steven n.
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Lawsuit alleges Apple involved in 'flagrant' music piracy on iTunes
ihatescreennames said:It's odd to me that almost every (every?) one of these "iTunes is pirating my music" lawsuits seems to come from artists (or their representatives) that have 1) older music or 2) nearly unheard of music or 3) a combination of the previous two. I'm not saying that invalidates their claims by any means. How come we don't hear that sort of thing from current big name artists?
Edit: Incidentally, it also seems that these are the artists that iTunes/Apple would be earning the least from. What is the incentive for Apple to be pirating music (at all, really) that likely isn't played/purchased very much?
Then the 7% wonder realizes this and it is called "flagrant" copy right infringement because you are missing some aspect of the rights to distribute the song. -
Senators Elizabeth Warren & Sherrod Brown push for Apple Card probe by CFPB
crowley said:airnerd said:Supposedly there is a stat that charges more interest for some females than males, and Congress gets involved because that's discriminatory. Meanwhile since the invention of auto insurance 16 year old boys are charged more than 16 year old girls because stats show there is a reason...and that's acceptable.
16 year old boys crash cars more often.
Where’s the stat that says women are worse at paying off credit cards?
Oddly, late payments (but paying it off) is much more profitable to the CC issuer than on time but defaulting.That said, are credit limits biased? Absolutely. Otherwise everyone would get the same exact limit. Let that sink in. They are biased for a reason. They are not 100% egalitarian with everyone getting the same exact outcome. -
Default Samsung messaging app randomly spamming contacts with pictures
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Apple debuts $549 AirPods Max over-ear headphones
22july2013 said:sdw2001 said:22july2013 said:No mic? I can't use it to talk with my iPhone? The fact that it has active noise cancellation proves it has some sort of mic in it, but not one I can speak into?
It's labelled with L and R for the Left and Right sides. How are they going to market that in countries where English isn't known or spoken widely?L/R is “English only” for the unenlightened only. -
Mac Pro, Pro Display XDR orders start December 10
StrangeDays said:coolfactor said:macxpress said:M68000 said:Looking forward to watching real world reviews of this new computer and monitor. Yes it may seem expensive, but when you think that it's possible to get 10 years out of a computer this powerful and this monitor will certainly not be obsolete any time soon - is it really that expensive over time ? Instead of buying 2 or 3 high end desktops\laptops in 10 years - just buy this...
I could be living in a totally different world, but I've seen companies (and myself!) hold onto the same computers for 10 years. My current laptop is 6 years old and still good as new, running Mojave. And do you remember the XP years? Windows XP lasted 10 years, and people ran it on the same hardware that whole time. So the three-year timespan is questionable in my mind, and I think the Mac Pro has 10 years in it, easy. It's a real workhorse. -
Apple details user privacy, security features built into its CSAM scanning system
mikethemartian said:numenorean said:Ok. So basically, Apple has decided to do an illegal search and seizure of our photos, have their system analyze them for what a government sponsored non-profit determines might be criminal (which of course can't ever be hacked or manipulated, as that's never happened to any company or database /s), then a non-police officer human will look at your photos and make a legal determination over them before taking you to the police. This is completely unconstitutional, as laid out in the fourth amendment:4th Amendment: "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
Where's the warrant that gives anyone the right to look at your personal photos, be it on your phone, on your server storage, or your personal home? This also such a clear violation of the precept of innocent before proven guilty, as everyone is suspected guilty, and therefore, searched. Apple is not law enforcement, nor have they been empowered by law enforcement, nor do they have a legal warrant issued by a judge to search your property.
Apple has really opened the door here for so many violations it's not even funny. And this is the company that would not help unlock the phone of a terrorist, but will now scan every single, innocent person's phone, you know "for the children". That excuse has always covered up so many sins.
You know, since Apple has decided to look at our photos, and one of their employees may end up looking at your personal photos should their magical system of identification accidentally flag one of your photos, how about we all get a view at the personal photos of Tim Cook and all other Apple employees. It's only fair isn't it?
Just pondering...
”Courts routinely look to two critical factors in making a determination as to whether an individual was acting as a government agent: (1) whether the government knew of and acquiesced in the intrusive conduct, and (2) whether the private actor’s purpose was to assist law enforcement rather than to further his own ends.”
in this case, both would be true and the Fourth Amendment would come into play. -
Apple sources 20M face masks, designs and ships face shields for medical workers
mjtomlin said:georgie01 said:seanismorris said:
My amateur projections saying the number of infected will quadruple over the next 2 week (in the USA)...
I really hope I’m wrong.I only say these things because our panic and overreactions to the coronavirus is causing more problems than the virus itself. We need to take it seriously, but we need to have perspective and patience.
Point 1. Anyone who suspects they may have is being tested, not just “those who are suffering”.
Point 2. You cant base “overreacting” to what the numbers show NOW. This isn’t about NOW, its about preparing for what might come, if you dont do anything NOW. This ignorance is EXACTLY why the US has sharply risen in the passed week - no one took it seriously when they SHOULD have - long before it became a problem. With an epidemic you have to fix it before it begins, otherwise its too late.
Point 3. “If the deaths quadruple” ... We havent even started with the body counts yet. The US is going to surge and surpass all other countries combined due to the lack of national leadership and management.Point 2 is true to people overreacting. The mass hoarding of toilet paper is a perfect example. Likewise, I’m betting 80% of the beans, pasta and rice hoarded by people will go to waste and never be used. To me, that is overreacting.Point 3 is a blatant lie. Period. The US was one of the earliest countries outside China infected and your lie of "lack of national leadership" can be shown as the lie it is by seeing how fast travel from China and Europe was curtailed (When compared to most western democracies). Many states, like CA and WA were quick to shut down while others, like NY were mind-numbingly slow to do things like shut down the Subway. As always, the STATES And local governments are the first line of defense because Wyoming (Currently at 0 deaths/million) is NOT New Jersey (103 Deaths/million) and Sublette Kansas is Not the Bronx NY. Each region is unique and requires unique handling.
Likewise, your statement of "The US is going to surge and surpass all other countries combined" can be nothing but a sick twisted hopefulness on your part because it is not, at all, backed up by numbers. Given the growth rate in the US is clearly at its inflection point there is little reason to think our death rate of 29/million will come anywhere close to countries like Italy (263/million), Spain (270/million), Belgium (125/million), France (124/million), UK (73/million) or even Switzerland (83/million). Germany (19/million) is the one true bright spot and has done a great job of dealing with the outbreak. They were able to get testing rolled out fast and did great on early detection. -
Apple's first AI research paper wins prestigious machine learning award
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France asks Apple to disable iOS security feature for national contact tracing app
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Hewlett Packard Enterprise leaving Silicon Valley, moving to Texas
razorpit said:Only problem is the company will pull all the people that made the same bad governmental decisions in CA to TX. Eventually Texas will eventually end up ruined like Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, etc.