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Google reportedly using ‘coercive sales tactics’ against Google TV holdouts

Google HTML5 YouTube App
A new report claims that Google is delaying manufacturers from releasing HTML5-based Smart TVs due to a drawn out process to earn YouTube certification. According to ETNews, the company requires manufacturers to go through “browser conformity tests” at is Mountain View headquarters before they can have access to an app for the popular video-sharing site. Google is also said to be requiring smart TV operators to place the app on the interface’s main home screen as well, and an industry insider blasted Google for taking away a company’s right of choice.
The anonymous individual suggested that Google is delaying manufacturers because they opted for HTML5-based solutions rather than Google TV, adding that requiring them to place the YouTube app in a certain location is “an act of coercive sales tactics.” Samsung was reportedly forced to delay the launch of new products because it waited three months to receive Google’s YouTube conformity certification.
A Google spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Updated Facebook Home Android App Gets Folders

When Facebook rolled out its ‘Facebook Home’ app, it arrived with a lot of fanfare. However, the app failed to gain much traction after the launch. Despite that, the social network is not ready to give up on it and has now rolled out a new version of the app.

Facebook Home

The new version is still in the beta phase and has been rolled out to Android beta testers for now. The most significant upgrade that the new version packs is the support for folders.

Users can easily create and manage new folders in Facebook Home. To create a new folders, you simply need to drag one app on top of the other. Once the folders have been created, you can add them to Facebook Home’s app drawer to be able to organize them neatly.

Whenever you wish to access the folders, you can move straight to the app drawer and open the desired folder. Other notable features that are a part of the updated app include the ability to share News Feed stories in private messages as well as use chat and access bookmarks. Not only that, you can also save your Facebook Android app on your smartphone or tablet’s microSD card.

Google Search field trial adds Gmail contact info to your search results, promises Google+ profile support soon

Google Field Trail adds Gmail contact info to search results, promises Google profile support soon
If you've already signed up to Google's experimental field trials, you might have started to notice people you know appearing within search queries. Expanding on shipping and flight results offered previously, Google's pulling that information from your Gmail account, meaning that you'll be able to poll for contact numbers, addresses (and more) through the search box. Of course, only you will be able to see the results and the beta feature can even link up to voice search. It currently supports all of your Gmail contacts, while Google+ connections are in the pipeline for future field tests. You can sign up to the trials at the second link below.

Bing Translator comes to Twitter's official Windows Phone app

Automatic translation comes to Twitter's official Windows Phone app
It's not every day we see Windows Phone being used to launch a major new feature, but Twitter has done just that. An update to its official app has just enabled automatic translation if you happen to be reading a person's tweet that isn't in English. The tweet isn't translated in your actual timeline; instead you have to manually click through, but that's nothing to complain about. Microsoft's Bing Platform, also released yesterday, is likely being used as the backend, so this feature could very well come to Twitter's official apps on Android and iOS (not to mention a whole range of other apps) in the near future.

Microsoft releases preview of Visual Studio 2013 and new .NET version

Developers can now download preview versions of Visual Studio 2013 and the next release of the .NET Framework. Microsoft unveiled the new software today at its Build conference, along with the preview of Windows 8.1.
As we reported earlier this month, "Visual Studio 2013 will have even more application life-cycle management features, including cloud-based load testing and the display of information such as unit test failures and recent changes directly within the code editor. Git support will be built-in." The Visual Studio downloads page was updated today with a preview version of this major release.
In addition, the third update to Visual Studio 2012 was released. This is mostly focused on bug fixes, but it's an important update "if you need to be able to 'round-trip' projects between Visual Studio 2012 and Visual Studio 2013, or if you want to run Visual Studio 2012 on the Windows 8.1 Preview," Microsoft Developer Division VP S. Somasegar wrote in a blog post.
Microsoft also said at its Build keynote that there are thousands of new APIs in Windows 8.1.
A preview version of .NET 4.5.1 is available now as part of the Visual Studio 2013 download. ".NET 4.5.1 is a highly-compatible, in-place update for .NET 4.5 that ships as part of Windows 8.1," Somasegar wrote. "The .NET 4.5.1 Preview installs as part of Visual Studio 2013 Preview, is included in all installations of Windows 8.1 Preview, and is also available for separate installation into Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, and the corresponding Windows Server releases."
In Microsoft's .NET Framework blog, the company explained that the release focuses on developer productivity and application performance. Under the developer productivity category, improvements include "x64 edit and continue; Async-aware debugging; Managed return value inspection; ADO.NET idle connection resiliency; [and] improvements in Windows Store app development." Application performance improvements include "ASP.NET app suspension; On-demand large object heap compaction; Multi-core JIT improvements; [and] consistent performance before and after servicing the .NET Framework."
The new Edit and Continue feature lets developers change running .NET code in 64-bit processes even when stopped at a breakpoint in the debugger. They can do this without having to restart the process and start the debugging experience over again, Somasegar wrote.
"Much of our work in this release of .NET is on improving the debugging and general diagnostics experience for developers," Somasegar continued. "As just one example, .NET developers have been asking for a feature that’s been available to C++ developers for a while: viewing method return values in the debugger, even if those values are never stored into any declared variable. With .NET 4.5.1 and Visual Studio 2013, this capability is now built-in."

Apple launches online store in Russia

Apple has launched its own online store in Russia. Previously all online sales of Apple products in that country had been done through third-party vendors. However, as MacRumors points out, Apple was reportedly unhappy with Russia's third-party distribution networks. Rumors of Apple launching its own online store in Russia surfaced last year. There are also rumors that Apple is planning to launch retail stores in the country, which would make sense as Russia is the ninth most populous country on the planet.

Sony Takes Another Stab at a SmartWatch, This Time With NFC

Joining the race to build the next generation of “smart” watches, Sony Electronics earlier today announced its latest entrant at the Mobile Asia Expo in Shanghai.
1_Smartwatch_2_Black_Angled
Sony’s Smart Watch 2, like the company’s previous watch, is meant to interact with and display notifications from a smartphone, alerting wearers to phone calls, messages and email. It will also work with social media and fitness apps to provide updates from those arenas.
But the new device has a larger, higher-resolution touchscreen than its predecessor. In addition to Bluetooth connectivity, it will offer one-tap pairing through NFC (most of Sony’s high-end hardware, like the Xperia Z and the Xperia Tablet Z, includes NFC, so it’s not a huge surprise that the company would incorporate this technology). Sony promises the watch will have extended Android compatibility, working with devices beyond Sony’s Xperia smartphone line, and longer-lasting battery life of three to four days with typical usage.
Lastly! If you have a newer Walkman — yes, they still exist — the new Sony watch will act as a remote for that device.
Sony in recent days has been hinting at its plans for a new, connected wearable device, tweeting “tick-tock” from the official Sony Xperia account, along with an image of a watch.
The product’s name might lead consumers to believe that this is Sony’s second smart-watch product, but it’s actually the Japanese electronic giant’s third in the category. Sony’s first smart watch came out in 2007, and about a year ago, Sony introduced another — which I found to be less than intuitive in my review of the device.
Smart watches in recent months have become a hot, though still a rather elusive, topic in consumer technology. Tech giants such as AppleMicrosoft and Samsung are reported to be working on smart, wearable devices that would possibly sync up with users’ smartphones to receive notifications and offer app-like functions from the wrist.
As I mentioned, this type of wearable has been attempted before — by companies like Microsoft and Sony — with modest or minimal success. Device-makers still grapple with battery-life limitations in such a small form factor, and weigh different approaches to the same device: Whether it should be a complement to the smartphone, its own two-way communicator, a health monitor or all of the above.
For now, Sony is categorizing this as a “global” announcement, which means we still don’t know when this watch will come to the U.S. market. Sony also isn’t naming its price.
We do know, however, the smart watch will be available around the world starting in September of this year.

European Publishers, Others Slam Google on “Abusive” Practices, Ask EC to Reject Google Proposal

Google-logo1
It looks like it may be back to the drawing board for Google on the European competitive front: hundreds of publishers and publishing trade associations today are coming out in force to ask the European Commission and its Vice President Joaquín Almunia to “reject outright” Google’s draft remedies, which Google suggested to rebalance competition in search and other online products where it is dominant in the region. The move, by the European Publishers’ Council, comes on the same day that other would-be Google competitors, including online mapping and travel companies, as well as the Fairsearch consortium, are also expected to call for much deeper scrutiny of Google and rejection of its proposals.

Google originally published its draft remedies on April 25, which included suggestions for how it would offer competitors some concessions such as labelling Google’s own links more clearly (a more detailed list of the remedies Google proposed is below). Google competitors were already stirring with negative responses early on, but Almunia, who oversees antitrust and other competition issues, gave them had until June 27 to respond formally. What’s coming out today appears to be a concerted effort to coordinate those negative reponses — claiming Google’s suggestions do not go far enough — for maximum effect.
We will be listening into the Fairsearch-led press conference later today and will update the post with more as we learn it.
The EPC includes big names like the FT, News International, Guardian Media Group, Axel Springer, Thomson Reuters and Reed Elsevier, but also more regional players. Among those coming out against Google, for example, is Dr. Hubert Burda, president of the German magazine publishers’ association VDZ. He echoes the basic line that Google needs to go back to the drawing board.
“If Google does not come up with fundamentally improved proposals very soon, we call on the Commission to use its full legal powers, including an immediate Statement of Objections with effective remedies,” he said in a statement. “Fair and non-discriminatory search with equal criteria for all websites is an essential prerequisite for the prosperous development of the European media and technology sector.”
As we reported before, here are the proposals as Google has made them to date:
  • label promoted links to its own specialised search services so that users can distinguish them from natural web search results,
  • clearly separate these promoted links from other web search results by clear graphical features (such as a frame), and
  • display links to three rival specialised search services close to its own services, in a place that is clearly visible to users;
  • offer all websites the option to opt-out from the use of all their content in Google’s specialised search services, while ensuring that any opt-out does not unduly affect the ranking of those web sites in Google’s general web search results,
  • offer all specialised search web sites that focus on product search or local search the option to mark certain categories of information in such a way that such information is not indexed or used by Google,
  • provide newspaper publishers with a mechanism allowing them to control on a web page per web page basis the display of their content in Google News,
  • no longer include in its agreements with publishers any written or unwritten obligations that would require them to source online search advertisements exclusively from Google, and
  • no longer impose obligations that would prevent advertisers from managing search advertising campaigns across competing advertising platforms.
It looks like the approach that competitors are taking is to take each of these suggestions, line by line, and show how they are not feasible. For example, on the suggestion on opting out from specialized searches (number three in the list below), the publishers’ group responds: “In other words, ‘if you don’t want us to steal your content, you need to make sure we can’t find it.’ An opt out from a 90% dominant player means of course that you become invisible to readers and is no option at all.”
We are reaching out to all the parties, including Google, for further comment.

Facebook Aims to Become Newspaper for Mobile Devices

Facebook has been quietly working on a service, internally called Reader, that displays content from Facebook users and publishers in a new visual format tailored for mobile devices. The project, which the company has been developing for more than a year, is designed to showcase news content in particular. Recent versions of Reader resemble Flipboard, a smartphone and tablet app that aggregates stories from multiple sources and lets users swipe to flip through articles, said people with knowledge of the project.

Using Tor to Remain Anonymous? You’re Not Safe From NSA

The Obama government has long offered FISA courts as the proof that whatever NSA has been doing is legal. However, the procedures observed by the FISA courts have just been made public, showing that these procedures have gaping loopholes. For instance, if a U.S. user browses on Tor, he is no longer considered a U.S. citizen and thus, information about him will be retained.
Tor

According to the procedures defined by FISA courts, the NSA is not allowed to retain information on any U.S. citizen. However, that is an empty statement. There are a bulk load of ‘exceptions’ which virtually apply to every other user and using those exceptions, NSA can effectively retain information on most U.S. citizens.

One example is that of Tor. According to the top secret rules that NSA observes, it treats any anonymous user as a non-U.S. citizen. For instance, if you are sending an encrypted email or make use of an anonymity tool such as Tor, the NSA would automatically register you as a non-U.S. citizen and will have all the freedom of gathering your data and information about you.

In other words, if you try to keep your online communications anonymous, that only highlights you on the NSA radar and you can expect to be more actively monitored as a result.

Not only that, if the communications of a U.S. citizen indicate that they are important for national security, these communications can be accessed and stored by NSA for years. Naturally, who gets to define ‘national security’ is ambiguous and under the cover of such terms, NSA effectively targets non-US as well as US citizens without any repercussions whatsoever.

We Had to Wait Until After E3 to Change Our DRM Policies - Microsoft

xbox closeup
At E3 last week, Microsoft packed a basketball arena full of journalists and fans to talk about its next-gen console, the Xbox One. So, today’s announcement that the company is reversing its DRM policies for the One was a bit puzzling. Why couldn’t it say this then?

Apparently, it was a very recent decision. Xbox Chief Product Officer Mark Whitten toldAllThingsD that the company had been listening to consumer feedback since the product’s unveiling in May, but that the E3 presentation was “the first time we had a chance to really lay out our program.”
“E3 was the first time when we felt like we’d had a chance to tell our complete story and have people see what they liked and what they didn’t like,” Whitten said.
Put another way: Despite all the non-gaming home media features baked into the Xbox One, Microsoft knows that gamers still butter its bread. That E3 presentation was actuallyless “complete” than the unveiling event because it was all about games, games, games.
Microsoft catered to gamers and ignored big features like the bundled Kinect and TV integration in its onstage E3 presentation, but the fans were still angry. Today’s announcement doesn’t make Redmond look good in the short term, but it cuts its losses before those fans have a chance to sway publishers’ minds or avoid the Xbox One on store shelves.
In other words, if this policy change had to happen at some point, it’s probably smarter for Microsoft to pull the trigger and take the hit now, rather than endangering the One’s launch by dawdling as the anti-DRM winds consistently blew in its face.
Whitten promised that both new DRM policies — the removal of online “check-ins” every 24 hours and the restrictions on physical disc sharing — will not change again. However, third-party developers will still have to choose for themselves if and how much their games will require constant Internet connectivity.
Interestingly, an anonymous (and unverified) forum post, allegedly by an Xbox engineer, predicted a policy change last week. Mandatory online check-ins, the supposed engineer wrote, were “the PoR (plan of record), but I expect it to change after the e3 clusterfuck.”
Microsoft previously declined to comment on the post.

Feedly hits 12 million users, launches web version and quits relying on Google’s backend

As Google Reader’s death nears — seriously, July 1 is really soon – RSS reader Feedly is stepping up its game. Feedly, which hit 12 million users at the end of May (up from 4 million in March), announced Wednesday that it is now an independently operating cloud product — i.e., it’s no longer relying on Google Reader’s backend. (If you’re already using Feedly, here’s how to be prepared for the company to roll your account over to the new cloud.)
Feedly has also launched a web-only version, which it says was the top user-requested feature. Feedly already had Chrome and Safari apps, but this means that users of other browsers, like Internet Explorer, can access the service.
feedly-cloud-apps
Finally, the fact that Feedly’s now operating in its own cloud means that developers can build apps for it. In its blog post, the company announced the first Feedly apps — including an IFTTT (if this then that) Feedly channel that lets you “connect your feedly account to 63 other services (including Evernote, Google Drive, Gmail, Pocket, Instapaper, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, WordPress, etc.),” social media management platform Sprout Social and RSS readers for various platforms from companies like Nextgen Reader, gNewsReader, Press and Newsify.

Meanwhile, we’re planning a guide to Google Reader alternatives to help you prepare for the switch, if you haven’t switched over to a new service already. If you were a die-hard Google Reader user, what product are you using now — or are you clinging to Google Reader until the bitter end? Let us know in the comments.

Google Drive Gets 18 New Languages

Googledrive
Google has added support for 18 new languages to its Google Drive web app suite. Besides Drive itself, this includes Google Docs, Sheets and Slides.
The newly supported languages are Afrikaans, Amharic, Basque, Chinese (Hong Kong), Estonian, French (Canada), Galician, Icelandic, Khmer, Lao, Malaysian, Nepali, Persian, Sinhalese, Spanish (Latin America), Swahili, Urdu and Zulu.
With these 18 languages, Google Drive now supports 65 languages in total.
To switch to a different language in Drive, users must click the gear icon in the upper-right corner, select "settings" and choose a new language under "general." To change the language in Google Drive for mobile, they must open their device's language settings.

Microsoft Looks to Boost Surface With Big Discounts for Schools

Surface_EDU_discount
Turns out that Microsoft’s Windows in the Classroom Surface Experience Project, a 10,000 Surface RT giveaway targeted at educators, was just the beginning of the company’s efforts to push its new tablet into the education market. The company is now offering significant discounts on Surface RT to schools around the world.

On Monday Microsoft said it would cut the price of the 32GB Surface RT in half for any school that purchases the tablet between June 17 and August 31, 2013. So for the next few months, K-12 and higher education institutions can purchase the $499 Surface RT for just $199, the $599 Surface RT with Touch Cover for $249, and the $629 Surface RT with Type Cover for $289. With no minimum order requirement, that’s a potentially compelling promotion for a tablet that ships with Office — particularly for schools dealing with death-by-a-thousand-cuts budget crisis.
According to Microsoft, the rationale for the discount is its “long tradition of offering special pricing to education customers,” and a “mission in education … to help schools, students and educators realize their full potential.”
But more practically, it’s an easy way to juice sales and whittle down inventory of a tablet that’s been slow to gain traction in the consumer market. According to research firm IDC, Microsoft shipped about 900,000 Surface RT and Surface Pro tablets in the first quarter of this year.
That’s a piddling amount. And if Microsoft’s first Surface RT production runs were as large as rumors say — three million to five million in the fourth quarter — then the company may be sitting on some serious inventory. That alone may be enough to justify offering a fire-sale discount like this to the education market, particularly if there are some next-generation Surface tablets in the pipeline.
But there’s likely another rationale at work here as well. To compete with a products like the iPad, Surface needs evangelists, people who will use it daily. People who will travel with it, take it to cafes and parks. People who will bring it out into the world. And the education market is potentially a wellspring of such folk.
If Microsoft’s new education promotion works as intended, we’ll see more Surface units in the wild. And that’s important. Because it’s hard to accept Surface as an alternative to the iPad or Galaxy Tab if you don’t see other people using it. Microsoft’s new Surface ads poking fun at Siri and the iPad are great. But they’re sticks and rags in a world in which you board a flight from San Francisco to New York and there are dozens of passengers with their faces obscured by iPads and Kindles and nary a Surface in site.
Marketing only goes so far. Microsoft desperately needs to put Surface in more hands. Maybe this new initiative will help it to do that.

See inside Facebook’s network & explore Google’s data dreams at Structure

Structure 2012: Werner Vogels - CTO and VP, Amazon
Want to understand how Facebook connects its servers? Hear from VMware’s CEO how the virtualization giant plans to build its next big business? Discover why Snapchat builds on Google App Engine as opposed to Amazon Web Services? Or maybe you want to understand if Microsoft can compete in the cloud.
We’re going to have people discussing all this and more on Wednesday and Thursday at this week’s Structure conference in San Francisco. In the sixth year of the event we’re spending a lot of our time delving into the practical matters of building out webscale infrastructure, from the networking conundrums to the business process around scaling.
If there’s one big theme for the show this year, it’s what happens when IT meets the business and how to bring an understanding of business goals to scaling out services, whether you are Amazon or Revlon. We’ll have Kevin Scott of LinkedIn sharing how he re-architected the business social network’s infrastructure to better meet business goals. Cory von Wallenstein of Dyn will discuss the process the company follows to support existing features while building new ones that must scale rapidly without breaking the service or the bank.
We’ll also have executives from Warner Music Group sharing how the company is building out an internal platform as a service and what it will do for the business, while CIOs from Revlon, Kohl’s and The Clorox Company share their takes on the cloud from inside the enterprise.
Networking nerds from web giants will be there discussing the importance of using software defined networks and real-time information for building application aware networks. Plus, we have several talks from people such as Jeff Dean of Google, Jason Hoffman of Joyent and Adrian Cockcroft of Netflix  that will discuss how to push our infrastructure’s boundaries for the data-rich era we’re entering.
We’ll also have ten three-minute talks from our Cloud Trailblazers who will be there ready to talk about their ideas for how to rethink infrastructure. You can meet the stars of tomorrow over the course of the two-day event. Or you can network with the stars of today. Plus, two hot startups will debut and there’s also a six-company LaunchPad with very young startups.
I’m preparing to get on a plane from Austin to spend this week in San Francisco. I’ve made this trip dozens of times for dozens of GigaOM events, but this one has me the most excited. We’ve pulled some amazing people together to talk not just about defining the cloud or various trends in infrastructure, but how the shift in information technology is playing out at real companies whether they are startups, enterprises or the giants of the webscale world.
We have a few tickets left, so just sign up and get on over to the event. This isn’t some wannabe cloud show. This is Structure, the first and the best cloud show planned by myself, Derrick Harris, Barb Darrow and the GigaOM events team. We wouldn’t let you down.

Google Spearheads New Effort Against Child Porn Online

A number of internet regulations, devised by different internet companies as well as regulatory authorities, have tried hard to curb online child porn. Google is now spearheading a new effort to that end, creating a new cross-industry database highlighting instances of child porn, making it easier for different organizations to report them.
Google
Google will populate questionable images into this database through a method known as ‘hashing.’ Hashing essentially analyzes the different specifics of an image, without caring about the type or resolution of the file. This helps it identify exact components that are specific to child-porn images and then flag these images to be removed from the web.

According to an official blog post by Google, “Since 2008, we’ve used ‘hashing’ technology to tag known child sexual abuse images, allowing us to identify duplicate images which may exist elsewhere. Each offending image in effect gets a unique ID that our computers can recognize without humans having to view them again.”

The post further reveals how the database being created by Google will help law enforcement agencies, “Recently, we’ve started working to incorporate encrypted ‘fingerprints’ of child sexual abuse images into a cross-industry database. This will enable companies, law enforcement and charities to better collaborate on detecting and removing these images, and to take action against the criminals.”

The search giant has also dedicated millions of dollars to curb child abuse and to ensure, through different charities and organizations, to rescue such children who have been victim of such issues.

Appreciating these efforts, an official of the UK government stated, “Google have stepped up. No one can argue about that. In all my time working in this space no company has ever devoted anything like this level of resources to working with civil society organizations to attack online child abuse images.”

Leaked Windows 8.1 screenshots show off Xbox Music, Movie Moments apps

Leaked Windows 81 screenshots show off Xbox Music, Movie Moments apps
We already know about Microsoft's impending Windows 8 overhaul, but previews of app specific updates have been few and far between. Now, thanks to an apparent Windows Store update on leaked builds, we're starting to see what kind of updates we can expect. In addition to updates for the news, weather, travel, finance and sports apps (see the video after the break), images are leaking for the OS' new calculator application, sound recorder, Movie Moments and an Xbox Music redesign. It's hard to judge these tweaks without actually handling the update ourselves, but we'll say it again for good measure: we may have to review Windows 8 all over again.

Mozilla Wants Scientists to be More Open

Mozilla Wants Scientists To Be More Open
When researchers needed an easier way to share data and resources, and generally collaborate they invented the internet. And then they all went home and let the memes and brunch photos take over. Which is weird. Sure, initiatives like CERN are able to coordinate thousands of scientists toward common goals as a result of the internet, but the process of publishing research really hasn't changed much.

People are finally starting to notice, and science-focused social media services are cropping up. One is Mozilla's Science Lab, which will promote open web practices. Kaitlin Thaney, who worked on starting the Creative Commons science program, is leading the charge. Science Lab's first focus will be digital literacy specifically geared for science, and the project is partnering with Greg Wilson who founded Software Carpentry, a program that helps researchers feel more comfortable with web resources. At this point it just seems like something's got to give in the traditional academic publishing system. Might make research feel more accessible to non-scientists, too. [Mozilla]