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| Apple, Google appeal rejection of $325 mln hiring settlement | | By Dan Levine SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Four technology companies including Apple and Google blasted a U.S. Plaintiff workers accused Apple, Google, Intel and Adobe in a 2011 lawsuit of conspiring to avoid poaching each other's employees. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, California, rejected the proposed class action settlement, saying the amount was too low.
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| U.S. court rejects gay-marriage bans as 'implausible' | | Judge Richard Posner, appointed by Republican President Ronald Reagan in 1981, wrote the unanimous decision on behalf of a three-judge panel of the Chicago-based 7th U.S. The court ruled against the bans. Supreme Court weighs in during its coming term. The arguments advanced by both states in defense of the bans were "totally implausible," wrote Posner, 75 and the panel's lone Republican appointee.
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| China warns again of dark side of the mooncakes | | China's crackdown on corruption, a scourge Communist Party leaders fear threatens their hold on power, is likely to last at least another five years, an official said, warning also against the mid-autumn tradition of handing out mooncakes as gifts. Wang Qishan, secretary of China's anti-corruption watchdog, was quoted as saying the government's "campaign against extravagance and corruption" would continue for at least five years, the official China Daily said. President Xi Jinping has promised to go after "tigers and flies" in rooting out rampant graft, a campaign that has brought down politicians and company executives in industries including oil, cars and healthcare. The campaign has also dragged down sales of high-end products from the fiery sorghum-based liquor, baijiu, to mooncakes, both traditional popular gifts for smoothing business and official ties.
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| Apple to add security alerts for iCloud users, says Cook - WSJ | | (Reuters) - Apple Inc is planning additional steps to keep hackers out of user accounts in the face of the recent celebrity photo scandal and will aggressively encourage users to take stricter security measures, CEO Tim cook told the Wall Street Journal in an interview. Apple will alert users through email and push notifications when someone tries to change an account password, restore iCloud data to a new device, or when a device logs into an account for the first time, the report said. Cook said Apple will broaden its use of the two-factor authentication security system to avoid future intrusions, the Journal reported.
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