Google ordered by French regulators to revamp privacy policy or face fines

Google ordered by French regulators to revamp privacy policies or face fines

Google has been under the gun in the EU for a while now about its privacy policies, particularly in France, which is fairly hardcore about such matters. In fact, the nation’s CNIL computer watchdog has just ordered Mountain View to change its practices or face an initial maximum fine of €150,000 (around $200,000), followed by a penalty of up to €300,000 for further non-compliance. Google has just three months to fall in line, and the French regulator’s ruling could just be the beginning; it investigated the search giant at the EU parliament’s behest, meaning nations like Italy, Spain and the UK could follow suit. For its part, Google — which is no doubt very sensitive to such matters at the moment thanks to the NSA saga — said it “respects European law” and will continue to work with French and EU authorities on the matter.

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Source: Reuters

The Hilarious Difference Between Google and Bing in One Picture

The Hilarious Difference Between Google and Bing in One Picture

You use Google. Or maybe, just maybe you use Bing. Sometimes one is better. Sometimes the other is prettier. Sometimes it’s the other way around. Whatever. The most hilarious, ridiculous difference between the two though? How they auto-complete the Xbox One. Google Instant finds words like terrible, ugly, a joke and so forth. Bing? Just one. Amazing.

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Google Receives Request For Glass Privacy Details From 6 Countries

Privacy commissioners from Canada, Israel, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand and Mexico have asked Google exactly what it will do with the data collected by Glass.

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Xperia Z Ultra screenshots tip 6.21-inch display, Snapdragon 800 [UPDATED]

It’s not every day a smartphone as massive as the Sony Xperia Z Ultra comes around, especially one with a processor that’s only thus far been seen in developer testing devices (and the occasional ZTE device.) This morning the Xperia Z Ultra (far larger than the Xperia Z, pictured below) has appeared in screenshot form,

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Google Purchases Two Robots That Can Perform Gangnam Style Dance

Google has purchased a couple of robots that can dance.

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LG “Always On Voice Commands” tipped with Qualcomm for 2014

This morning the folks at LG have been seeing their fair share of next-generation possibilities appearing in the news courtesy of anonymous tipsters from the shadows – and here with “Always On Voice Commands”, LG’s next smartphone continues to seem like no joke. While flexible OLED displays might be more your seemingly super-strange feature of

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Feedly Cloud arrives bringing standalone Google Reader replacement

Up until now, Feedly was merely just an extension of Google Reader, rather than a dedicated web app. However, with the introduction of Feedly Cloud, the service is now completely standalone, and users will be able to easily merge their Google Reader data to Feedly and completely forget about Google Reader while they’re at it.

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Feedly launches cloud platform and new web interface ahead of Google Reader shutdown

Feedly launches cloud platform and new web interface ahead of Google Reader shutdown

The eventual demise of Google Reader gave existing services like Feedly an opportunity to land hundreds of thousands of new users, but the sudden gain of popularity demands an infrastructure that can handle the load. By opening its APIs to the masses today, Feedly says it’s officially making the transition “from a product to a platform,” supplying developers and RSS users alike with a painless migration path from Google’s soon-to-be deceased reader. To go along with that, the company also announced a novel version of Feedly on the web, one which doesn’t require any extensions or plugins and is accessible via browsers such as Internet Explorer and Opera.

As the image above shows, the freshly minted cloud platform already offers support for a slew of third-party applications, and Feedly says numerous other devs are currently working on their own for the near future. Now, if you didn’t think Mountain View’s recent spring cleaning could have a huge influence in such a short span of time, hear this: Feedly’s touting that its user base has more than tripled since the announcement, making the jump from 4 to 12 million through the end of last month. Only time will tell if Feedly ends up being a worthy Reader replacement, so perhaps now would be the perfect instance to start deciding whether or not this will be the proper solution to all your RSS needs.

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Source: Feedly

Google Ventures-backed Kibits brings “Collaborate” for mobile teamwork

This week the team at Kibits have launched “Collaborate.com”, a full mobile and web browser-based environment for teamwork, aiming to bring together groups of associates that aren’t always working in the same zip code. This platform works at launch on iPhone, iPod touch, Android, and inside web browsers and integrates the content of services such

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Ten international privacy authorities—spanning Australia, Canada, Switzerland, Israel and more—have

Ten international privacy authorities—spanning Australia, Canada, Switzerland, Israel and more—have sent a letter to Google asking for it to address privacy concerns over Glass. A letter; yeah, that’ll work.

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