Apple's misleading warranties must be punished, says EU Commissioner

Sorry, but Samsung has not taken Apple's innovation crown | Google, Mozilla, and Apple made the most vulnerable software of 2012

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Apple's misleading warranties must be punished, says EU Commissioner
The European Commission must take a larger role to monitor and coordinate consumer protection laws, Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding said Tuesday, citing Apple as a prime example of the need for the Commission to get tougher. "In at least 21 E.U. countries, Apple is not informing consumers correctly about the legal warranty rights they have," Reding said at the European Consumer Summit in Brussels. "This is simply not good enough." Read More


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Rapidly Integrate SAP with Cloud Applications
As cloud adoption rates increase, the need to integrate cloud applications and SAP systems is critical. IBM WebSphere Cast Iron Cloud integration provides companies with the ability to implement integration projects in days, not weeks or months and it can streamline business processes across multiple cloud and on-premise applications. Read Now

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Guide to a successful BYOD and mobile IT strategy
It's the biggest shift in IT in years: the consumerization-of-IT trend that gained major traction with the advent of the iPhone and other modern mobile devices, causing most businesses to let employees bring -- or at least choose -- their own smartphones and tablets, all in fewer than two years. Learn More

Sorry, but Samsung has not taken Apple's innovation crown
The Galaxy S 4 shows that both Samsung and pundits confuse features with innovation. But if you define innovation as changing the game, Apple is responsible for nearly all the innovations we see in mobile today. Read More

Google, Mozilla, and Apple made the most vulnerable software of 2012
Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, and Apple iTunes were the most vulnerable among popular software programs in 2012, according to the newly released 2013 Secunia Vulnerability Review. Read More

Apple CEO Tim Cook's approval rating drops
Apple CEO Tim Cook's approval rating fell in the last 12 months, dropping Steve Jobs' successor to the 18th spot on an annual ranking of American chief executives. Cook received an average approval rating of 93 percent from more than 640 Apple workers on Glassdoor, an online jobs and careers website, between March 2012 and March 2013. That put Cook at No. 18, behind several other technology CEOs such as Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg (No. 1), EMC's Joe Tucci (No. 7), Google's Larry Page (No. 11), and Amazon's Jeff Bezos (No. 16). Read More


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