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TECH TREK

Chinese News Agency Earnestly Reports Satirical News on Bezos’ Post Purchase

Comedian and writer Andy Borowitz has risen to pretty heady comedic heights. His Borowitz Report, a satirical chronicle of daily news — one election season headline read, “Weather Forces Romney to Shift Lying to Other States” — was picked up by The New Yorker and is frequently the Most Popular item on the high-brow site.

Not everyone, however, gets the humor.

Xinhua, the Chinese government’s official press agency, took notice of a Borowitz Report article that claimed Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’ recent US$250 million purchase of The Washington Post was an accident.

Xinhua published a translation of the article and passed it off as real news.

The joke’s on them.

[Source: The Shanghaiist]

Citing Snowden, White House Nixes Obama-Putin Meeting

Sure, missile defense was listed as a factor. Arms control and commercial relations, too.

However, Edward Snowden is the nugget from a White House statement that is getting the most attention.

President Obama canceled a scheduled meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at next month’s G20 Summit in Russia. Russia, of course, recently granted serial leaker Edward Snowden temporary asylum, and that decision played a role in the Obama cancellation.

“Russia’s disappointing decision to grant Edward Snowden temporary asylum was also a factor we considered in assessing the current state of our bilateral relationship,” White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said in a statement, adding that there “is not enough progress in our bilateral agenda with Russia” to warrant such talks.

The U.S. will go ahead with a meeting between Secretary of State John Kerry and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and their Russian counterparts, slated for Friday.

[Source: The White House, via The Register]

Flipboard Blocked in China

The international version of the social reading app Flipboard — which culls and collects content from news sites and social media and displays it as a sort of digital magazine — has been blocked in China.

It makes sense that China would block an app specifically designed to aggregate news and social media content. China has famously blocked Twitter and Facebook, and it has blocked a handful of foreign news sites, among them The Wall Street Journal’s Chinese website, which it blacked out briefly earlier this week.

The Chinese version of Flipboard, launched for iPhones in March of 2012, is still available.

[Source: The Next Web]

Former Alibaba Exec Sentenced

Yan Limin, former general manager of Chinese e-commerce and Internet giant Alibaba, was sentence to seven years in prison for accepting bribes.

Yan was fired from Alibaba about four months before being arrested a little more than a year ago.

Alibaba chief Jack Ma made some unfortunate remarks last month, likening his actions to rid his company of fraud with Beijing’s decision to crack down on protestors in Tiananmen Square.

[Source: Tech In Asia]

Android Global Share Rising

Aided by a spike in China, Android’s slice of the global smartphone market reached 79.3 percent in the second quarter, up from 69.1 percent a year prior.

Microsoft’s Windows Phone was the only other operating system to gain — but that was from 3.1 percent to 3.7 percent. Windows Phone is the OS used in Nokia’s new line of Lumia phones.

Apple’s iOS fell from 16.6 percent to 13.2, while BlackBerry, the one-time world leader, came in fourth place at 3 percent, down from 5 percent last year.

[Source: IDC via The Wall Street Journal]

David Vranicar is a freelance journalist and author ofThe Lost Graduation: Stepping off campus and into a crisis. You can check out hisECT News archive here, and you can email him at david[dot]vranicar[at]newsroom[dot]ectnews[dot]com.

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