance que vos données restent à l’intérieur de l’Union européenne. » On est loin du concept de « cloud souverain » entièrement contrôlé par des entreprises nationales : il s’agit de passer à un « après-Snowden », mais en douceur, sans confrontation.
After the President’s statement, it is hard to imagine that the commission can hold out forever and do nothing at all. If it does, the F.C.C. will be remembered as the agency that presided over the closing of the open Internet.
Google tries to accompany people throughout their day, to generate data and then use that data for economic gain. It’s at that point where a conflict with Google seems pre-programmed. That’s where we need to negotiate.
For almost a century, our law has recognized that companies who connect you to the world have special obligations not to exploit the monopoly they enjoy over access into and out of your home or business. It is common sense that the same philosophy should guide any service that is based on the transmission of information — whether a phone call or a packet of data.
La véritable reine d’Airbnb se prénomme Jasmina. Le site lui attribue 87 logements, dont 39 à Genève. En vérité, Jasmina Salihovic en gère 120.
You often need money to change things. But most ways of acquiring it require you to compromise on your ideals. We can do better than that.
Most of us think we’re too smart to fall for phishing, but our research found some fake websites worked a whopping 45% of the time. On average, people visiting the fake pages submitted their info 14% of the time, and even the most obviously fake sites still managed to deceive 3% of people. Considering that an attacker can send out millions of messages, these success rates are nothing to sneeze at.
