Correction: Android usage
The story incorrectly listed which version of Android has 20.9 percent share of usage. It is Android 4.0, aka Ice Cream Sandwich.
Read the corrected story here.
The story incorrectly listed which version of Android has 20.9 percent share of usage. It is Android 4.0, aka Ice Cream Sandwich.
Read the corrected story here.
Read the updated version here.
The initial story incorrectly said the photos were of the iPad Mini. The photos actually show a mock-up of the tablet.
Read the corrected story here.
The proper name of the subject of this story is Gottfrid Svartholm Warg. The story originally dropped his last name.
This story originally misspelled the name of David Kurmann, head of marketing and sales at Koubachi.
The initial version of this story incorrectly defined the hearing. Today's fairness hearing allows Facebook to bypass federal registration for its Instagram deal.
The article incorrectly stated that the Nexus 7 ad was the first ever to pop up on Google's home page.
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Under patent '677, this post initially misstated the Epic model that infringed. It was the Epic 4G Touch, not the Epic Touch.
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This story and its headline have been updated and corrected to reflect new information provided by the researchers that completely changed their conclusions.
Researchers today said that hackers behind the Gauss cyber-espionage malware targeting banks in the Middle East were directing infected computers to connect to a command-and-control server used by the Flame spyware. However, later in the day they said they were mistaken and that other researchers had control of the server instead.
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An earlier version of this piece incorrectly compared Facebook's quarterly average revenue per user (ARPU) to the annual ARPU that would justify its IPO share price. Facebook's annualized ARPU is currently $5.12; it would need to rise above $33 with its current user base to justify a $38 share price.