| The Drill Down 436: Tech’s Master PlansOn this week’s Drill Down podcast, Wikileaks leaks DNC emails, Verizon buys Yahoo, the future for Tesla & Facebook, can police unlock your iPhone by 3D-printing your fingerprint? Â …and much, much more!
...continue reading » Tags: 3D Printing, agriculture, Amazon, Apple, Bernie Sanders, CNC, Democratic National Convention, DNC, drone, Elon Musk, Encryption, Facebook, FarmBot, Hillary Clinton, iPhone, Kickass Torrents, Marissa Mayer, Mark Zuckerberg, Nintendo, Pokémon Go, Pokemon, politics, security, Solar City, Star Trek, Star Trek: Discovery, Tesla, torrents, Verizon, WikiLeaks, Yahoo | |
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| The Drill Down: Inside BlogballThis week, Andrew Sorcini, Devindra Hardawar, Dwayne De Freitas, and Christopher Burnor take a look at other companies that are storing your data without your permission, following last week’s coverage of the Path debacle, and later we examine former TechCrunch reporter turned Crunchfund partner MG Siegler‘s claim that tech journalists today are foregoing putting research and expertise into their work in favor of using sensationalism to chase page views. But first, the headlines… Google develops a home entertainment system, two Kickstarter projects hit the $1 million mark, SNL pokes fun at Verizon marketing, Steve Jobs earns a posthumous Grammy, Twitter beats MSM on news of Whitney Houston‘s death, The Pirate Bay says goodbye to .torrent files, Apple readies the iPad3 (and tests an 8-in. tablet), and Apple invites inspections of its suppliers.
...continue reading » Tags: Apple, CrunchFund, Dan Lyons, Foxconn, Google, iPad, Kickstarter, LTE, MG Siegler, Nick Bilton, Path, Pirate Bay, Saturday Night, SNL, Steve Jobs, TechCrunch, The Drill Down, torrents, Twitter, Verizon, Whitney Houston | |
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| Did You Download ‘The Hurt Locker’? Voltage Pictures May Just Be Suing You |
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The Hurt Locker was named Best Picture at the most recent Academy Awards ceremony, and though many might not think it deserved the title (including Kyle Broflovski, of course), it didn’t stop thousands and thousands from downloading it online. It also didn’t help that the movie was leaked months before its release here in the States. Now Voltage Pictures is ready to start taking some action. The company has enlisted the services of U.S. Copyright Group, a firm who handles these types of issues and is already waist-deep in thousands of lawsuits for the illegal downloading of other films. The lawsuit regarding The Hurt Locker is expected to begin this week, with “tens of thousands of people” expected to find themselves facing legal hot water. Hire yourselves a lawyer, get your papers in order, and head on over to the other side for more and to read Voltage Pictures’ response to one letter calling their actions “inhumane.”
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