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Added on the 20/06/2018 16:28:29 - Copyright : Wochit
Beijing, Aug 5 (EFE/EPA).- Microsoft has been reportedly in talks to buy a Chinese-owned social media app TikTok after US President Donald Trump said he wanted to ban the app in the country over fears that user data was being shared with China’s government.TikTok has some 80 million users in the US and is one of the fastest growing social media platforms. It has a particularly strong market among adolescents and young adults, and is also used by celebrities. (Camera: WU HONG)SHOT LIST: B-ROLL OF MICROSOFT OFFICE IN BEIJING, CHINA.
Australia's government has released a coronavirus contact-tracing app.
Fédération des travaux publics : Les entreprises réclament des mesures d'urgence
Fédération des travaux publics : Les entreprises réclament des mesures d'urgence
Skype released its app for the Windows Phone. Microsoft pulled an Office for Mac 2011 update from its upgrade servers in response to bugs. Adobe unveiled Creative Suite 6 and the Creative Cloud service. Dropbox updated its desktop, mobile, and Web app software.
It’s not hard to get people riled up about Internet privacy. Privacy policies can seem long and technical, and it’s easier to listen to the digital shouts of the Twittersphere and the media. After Windows 10 was released this summer, people said the operating system was spying on users and collecting data for extraneous purposes. Now, Microsoft is attempting to put those prickly privacy issues to rest with articles addressing the data Windows 10 collects and why. In the company’s introductory blog post about the issue, Terry Myerson, executive vice president of the Windows and Devices Group, makes it clear that the user is the most important factor when considering privacy. The company says the information falls into three levels: safety and reliability data, personalization data and advertising data.