Word: usersã
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...found their gift ideas spoiled because they had not known to disable the feature each time they bought something. Facebook’s social advertising feature uses Beacon, an online tracking system which displays ads of participating companies from which users have recently made purchases. The system also alerts users?? friends to new purchases. Though the tweaks to the feature may have appeased most users, some users said they are still worried about their privacy. “With the nature of Facebook, privacy is a fine line,” said Jeffrey...
...student groups some slack. While the Harvard name may legally belong to upper management, intellectually it is the property of its users??without whose contributions the name’s meaning itself would evaporate. Harvard’s legal archers would find better targets elsewhere. Garrett G. D. Nelson ’09, a Crimson editorial editor, is a social studies and visual and environmental studies concentrator in Cabot House...
Thomas added that the free network’s speed—which would depend on location, weather, the number of users, and the users?? online activities—could vary between one and 54 megabytes. In comparison, University high-speed wireless internet usually runs consistently at 54 megabytes per second. [SEE CORRECTION BELOW...
...seem like strange bedfellows, on a campus where many students prefer a 4.0 to a 40, we cannot pretend to be too surprised.We also cannot feign shock at the light use of the Student Organization Center at Hilles (SOCH). Though the administration has offered considerable perks to SOCH users??including a snazzy café, a well-equipped library, and plenty of meeting space—student groups have been reticent to move their activities to the Quad. The administration, however, is wrong to penalize student groups by taking away their office space for failing to take full advantage...
...protecting user privacy while abiding by the law,” said Victoria Grand, a Google spokeswoman. “Last year, we went to court to resist a [Department of Justice] subpoena for millions of search queries on the grounds that it was excessive and invaded our users?? privacy.” “The judge ultimately ruled in Google’s favor, establishing an important legal precedent for protecting user privacy,” she said. But Mayer-Schoenberger said that search engines could sell personally identifiable information to outside organizations, such...