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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Rok Urbancic

Rok Urbancic

BBC News - Google must drop ivory adverts say campaigners - 0 views

  • Campaigners say Google are encouraging the poaching of elephants by running advertisements promoting ivory products.
  • more than 10,000 ads about ivory were running on Google's Japanese shopping site.
  • They have written to the internet giant asking for their removal.
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  • adverts relating to endangered species were not allowed on their sites.
  • They found more than 1,400 of these types of ads
  • ads on Google's wholly owned Japanese shopping site, they found more than 10,000.
  • one of the world’s richest and successful technology companies with such incredible resources had taken no action to enforce their own policies
  • They say that the adverts are still up and running.
  • Dealing with the ivory issues is one of the key tasks for this meeting of Cites
  • The sale of elephant tusks was banned back in 1989.
  • around 30,000 elephants a year are still being killed to meet the demand for trinkets and carvings that are often sold to tourists
  • The internet has given a huge boost to the ivory business.
Rok Urbancic

Would you buy a 'No internet. No video. No music' laptop? - News - Gadgets & Tech - The... - 0 views

  • wouldn't it be nice to have a phone that just does phone calls?
  • at the Buckeye Tool Expo in Dalton, Ohio there is unusual demand for devices that do less.
  • the exhibition is a draw for the Amish community, whose access to technology is restricted by their faith.
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  • You don't have to wear a bonnet, however, to seek low-technology in a world still gripped by the race to offer enough bells and brushed
  • The Amish laptop is at the extreme end of a quiet drive for digital simplicity
  • The 105 has real buttons, makes calls, sends texts, costs £13 and has, wait for it, a battery life of 35 days
  • Less-smart phones are also winning fans wishing to liberate their fingers and minds from hours of distraction from forgotten pursuits, like reading books, and their wallets from £80 phone bills.
  • The needs of users aren't always the priority of tech giants more often guided by marketing departments.
  • Clutter is banished from screen and keyboard, which features dedicated "copy" and "paste" keys.
  • Ordissimo will compete with SimplicITy, laptops with just six functions launched in 2009
  • The majority of people only want a computer to send emails, Skype their family, browse the web and write documents
Rok Urbancic

Facebook News Feed must reduce confusion - Telegraph - 0 views

  • A new version of the Facebook News Feed will be unveiled
  • major overhauls of the News Feed, like the one coming this evening, are not that regula
  • the News Feed is for: it's there to tell you what your friends have been up to.
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  • In reality, news from your friends is competing with updates from media organisations, such as newspapers and record labels, sports clubs, advertisers, app developers and all kinds of other organisations who would like to send you a message.
  • Teens are said to be drifting away from Facebook.
  • the company wanted the News Feed to be capable of displaying "more engaging ads".
Rok Urbancic

Microsoft faces hefty EU fine | Technology | guardian.co.uk - 0 views

  • European commission expected to fine Microsoft hundreds of millions of euros after software company broke antitrust promise
  • The EU competition commissioner, Joaquín Almunia, is expected to use the fine – which could run into hundreds of millions of euros – to set an example after the US software giant became the first company to break a promise made to end an antitrust probe
  • The fines relate to an antitrust battle in Europe more than a decade ago. In order to avoid a penalty then, Microsoft promised to offer European consumers a choice of rival browsers.
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  • EU rules mean the company could be penalised $7.4bn (£4.9bn) – or 10% of its fiscal 2012 revenues
  • this did not happen for a period during February 2011 and July 2012, a lapse Microsoft blamed on a technical error. It has said it since tightened internal procedures to avoid a repeat.
  • The European commission has already fined Microsoft €1.6bn (£1.4bn)
  • Microsoft's share of the European browser market has roughly halved since 2008 to 24% in January, below the 35% held by Google's Chrome and Mozilla's 29% share
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