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Submission + - Google Urged To Let Personal Data Fade Away (eweekeurope.co.uk) 1

jee4all writes: Researchers say personal information should "degrade" — becoming less specific over time — to protect users' privacy

Rather than amassing personal data and holding on to it as long as legally possible, companies such as Google should allow the data to degrade over time, according to researchers.

In an interview with the BBC this week, Dutch researcher Harold van Heerde discussed his work on the idea of allowing data to becomes less specific over time. Letting the specifics gradually disappear could protect consumer privacy while also meeting the needs of service providers, he said.

Google

Submission + - Google audits street view data systems (itnews.com.au)

schliz writes: Google's plans to upgrade to high-definition Street View in Australia are on hold until it completes a rigorous internal audit of the processes, it announced today. The company is currently being investigated by international regulators about possible privacy breeches when it became known that its street view vehicles were capturing not only publicly available SSIDs and MAC addresses, but also samples of payload data transmitted over these networks.
Science

Submission + - New Metamaterial Means More Efficient Solar Cells (gizmag.com)

ElectricSteve writes: Metamaterials are manmade substances designed to do some very weird things that natural materials don’t. The path of a beam of light through a natural material like glass is predictable, but scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have engineered an optical material that bends light in the wrong direction. This new negative-index metamaterial (NIM) could have several valuable uses including invisibility cloaking, superlensing (imaging nano-scale objects using visible light) and improved light collection in solar cells.
Google

Submission + - Facebook attracting more visitors than Google (hitwise.com)

vikingpower writes: "Internet research firm Hitwise just broke the news: last week, Facebook attracted 7,07 percent of the internet traffic in the USA, against 7,03 percent for Google. This is an historical first, and reflects a change in the way people use internet. They tend to privilege social interaction sites above "passive" search engines."
Power

Submission + - Toshiba ends incandescent bulb production (goodgearguide.com.au) 1

angry tapir writes: "Toshiba has ended production of mass-market incandescent light bulbs, putting to a close a 120-year manufacturing history of the products. The company, which is one of Japan's largest makers of lighting products, had planned to halt production next year but brought up the date by a year. It will now focus on more energy efficient products including LED (light-emitting diode) lights, which contain a handful of white LEDs and draw a fraction of the power of incandescent bulbs."
Science

Submission + - Nokia Targets Mobile Kinetic Energy Charging (eweekeurope.co.uk)

justice4all writes: Nokia has filed a US patent for a phone charger that harvests kinetic energy

The technology has been used in laptops, PDAs and GPS receivers, according to Nokia. Essentially, the mobile devices would be powered, in part, through the movements of their owners.

Comment Re:A bright future for the web... (Score 1) 181

Translate is a work in progress, so not all of the translations will be clean, crisp and accurate. But as with everything else Google does, Translate is an iterative technology that will Google will advance over time. http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/news/new-google-chrome-browser-beta-offers-auto-translation-5605

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