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Alibaba Seeks $21 Billion in Highly Awaited I.P.O.dealbook.nytimes.com
The Chinese e-commerce giant plans to price its shares between $60 and $66 a share. At the midpoint of that range, the company would be valued at nearly $156 billion, not far behind Amazon.com. - commonmark.org
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It’s Time For VCs To Run To Their Bubble Bunkers | TechCrunchtechcrunch.com
Techstars, one of the most prominent accelerators in the world, announced yesterday that it was introducing what it called “an equity back guarantee.” The.. - github.com
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Google to mull ways to store Russian users’ personal data locallyen.itar-tass.com
President Vladimir Putin signed a law in July to oblige Internet companies to keep personal data of Russian users in the country -
Exclusive: Marc Newson to Join Jony Ive on Apple’s Design Teamvanityfair.com
Newson will work with Jonathan Ive, Apple’s head of design. - news.ycombinator.com
- googleonlinesecurity.blogspot.com
- moderncrypto.org
- kumu.io
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ChitChatchitchat.ideo.com
ChitChat is pure voice messaging. Just tap and hold on a contact to talk, then release to send. Once your message is heard, it gets deleted. -
So Bill Gates Has This Idea for a History Class . . .nytimes.com
Should one of the world’s richest men get to dictate the future of how we learn about our past? -
The global talent crunchfortune.com
The coming labor shortage is being fought head-on by a new generation of talent innovators—Silicon Valley -
The roots of ‘Anonymous,’ the infamous online hacking community | PBS NewsHourpbs.org
As online hacking becomes more common, interest in the individuals and groups behind such cyber attacks rises. Hari Sreenivasan speaks with David Kushner of The New Yorker on the origins of one of the most infamous hacking groups, “Anonymous.” Continue... -
The U.S. Government's Secret Plans to Spy for American Corporations - The Interceptfirstlook.org
Throughout the last year, the U.S. government has repeatedly insisted that it does not engage in economic and industrial espionage, in an effort to distinguish its own spying from China’s infiltrations of Google, Nortel, and other corporate targets. So... - engineering.zenpayroll.com
- queue.acm.org
- nytimes.com
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More Than Meets the Eye: NASA Scientists Listen to Datanasa.gov
Scientists at NASA use their ears instead of eyes to process satellite data more rapidly and detect more details than through visual analysis. -
JPMorgan Had Exodus of Tech Talent Before Hacker Breachbloomberg.com
As hackers pierced JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s defenses in June, the bank’s cybersecurity chief was just getting acquainted with his employer and its sprawling technology infrastructure.