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Mittwoch, 11. Juni 2014 00:00:00 Technik News
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Twitter went into crisis mode today to fix The

The first Android Wear smartwatch could be more affordable than you'd think.

China makes headlines every other week for its censorship of the Internet, but few people outside the country know what it’s like to live with those access controls, or how to get around them. Foreigners who visit the country should expect some headaches. Be prepared to live without Google, Twitter and your favorite daily newspapers, and to have a hard time connecting with friends back home, or even firing off an email. That’s how bad it can get.

The company wants to control everything bought, sold, and processed -- including mobile payments and even your local babysitter.

If you saw strange pop-up messages in TweetDeck this morning, you weren’t alone. It wasn’t the work of the Syrian Electronic Army, just some relatively harmless XSS exploitation. The vulnerability allowed hackers to remotely execute code, specifically in TweetDeck’s Chrome app, though the exploit was spotted in other TweetDeck versions. (The Mac app was reportedly not affected.) The Mac application for Tweetdeck does not appear to be vulnerable to the XSS. Confirmed in Chrome though. <script>alert("Yo!");</script>♥ Some 40,000 Twitter accounts also unwittingly from a My Little Pony account, thought to be the result of the same vulnerability.

Apple said it pays every euro of every tax it owes

You can buy

The few lucky early buyers of the It wasn't clear what the hold-up was, but now a Cyanogen staffer has stepped forward to shed a little light on the issue. On a