Chinese authorities have cracked a total of 1,327 cases of personal
information trafficking which involved the use of Internet and other
technologies..
The ministry of public security said in a statement on Sunday, it had
broken up 468 gangs and arrested 1,213 people for suspected personal information
trafficking, China Dailyreported. More than 700 million pieces of personal
information were also seized by police from more than 20 public security organs,
including the cities of Beijing, Hebei and Shanghai.
A large number of computers, hard disks, tracking and positioning devices
had been used by the criminals to market personal information were also captured
during the campaign, the ministry said.
In early April for example, the police in the cities of Beijing and Hebei
found a gang marketed personal information on the Internet, with business
spanning more than 20 provincial and city regions across the country, the
statement noted.
The ministry said it will maintain strong crackdowns on such activities to
ensure people's legal rights are well protected, and also asked the public to
improve the awareness of self-protection by not disclosing personal information
in their daily life.
Late last month, Shanghai's People Procuratorate also said the number of
identity theft cases increased from one in the first half of last year, to
thirty cases this year, with most suspects abusing their employee position to
harvest data for criminal purposes.
China however, has stepped up measures to protect the online personal data
of its citizens. The country's police force in June last year was pushing for
more regulated and clearly defined parameters on crimes personal data theft, as
the existing law makes it tough for law enforcers to convict criminals. The
government also set out rules and guidelines which companies must observe when
they process personal data in February this year.
2013年8月12日星期一
NVidia and Intel, all of that is possible
It's no secret that Surface RT and Windows RT, along with Windows RT on
other platforms, didn't do too as Microsoft hoped. The latest collateral harm in
that failure was Nvidia's Tegra processors, which run in the Surface RT.
Surface/Windows RT had no shortage of skeptics even when it launched, but it is attainable things could alter more than time. I'm not saying that this *will* come about, but that there's a reasonable situation for it. Here's how it operates.
Very first, some Microsoft organization plan forensics: Microsoft wants developers to write apps for the new, Modern UI (a.k.a. Metro). Releasing Windows 8 only for Intel architecture, they have to have believed, would have made it as well simple for developers to bypass Metro because conventional Windows programs would currently run on it (and on Windows 7 as well as other versions). But if Surface RT had been a results, developers would would like to be on it, and would pick to create Metro apps so that you can be on each platforms.
Nicely, that didn't perform. In truth, colour me shocked in the degree of reticence of developers to create Metro apps, because the sheer number of users who can run them will undoubtedly be pretty big, even if it is little enough to become considered a failure for Microsoft. Try to remember, any other firm in the world would really like to have a disaster like Windows Vista, hundreds of millions of copies of which have been sold. Such is definitely the worst you can expect from Windows 8.
This holiday season you may anticipate to find out touch-enabled Windows systems heavily promoted and Microsoft will attempt other promotions to have persons buying apps in the shop. In reality, the failure to acquire developers writing apps for the shop will be the single biggest difficulty they have. With excellent apps users will undoubtedly come, and with users very good apps will come.
And in the event the apps do come, then the selection to purchase an RT device could grow to be much far more reasonable. There requirements to be a price advantage in comparison with x86 because the RT will nevertheless be significantly less capable, or it will have to demonstrate far far better battery life or anything to give men and women a explanation to get it, as opposed to an Intel-based method.
Depending on the efficiency and energy consumption with the most current chips from NVidia and Intel, all of that is possible. It's also attainable that Intel will narrow the price and performance consumption gaps, and RT will drop all its raison d'etre.
But if, come vacation time or later, the Windows app selection is respectable and RT systems are less highly-priced than Intel-based ones, it could possibly be perfectly affordable to get one. If they get low-cost sufficient, people might get casual about buying them.
My money's against it, however it could come about. There happen to be attempts in the past to put Windows on other architectures, but they have all failed because the Intel has normally enhanced their chip efficiency enough to make the price of incompatibility as well high relative towards the rewards.
You can make a case that Microsoft ought to have pursued it this approach to start with: x86 1st, other architectures after the app market was solidly established. It appears like that will be the Strategy B for Microsoft and NVidia, and probably it was built-in in the starting.
Surface/Windows RT had no shortage of skeptics even when it launched, but it is attainable things could alter more than time. I'm not saying that this *will* come about, but that there's a reasonable situation for it. Here's how it operates.
Very first, some Microsoft organization plan forensics: Microsoft wants developers to write apps for the new, Modern UI (a.k.a. Metro). Releasing Windows 8 only for Intel architecture, they have to have believed, would have made it as well simple for developers to bypass Metro because conventional Windows programs would currently run on it (and on Windows 7 as well as other versions). But if Surface RT had been a results, developers would would like to be on it, and would pick to create Metro apps so that you can be on each platforms.
Nicely, that didn't perform. In truth, colour me shocked in the degree of reticence of developers to create Metro apps, because the sheer number of users who can run them will undoubtedly be pretty big, even if it is little enough to become considered a failure for Microsoft. Try to remember, any other firm in the world would really like to have a disaster like Windows Vista, hundreds of millions of copies of which have been sold. Such is definitely the worst you can expect from Windows 8.
This holiday season you may anticipate to find out touch-enabled Windows systems heavily promoted and Microsoft will attempt other promotions to have persons buying apps in the shop. In reality, the failure to acquire developers writing apps for the shop will be the single biggest difficulty they have. With excellent apps users will undoubtedly come, and with users very good apps will come.
And in the event the apps do come, then the selection to purchase an RT device could grow to be much far more reasonable. There requirements to be a price advantage in comparison with x86 because the RT will nevertheless be significantly less capable, or it will have to demonstrate far far better battery life or anything to give men and women a explanation to get it, as opposed to an Intel-based method.
Depending on the efficiency and energy consumption with the most current chips from NVidia and Intel, all of that is possible. It's also attainable that Intel will narrow the price and performance consumption gaps, and RT will drop all its raison d'etre.
But if, come vacation time or later, the Windows app selection is respectable and RT systems are less highly-priced than Intel-based ones, it could possibly be perfectly affordable to get one. If they get low-cost sufficient, people might get casual about buying them.
My money's against it, however it could come about. There happen to be attempts in the past to put Windows on other architectures, but they have all failed because the Intel has normally enhanced their chip efficiency enough to make the price of incompatibility as well high relative towards the rewards.
You can make a case that Microsoft ought to have pursued it this approach to start with: x86 1st, other architectures after the app market was solidly established. It appears like that will be the Strategy B for Microsoft and NVidia, and probably it was built-in in the starting.
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