Word: companyã
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...consented each time a purchase was made. In his apology this week, Zuckerberg stated that Facebook released a new “privacy control” allowing users to completely disable Beacon—a step he described as “the right solution” to the company??s previous mistakes. “Facebook was already a privacy nightmare, so I definitely don’t like that they were able to send out our information without telling us,” user Kristine E. Beckerle ’11 said...
...middle schools, and 83 percent of elementary schools have either vending machines or snack bars that offer primarily unhealthy snacks. This is because many schools and large food and beverage producers, like Coca-Cola and Pepsi, have reached agreements by which both parties profit when schools sell a particular company??s brands. The health of our schoolchildren, however, is far too high a price to pay for increased school revenue. Just as it would be ludicrous for high schools to sell cigarettes during lunch, it is ridiculous that 83 percent of elementary schools are making a profit...
...federal judge ruled against Facebook Inc. on Friday, denying two emergency motions to force 02138 magazine to take down documents regarding Mark E. Zuckerberg, the company??s founder. The documents—which included Zuckerberg’s Harvard College application, his personal diary, and an e-mail he wrote to the College’s Administrative Board—are evidence in an ongoing court battle between Facebook and ConnectU, a social networking site founded by Harvard students who employed Zuckerberg before he went on to found Facebook. The ConnectU founders allege that Zuckerberg, formerly...
Earlier this month, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos unveiled Kindle, his company??s newest take on one of the biggest futuristic technologies that never took off—the electronic book. Though a massive PR blitz has helped get the white, plasticky device backordered through the holidays, Kindle is unlikely to be the next sensation Bezos hopes it will be. As bloggers have been quick to point out, Kindle has many problems that must be addressed before it becomes a permanent fixture at Starbucks nationwide...
...approximately $20 million in damages, the amount he says he would have earned on the project. The defendants argued in court papers that because they were not directly involved in the investment’s management, state law shielded them from Fahey’s accusations. The Harvard Management Company??s outgoing president, Mohamed A. El-Erian, could not be reached for comment. —Staff writer Kevin Zhou can be reached at kzhou@fas.harvard.edu...