Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Japanese authorities looking into Mt. Gox amid US subpoena report

In appeal, Apple says e-book ruling will harm consumers

Samsung debuts new Exynos chips, questions linger on 64-bit plans

IT News Daily
February 26, 2014
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Japanese authorities looking into Mt. Gox amid US subpoena report

Japan's top government spokesman said authorities are gathering information on the situation at Tokyo-based Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox, where trading halted amid concerns that hundreds of millions of dollars worth of bitcoin are missing.

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Issue highlights

1. In appeal, Apple says e-book ruling will harm consumers

2. Samsung debuts new Exynos chips, questions linger on 64-bit plans

3. New iOS flaw increases risk of spying on enterprises

4. FCC brings its free speed-test app to iTunes App Store

5. Why Julie Larson-Green's 'demotion' is actually a massive responsibility at Microsoft

6. RSA chief: NSA exploited 'position of trust'; should spin-out security tech group

In appeal, Apple says e-book ruling will harm consumers

Apple had no knowledge that publishers were engaged in a conspiracy in December 2009 or at any other point, the company said in its appeal against a district court ruling which found Apple and five major U.S. publishers had conspired to fix e-book prices. READ MORE

Samsung debuts new Exynos chips, questions linger on 64-bit plans

Samsung announced new 32-bit Exynos chips for smartphones and tablets with six- and eight-CPU cores, but left questions hanging on when the company will launch its first 64-bit chip. READ MORE

WHITE PAPER: Dell Software

30 Tips and Tricks for Toad for Oracle You Need to Know

For more than 10 years Toad for Oracle has been the number one productivity tool for Oracle developers. This white paper will step you through over 30 proven tips and tricks to get more out of Toad. Test your knowledge and see how many you know. Read now!

New iOS flaw increases risk of spying on enterprises

A security vendor has uncovered an iOS vulnerability that an attacker could use to run a monitoring app on Apple devices and record all touches on their screens. READ MORE

FCC brings its free speed-test app to iTunes App Store

Apple fans can now join Android users in testing their mobile data speeds and reporting them to the U.S. Federal Communications Commission to support the agency's decision-making about broadband. READ MORE

WHITE PAPER: Xirrus

BYOD Requires New Network Strategies

The concept of bring-your–own-device (BYOD) is driving the most significant IT shift since the dawn of computing. The migration to mobile computing promises to bring us closer to the vision of being able to deliver any content to any device. Learn more>>

Why Julie Larson-Green's 'demotion' is actually a massive responsibility at Microsoft

On Monday night, Julie Larson-Green was promoted to one of the most important roles within Microsoft. READ MORE

RSA chief: NSA exploited 'position of trust'; should spin-out security tech group

Did the National Security Agency trick RSA, the security division of EMC, into including a crypto algorithm that was really an NSA cyber-espionage backdoor into the RSA BSAFE toolkit in order to propagate it through tech industry products? READ MORE

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