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Apple buys indoor-mapping company

Written By Unknown on Senin, 25 Maret 2013 | 09.10

25 March 2013 Last updated at 09:08 ET

Apple has bought indoor-mapping specialist Wifislam as it looks to expand its maps product to compete with Google.

The acquisition, confirmed to the BBC by Apple, could allow the company to offer maps within buildings with an accuracy of 8ft (2.5m).

Rival Google has stepped up its efforts to add indoor locations to its already huge Street View product.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Apple paid $20m (£13m) for Wifislam.

In a statement, the iPad-maker batted away speculation about its plans, saying: "Apple invests in smaller technology companies from time to time, and we generally do not comment on our purpose or plans."

Pinpointing

Indoor coverage is seen as the next battleground for mapping technology.

Google, which leads the pack, has invested time and money in accepting more than 10,000 floor plans from businesses who want to be featured.

Its service also draws data from nearby wifi hotspots and signal towers to pinpoint location in a way which is more accurate than satellite positioning.

According to its website, Wifislam's technology works by using smartphones to "pinpoint its location (and the location of your friends) in real-time to 2.5m accuracy using only ambient WiFi signals that are already present in buildings".

Elsewhere in the market, Microsoft's Bing maps has acquired up to 3,000 indoor locations, while Nokia's Destination Maps product has more than 4,000 locations in 38 countries.

Apple's map product was strongly criticised by much of the technology community when it launched last year, forcing chief executive Tim Cook to apologise to users.

Complaints centred on missing or moved locations as well as confusing, irrelevant search results.

In his apology, Mr Cook said: "With the launch of our new Maps last week, we fell short on this commitment.

"We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better."


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Microsoft details data snoopers

22 March 2013 Last updated at 07:03 ET

More than 75,000 requests were made by police forces around the world for data on Microsoft users in 2012.

The figures were revealed in Microsoft's first transparency report which detailed how often police forces sought data to aid investigations.

US police forces topped the list of agencies keen to know who created specific images or other content.

In most cases, Microsoft only handed over basic information such as login names and IP addresses.

The transparency report from Microsoft follows similar efforts by Google, Twitter and others to let users know who is seeking data about what people do online.

The requests covered more than 137,000 accounts on Microsoft's many services including Hotmail, Outlook.com, Xbox Live, Skype and others. It was hard to estimate how many individual users that involved, said Brad Smith, Microsoft's general counsel, in a blogpost, because many people ran lots of separate accounts.

Content control

Only 2.1% of the requests involved Microsoft handing over the content people created. This includes documents or images stored on servers or sent via email as well as copies of messages sent through its services. More than 99% of requests for content data came from US law enforcement agencies.

Most of the other requests were for non-content data such as login names, IP addresses or other low-level identifiers. Police forces in five countries - the US, UK, Turkey, Germany and France - made the bulk of these requests.

Finally, about 18% of requests involved Microsoft handing over no data at all, said the report, either because there was no data to be found or the request was not submitted properly.

"While law enforcement requests for information unquestionably are important... only a tiny percentage of users are potentially affected by them," wrote Mr Smith. He estimated that only 0.02% of its users felt the effect of a police request for data.

Microsoft said it would update the report every six months.


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China starts work on home-grown OS

22 March 2013 Last updated at 07:28 ET

China is working with software firm Canonical on an open-source operating system customised for Chinese users.

The collaboration will produce a version of Canonical's Ubuntu operating system called Kylin which will be released in April.

The deal is part of a five-year plan by China to get more people using open source software.

This software gives people more access to its internal workings so they can modify it themselves.

The first version of Ubuntu Kylin is intended for desktop and laptop computers. As well as using Chinese character sets, Kylin will also do more to support the way Chinese people interact with computers as well as reflect China's date conventions.

Future versions will include tools that let people use popular Chinese web services such as Baidu maps, the Taobao shopping service as well as versions of office programs and image management tools, directly from Ubuntu's main screen.

The code will be created at a laboratory in Beijing staffed by engineers from Canonical as well as several Chinese R&D agencies.

Canonical is also working with the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on a version of Kylin that will run on servers so websites, online shops and hosting firms can adopt the software.

The move is widely seen as an attempt by China to wean its IT sector off Western software in favour of more home-grown alternatives.

Ubuntu is based on the Linux operating system and its development and use is governed by an open ethic that emphasises the sharing of core computer code. It stands in contrast to the closed or proprietary systems of Microsoft and Apple who restrict access to the core or source code for their operating systems.


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'Sexist joke' whistle-blower fired

22 March 2013 Last updated at 08:18 ET By Zoe Kleinman Technology reporter, BBC News

A woman who was offended by an exchange between two men at the US PyCon developer conference and tweeted their photo has been fired.

Adria Richards was near two delegates who joked about "big dongles" and used a technical term - forking repos - in what she felt was a sexual way.

She complained to the conference organisers and one of the men was fired by his company, a sponsor of the event.

Ms Richards has since faced a barrage of online abuse for her actions.

She has received death threats and her website was attacked by hacking collective Anonymous.

Ms Richards, a former "development evangelist" at SendGrid, has also now lost her job.

'Crossed the line'

"A SendGrid developer evangelist's responsibility is to build and strengthen our developer community across the globe," wrote SendGrid chief executive Jim Franklin in a blog post.

"In light of the events over the last 48+ hours, it has become obvious that (Adria's) actions have strongly divided the same community she was supposed to unite. As a result, she can no longer be effective in her role at SendGrid.

"Her decision to tweet the comments and photographs of the people who made the comments crossed the line."

Ms Richards claims she decided to take action after seeing pictures of young female coders displayed at the conference and felt they would be put off joining the industry if such behaviour continued.

"Women in technology need consistent messaging from birth through retirement they are welcome, competent and valued in the industry," she wrote on her blog.

"Everyone must take personal accountability and speak up when they hear something that isn't OK. It takes three words to make a difference: 'That's not cool'."

'Forking'

"Forking a repo" is a term used by developers to mean using somebody else's project as a starting point for your own.

Ms Richards also pointed out that PyCon's own code of conduct states that "sexist, racist, or exclusionary jokes are not appropriate for PyCon".

The man who was fired worked at PlayHaven. Its chief executive Andy Yang wrote in a blog post that a "thorough investigation" had been carried out before the decision was made to terminate his employment.

Someone claiming to be the man in question apologised in online forum Hacker News for any offence caused but denied saying anything inappropriate about "forking".

"While I did make a big dongle joke about a fictional piece of hardware that identified as male, no sexual jokes were made about forking," he wrote.

"My friends and I had decided forking someone's repo is a new form of flattery (the highest form being implementation) and we were excited about one of the presenter's projects; a friend said 'I would fork that guys repo'.

"The sexual context was applied by Adria, and not us.

"Let this serve as a message to everyone, our actions and words, big or small, can have a serious impact," he added, also saying that he has now lost the job he liked and has three children to support.

Equality

Ms Richards has received criticism from both men and women about her actions.

"What you did reflects poorly on all of us women, but even worse on humankind," wrote Malia Stubben on Adria Richards' blog.

"How can you be so offensive in the name of equality? I thought programmers were logical," wrote Joshua Jones.

Others have been supportive.

"They didn't lose their jobs because of Adria Richards, they lost their jobs because of unprofessional actions reflecting badly on their employers," wrote Jake.

"You inspire me to speak out against inappropriate behaviour in the moment," wrote Jessica Keyes.


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Blizzard reveals trading card game

22 March 2013 Last updated at 12:04 ET

Blizzard has taken the wraps off the new video game it has been developing - a collectable card game.

Called Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft, the duelling game is based around cards players gather.

The game will be free to play in that people can earn cards by playing, but they will advance faster by buying cards in stores.

Blizzard said Hearthstone was going through internal testing but would be released before the end of 2013.

Cards in the game are based around characters, spells and artefacts from Blizzard's Warcraft world to make them immediately familiar to players, said Rob Pardo, Blizzard chief executive during a presentation about Hearthstone at the Pax East gaming convention. Packs of five cards would cost about $1 (60p) each, he said.

Cards bought in stores are replicated in the online game in which people duel with other players calling on weapons, spells and followers to help defeat an opponent.

Duplicate cards can be converted online into "arcane dust" that can be stockpiled and then used to craft the rare cards players need to do better in duels.

Currently, there is no direct connection between World of Warcraft and the Hearthstone game. However, people will need a Blizzard Battlenet account to play the card game. It will be playable on PCs, Macs and on Apple tablets.

Hearthstone could face competition from game studio Mojang which is developing a similar game called Scrolls. In addition, there are many other well-established collectable card video games such as Duel of the Planeswalkers.

Olivia Grace, a contributing editor at online gaming site Wow Insider, said the game was "definitely not" what she and other keen gamers were expecting,

"This is something of a surprise, yes, and it's not that remarkable that there have been feelings of disappointment," she told the BBC.

Despite this, she said, Hearthstone looked well put together.

"The microtransaction-based free-to-play business model is a new endeavour for Blizzard, and hopefully they'll execute it well," she added. "Also, given the existence of the WoW Trading Card Game, it'll be interesting to see whether there's any incorporation of the TCG into this new one."


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Dell buyout bid deadline approaches

22 March 2013 Last updated at 18:31 ET Continue reading the main story

A deadline expires on Friday for other bidders to put in offers that top Michael Dell's bid for personal computer maker Dell.

The 45-day window has been in place for others to top the $24.4bn (£16bn) bid to sell Dell to its founder and chief executive and a group of investors.

Reports say New York's Blackstone Group could be ready to exceed the current bid of $13.65 per share.

Dell says the deadline may be extended if other suitable investors emerge.

The Texas-based firm has promised to provide extensive details about the sales process in regulatory documents to be filed next week.

The Dell board committee that negotiated the current deal says it is selling the firm at a fair price, despite some analysts saying it could be worth more.

And Dell's largest independent shareholder, Southeastern Asset Management, says Mr Dell's offer "grossly undervalues the company".

The computer maker has been hit by a consumer move to tablets and is diversifying into more profitable areas of technology, such as business software, data analytics and storage.


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Nokia and Google clash on web video

25 March 2013 Last updated at 07:06 ET

Nokia and Google have clashed over software that is part of free-to-use video encoding technology.

Google wants its video coding program, called VP8, to be a core part of the WebM project that is making web-centred video production tools.

But Nokia says it owns key patents that define parts of VP8 and has filed an official objection to Google's plan.

Nokia said it filed the objection to stop Google's software replacing more open alternatives.

'Unusual step'

The independent WebM project was started to create video production and playback software specifically designed for use online.

Many of the tools currently used to do this are cut-down versions of similar programs used in TV stations and can be expensive to use.

By contrast, WebM tools would be free to use and the software would take account of the needs of websites, browsers and smartphones.

Google has proposed its VP8 codec, a program that codes and decodes video, be a core part of WebM.

The engineers working on WebM hope their technology will eventually become part of the HTML standards that define the way the web works.

However, Nokia has sent a submission to the Internet Engineering Task Force saying it owns patents for innovations VP8 depends upon.

It said it was "not prepared" to license any of the 64 patents and 22 pending patent applications that apply to VP8.

It was taking this "unusual step" because it believed Google was trying to get VP8 adopted over other, better, alternatives, a Nokia representative told the Foss Patents blog.

Google's VP8 offered "no advantages" over existing technologies, the representative said.

Google has yet to issue an official comment about Nokia's objection.


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Anonymity risk from phone place data

25 March 2013 Last updated at 07:09 ET By Jason Palmer Science and technology reporter, BBC News

Scientists say it is remarkably easy to identify a mobile phone user from just a few pieces of location information.

Whenever a phone is switched on, its connection to the network means its position and movement can be plotted.

This data is given anonymously to third parties, both to drive services for the user and to target advertisements.

But a study in Scientific Reports warns that human mobility patterns are so predictable it is possible to identify a user from only four data points.

The growing ubiquity of mobile phones and smartphone applications has ushered in an era in which tremendous amounts of user data have become available to the companies that operate and distribute them - sometimes released publicly as "anonymised" or aggregated data sets.

Continue reading the main story

Even if there's no name or email address it can still be personal data, so we need it to be treated accordingly"

End Quote Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye MIT

These data are of extraordinary value to advertisers and service providers, but also for example to those who plan shopping centres, allocate emergency services, and a new generation of social scientists.

Yet the spread and development of "location services" has outpaced the development of a clear understanding of how location data impact users' privacy and anonymity.

For example, sat-nav manufacturers have long been using location data from both mobile phones and sat-navs themselves to improve traffic reporting, by calculating how fast users are moving on a given stretch of road.

The data used in such calculations are "anonymised" - no actual mobile numbers or personal details are associated with the data.

But there are some glaring examples of how nominally anonymous data can be linked back to individuals, the most striking of which occurred with a tranche of data deliberately released by AOL in 2006, outlining 20 million anonymised web searches.

The New York Times did a little sleuthing in the data and was able to determine the identity of "searcher 4417749".

Trace amounts

Recent work has increasingly shown that humans' patterns of movement, however random and unpredictable they seem to be, are actually very limited in scope and can in fact act as a kind of fingerprint for who is doing the moving.

The new work details just how "low-resolution" these location data can be and still act as a unique identifier of individuals.

Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the Catholic University of Louvain studied 15 months' worth of anonymised mobile phone records for 1.5 million individuals.

They found from the "mobility traces" - the evident paths of each mobile phone - that only four locations and times were enough to identify a particular user.

"In the 1930s, it was shown that you need 12 points to uniquely identify and characterise a fingerprint," said the study's lead author Yves-Alexandre de Montjoye of MIT.

"What we did here is the exact same thing but with mobility traces. The way we move and the behaviour is so unique that four points are enough to identify 95% of people," he told BBC News.

"We think this data is more available than people think. When you think about, for instance wi-fi or any application you start on your phone, we call up the same kind of mobility data.

"When you share information, you look around you and feel like there are lots of people around - in the shopping centre or a tourist place - so you feel this isn't sensitive information."

Privacy formula

The team went on to quantify how "high-resolution" the data need to be - the precision to which a location is known - in order to more fully guarantee privacy.

Co-author Cesar Hidalgo said that the data follow a natural mathematical pattern that could be used as an analytical guide as more location services and high-resolution data become available.

"The idea here is that there is a natural trade-off between the resolution at which you are capturing this information and anonymity, and that this trade-off is just by virtue of resolution and the uniqueness of the pattern," he told BBC News.

"This is really fundamental in the sense that now we're operating at high resolution, the trade-off is how useful the data are and if the data can be anonymised at all. A traffic forecasting service wouldn't work if you had the data within a day; you need that within an hour, within minutes."

Dr Hidalgo notes that additional information would still be needed to connect a mobility trace to an individual, but that users freely give away some of that information through geo-located tweets, location "check-ins" with applications such as Foursquare and so on.

But the authors say their purpose is to provide a mathematical link - a formula applicable to all mobility data - that quantifies the anonymity/utility trade-off, and hope that the work sparks debate about the relative merits of this "Big Data" and individual privacy.

Sam Smith of Privacy International said: "Our mobile phones report location and contextual data to multiple organisations with varying privacy policies."

"Any benefits we receive from such services are far outweighed by the threat that these trends pose to our privacy, and although we are told that we have a choice about how much information we give over, in reality individuals have no choice whatsoever," he told BBC News.

"Science and technology constantly make it harder to live in a world where privacy is protected by governments, respected by corporations and cherished by individuals - cultural norms lag behind progress."

But Mr de Montjoye stressed that there is far more to location data than just privacy concerns.

"We really don't think that we should stop collecting or using this data - there's way too much to gain for all of us - companies, scientists, and users," he said.

"We've really tried hard to not frame this as a 'Big Brother' situation, as 'we know everything about you'. But we show that even if there's no name or email address it can still be personal data, so we need it to be treated accordingly."


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Dell confirms rival bid offers

25 March 2013 Last updated at 08:33 ET

A special committee of Dell's board has confirmed that it has received two takeover offers to rival the one made by founder Michael Dell.

It said that "both proposals could reasonably be expected to result in superior proposals".

The offers for the PC maker came from the private equity group Blackstone and billionaire investor Carl Icahn.

Mr Dell, together with the Silver Lake Group, is offering $13.65 a share.

That offer from the founder and his private equity partners would value the computer manufacturer at $24.4bn (£16bn).

Blackstone is offering an amount in excess of $14.25 a share, while Mr Icahn is offering $15 a share.

Neither of the new bidders wants to buy the whole company, however, with Mr Icahn offering to buy 58% and Blackstone saying it would buy out any shareholders who wanted to sell their holdings, but not specifying how much of the firm it wants to acquire.

Alex Mandl, chairman of the special committee, said he was pleased to have found "two alternative proposals with the potential to create additional value for Dell shareholders".

But the committee's statement stressed that there was no assurance that either proposal would eventually lead to a bid being made.

Analysts have said that one problem for the committee will be how to compare three offers to buy different amounts of the company.

Michael Dell, who is currently chairman and chief executive of the company, would delist it from the stock exchange, while the two new offers would take control but retain the listing.

Dell's largest independent shareholder, Southeastern Asset Management, says the offer from Mr Dell, who owns 16% of the company, "grossly undervalues" it.

Any of the offers would need to be approved by a majority of Dell shareholders, excluding the founder.

The computer maker has been hit by the rising popularity of tablet computers and is diversifying into more profitable areas of technology, such as business software, data analytics and storage.


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UK teen's app bought for 'millions'

25 March 2013 Last updated at 10:20 ET

An app created by a UK teenager has been acquired by web giant Yahoo in a deal the BBC understands to be worth "dozens of millions" of pounds.

Seventeen-year-old Nick D'Aloisio's Summly app summarises news stories from popular media companies.

Neither company would disclose the terms of the deal publicly.

The app itself will now close, but its features will be used in mobile products at Yahoo, where Mr D'Aloisio has been given a job.

He will be joined by several of Summly's "top staff" in new roles at Yahoo in the next few weeks.

The app launched when Mr D'Aloisio was aged just 15, and soon attracted more than £1m of investment. He is now likely to be one of the world's youngest self-made multi-millionaires.

Speaking to the London Evening Standard, the Wimbledon-based teen said: "I like shoes, I will buy a new pair of Nike trainers and I'll probably get a new computer, but at the moment I just want to save and bank it.

"I don't have many living expenses."

'Fantastic team'

In a note on the Summly blog, Mr D'Aloisio wrote on Monday: "When I founded Summly at 15, I would have never imagined being in this position so suddenly.

"I'd personally like to thank Li Ka-Shing and Horizons Ventures for having the foresight to back a teenager pursuing his dream. Also to our investors, advisers and of course the fantastic team for believing in the potential of Summly.

Nick D'Aloisio

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Nick D'Aloisio talks to Jane Wakefield in 2011 about the inspiration for his app

"Without you all, this never would have been possible. I'd also like to thank my family, friends and school for supporting me."

Yahoo's senior vice president of mobile, Adam Cahan, said the company was "excited" to have Mr D'Aloisio and his colleagues on board.

"For publishers, the Summly technology provides a new approach to drive interest in stories and reach a generation of mobile users that want information on the go," he wrote.

Less enthusiastic about the acquisition was app developer Little Fluffy Toys.

The London-based company was commissioned by Mr D'Aloisio to create an Android version of the Summly app - which was days away from launch.

Little Fluffy Toys director Kenton Price - who is also contracted by the BBC - said that his firm was told the Yahoo deal was on the cards, but was "disappointed" the app would now never be released.


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