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South Korean police raided Google's offices Tuesday to see whether the company broke local laws by collecting user data in kicking off its Street View service in the country. The Korean National Police Agency confirmed the probe of the search giant in a statement sent to Reuters and other news sources. "[The police] have been investigating Google Korea LLC on suspicion of unauthorized collection and storage of data on unspecified Internet users from Wi-Fi networks," the agency said in the statement. "Wehttp://news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-20013156-83.html |
Earlier technology news articles: |
Facebook's upcoming IPO will make founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg a billionaire -- but it will also stick him with an eye-popping tax bill that could reach as high as R15.14 ($2) billion. Industry experts say that might be one for the record books. "I personally have never seen a bill into the billions -- close, but not quite," said Anthony Nitti, a Colorado-based CPA and partner with Withum, Smith and Brown. "I talked to a few buddies of mine at the Big Four accounting firms, and it's something not many ... |
Google on Tuesday began offering a beta version of its Chrome browser for Android phones, finally beginning the move to unify its computer, tablet and mobile phone browsers. The browser, however, is only available for phones and tablets running Android 4.0, also known as Ice Cream Sandwich. As of Feb. 1, just 1 percent of Android devices in use are running Ice Cream Sandwich. The Chrome browser for Android offers a few neat features for people who also use Chrome on their computers. When signed into Chrome... |
Network hardware vendor Trendnet admitted yesterday that a firmware flaw could turn almost two dozen models of safety cameras into spy cameras for anybody to view. The company is rushing out firmware fixes for all the affected lines. Check the listif you have one of the problem camera models, turn it off right now. What exactly happened here? In early January a blog called Console Cowboys reported an interesting discovery about Trendnet's security cameras. While the video feed was nominally password-... |
Twitter set a new record for gameday activity during Super Bowl XLVI--12,233 tweets per second at the end of the game. The second highest rate came during Madonna's Caligula-inspired halftime extravaganza: 10,245. Compare that with past spikes. The Bin Laden raid topped out at 5,106 tweets per second and held steady at 4,000 sustained tweets. The MTV Video Music Awards topped out 2011 with 8,868. The biggest ever spike? the December 13, 2011 television broadcast in Japan of Hayao Miyazaki's animated... |
A graffiti artist who accepted shares instead of cash when he painted Facebook's first HQ seven years ago is set for a $125.00(125) million payday. David Choe, 35, was asked to paint the walls of the offices in Palo Alto, California, in 2005, and was offered the choice of a few thousand cash or the equivalent in shares. And, even though he considered the idea of Facebook Óridiculous and pointless at the time, he took the stock, reports The New York Times. Now, after a blockbuster USD5billion Facebook... |
The High Court in Auckland said it agreed with an earlier ruling that Mr Dotcom - a German national - might try to flee the country. The file-sharing site creator is accused of profiting from the copying and distribution of pirated content. Mr Dotcom's lawyers said that he denied the charge and would fight an extradition application by the US. Prosecutors had said Mr Dotcom - also known as Kim Schmitz - posed an extreme flight risk, noting that he had passports and bank accounts in three names and a history... |
Apple has pulled several iPad and iPhone models from its German online store after Motorola Mobility enforced a patent injunction against its rival. The move follows a December ruling that Apple had failed to license one of Motorola's wireless intellectual properties. iPhone users in Germany may also face the loss of their push email iCloud service after a separate patent victory by Motorola. Apple has said it will appeal. The dispute may eventually pit Apple against Google. The search giant is in the... |
Federal prosecutors in the US have given Megaupload's web hosts the go-ahead to delete its massive trove of data as early as Thursday. The erasure may go ahead on the basis that authorities had completed their search under the warrants, which no longer gave them a right to access that data and cleared the way for the service providers to do what they wanted, according to the Associated Press. A letter filed last Friday by the US Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Virginia permitted Megaupload... |
The crackdown on file-sharing site Megaupload is expected to do little to reduce overall piracy of music, software and Hollywood movies, while potentially stifling emerging means of distributing content online. In the wake of last week's surprising indictment of the digital storage company and seven executives, other companies have begun changing their policies even as Megaupload officers maintained their innocence in a first court appearance in New Zealand. Filesonic.com stopped allowing people to download... |
Google has changed its privacy policy, streamlining it across its multiple services including search, email, video and social networking sites. More than 60 different policies will be combined into one that will go into effect 1 March, the company said. Google said the new policy will give people more relevant search results and help advertisers find customers. Google has previously faced criticism over the sharing of users data. "We're rolling out a new main privacy policy that covers the majority of of... |