iPad Mini 6 release date, price, news and leaks
We've heard Apple is working on a new iPad to come out in early 2021 - here's what we want to see.
Read MoreIn a major twist, major social media platforms and messaging apps like Facebook, Google, Koo, Sharechat, Telegram, WhatsApp have agreed to comply fully or partially with the new IT rules introduced by the Indian government.
The new IT policies require these Tech platforms with over 50 lakh users to appoint a local grievance officer, a nodal officer, and a chief compliance officer. According to the government officials, both Google and Facebook have initiated the process of updating their website with requisite information and have shared the details with the IT ministry.
Additionally, in a bid to fight fake news the government wants messaging platforms like WhatsApp to implement traceability to track the origin of a message. WhatsApp, rather than agreeing to this condition, sued the Indian government stating that this policy could impact users’ privacy.
On the other hand, it is reported that Twitter, which has been at the loggerheads with the Indian federal government, is yet to comply with the policies. Rather than announcing a compliance officer based in India, Twitter has reportedly shared details of a lawyer working in a law firm as a nodal contact person and grievance officer.
TechRadar India has reached out to Twitter and is yet to get an official response on the same.
Apart from the appointment of nodal officers and chief compliance officer in the country, the new IT rules require social media companies to take action against flagged content within 36 hours and remove any content that is reported for nudity or pornographic within 24 hours.
Facebook, WhatsApp and Twitter are also required to implement traceability of messages, which according to the government is critical in fighting fake news and stops the spreading of hate messages.
Failing to comply with these laws will result in these platforms will make them liable for action in case a complaint is filed against them. Noncompliance to the new policies will mean that the platform will lose its intermediary status that provides them immunity against being liable for any data shared/hosted on their platform.
While WhatsApp feels that the traceability clause will breach user privacy and hence is apprehensive in agreeing to the condition, Twitter is not ready to accept that the Chief compliance officer can be criminally accountable for any content shared on the platform. It is also against some of the conditions that force Twitter to share the details of its users and feels that this is inconsistent with open, democratic principles.
The Indian government, this time though, has taken a tough stance and wants all such companies to follow the rules of the land, in case they want to operate in the country.
Want to know about the latest happenings in tech? Follow TechRadar India on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!
We've heard Apple is working on a new iPad to come out in early 2021 - here's what we want to see.
Read MoreA former Microsoft executive has offered up some advice for current CEO Satya Nadella: spin off Windows and Office and focus on Azure, Microsoft's cloud computing crown jewel. Ben Slivka, a 14-year veteran at Microsoft who left in 1999, gave the unsolicited advice to Nadella in an interview with CNBC, saying: "The right thing probably is to bet the future on the cloud." “People running the Windows business put the mobile OS people in a box and constrained what they could do,” Slivka said. “They had their little ‘Start’ button and all this other bullshit. Microsoft rebooted its mobile strategy three times. Finally cellphone manufacturers and developers just gave up.” Satya Nadella took over the reigns at Microsoft in 2014 at a perilous time and has done an exceptional job, equal to – and perhaps even surpassing – Tim Cook at Apple. Since then, Microsoft's stock has risen from around $36 to $315, where it sits today, having gained 51% in 2021 alone, outpacing the S&P 500's 27% rise. To achieve this turnaround, Nadella refocused Microsoft on rethinking how Office and Windows fit into its overall services business; gone were the one-time payments, replaced with recurring monthly (or yearly) fees to access Windows and Office 365. On top of this, Nadella invested heavily in building out Azure and other enterprise-focused offerings to compete with Amazon's AWS and Google Cloud. By some estimates, Azure hold 20% of the cloud market, below AWS' 32% and above Google's 9%. According to analysts that CNBC spoke to, spinning off Windows and Office would make very little sense. Nadella has built significant and much-needed synergies between Microsoft's various businesses, in such a way that the rise of one boosts the others. Removing two of Microsoft's most longstanding and important products from the mix would likely have a negative impact on Azure and other services, which can be bundled together and sold to companies. Microsoft's wild ride
Would spinning off Windows and Office work?
The global semiconductor shortage is coming for Apple MacBooks running on the company's in-house silicon, leading to significantly lower than expected shipments in 2022.
Read MoreTechRadar has sifted through all the NBN offerings to find you the fastest plans at the best prices.
Read MoreWant to hire best people for your project? Look no further you came to the right place!