An editor for ‘The Verge’ took a job with Apple — and didn’t tell his employer

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An editor for The Verge took a job with Apple — but didn’t tell his employer. 

Chris Ziegler, a founding editor at the tech-focused digital media publication, began working for Apple in July 2016. Ziegler did not tell The Verge, where he had been a deputy editor, and continued to be employed by the website, according to Editor-in-Chief Nilay Patel, who posted a note to The Verge on Friday afternoon.

Patel said that the website had become aware of Ziegler’s dual employment and investigated whether he had been involved in any coverage of his new employer. Strangely, Patel said that the website had not heard from Ziegler in August or September. Read more…

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The Verge’s Deputy Editor Chris Ziegler Was Secretly Working for Apple for Two Months

Late this afternoon, Nilay Patel, the editor-in-chief of The Verge, published a post detailing the circumstances around the departure of Chris Ziegler, a founding member of the site. As it turns out, according to Patel, Ziegler had been pulling double duty as an employee of both The Verge and Apple.

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Pissing Man Discovers Major Apple AirPod Design Flaw

While people mourn the loss of the headphone jack on the iPhone 7, they ignore the real danger of Apple’s AirPods : If you wear them while you use the bathroom, you run the risk them falling from your ear into the toilet. Be careful out there, AirPod users.

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Flurry data shows Apple Watch and Android Wear may have spawned new interest in health apps


A new report from Flurry notes that of all the apps we have access to, those in the Health and Fitness categories on Google Play and in the App Store are the ones we rely on. Based on two metrics — use per week and 30-day retention — Flurry’s findings suggest health apps are only rivaled by weather or news. The lone failing of health apps is how often we tap into them, but that may be a poor metric to consider if we’re using wearables. With Apple Watch, the wearables market exploded along with apps for wearables. With a…

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Apple is ‘doing what’s right’ in iPhone encryption case, former CEO John Sculley says

Former Apple chief executive John Sculley.

Former Apple chief executive John Sculley believes that his old company is doing an excellent job in the debate with the U.S. government over helping it decrypt San Bernardino shooter Syed Rizwan Farook’s iPhone.

Sculley laid out his views on the subject in an interview today with VentureBeat. Here’s what he said:

I have a very strong opinion [on the subject]. I think Tim Cook has handled this situation extremely well. In fact he’s done such a good job at it that I’m sure he’ll end up being a Harvard Business School case history of how an executive manages a crisis.

They obviously have issues that need to be, you know, appreciated and understood and clarified regarding security. Nobody wants terrorists doing bad things. But the reality is to go out and take a look at the 1789 All Writs Act law and use that as an example, and they say they want to create a precedent to open up privacy on people’s smartphones — I think that was, you know not well thought out before they went and did that.

Absolutely, I think they’re doing what’s right. What Tim Cook has said — he said, “Look, it’s not Apple’s role to determine law. … We have the Constitution, we have Congress, and we have Supreme Court. Let’s do it the way we do things in other big issues in the history of the country. Let Congress weigh in and let the Supreme Court weigh in. Why should Apple be the one that has to determine all these things?”

The way the law is now on privacy and freedom of speech, I think Tim Cook has handled it exactly as he should.

It’s not surprising to see Sculley sticking up for the company he used to run, but he is one more prominent person taking Apple’s side in this complex controversy. Other technology executives, such as Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg and Twitter’s Jack Dorsey, have also announced their support for the iPhone maker.

Sculley, author of the 2014 book Moonshots, has been busy as of late. He’s a cofounder of Obi Worldphone, a company selling low-priced Android phones in Asia, the Middle East, and South Africa. And he’s more directly involved with PeoplePicker, a company that maintains a database of pay rates for every job in the U.S., and RxAdvance, a company seeking to lower pharmaceutical costs using big data analytics.

For a full rundown of the Apple-FBI case, check out our timeline.

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Apple devs: Don’t let Apple’s Xcode validation scare you

The Apple App Store has long enjoyed a sterling reputation for screening out malware. But last weekend, the company pulled apps infected with XcodeGhost malware from the Chinese Apple App Store — infected apps that had apparently been created with a counterfeit version of Apple’s Xcode IDE by unsuspecting developers.

As a precaution, Apple emailed its developers on Tuesday, recommending that they validate their installed version of Xcode using a simple procedure to ensure it wasn’t a hacked version. The email also contained a reminder to “always download Xcode directly from the Mac App Store, or from the Apple Developer website, and leave Gatekeeper enabled on all your systems to protect against tampered software.”

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Apple drops iCloud prices, matches rival storage services from Google and Microsoft

For the second year in a row, Apple reduced prices for its expanded iCloud storage plans, putting costs in line with rivals like Google, Microsoft and Dropbox.

Apple announced changes to iCloud extra storage pricing earlier this month at the event where it unveiled new iPhones, the larger iPad Pro and a revamped Apple TV.

Although the Cupertino, Calif., company did not boost the amount of free storage space — as Computerworld speculated it might — and instead continued to provide just 5GB of iCloud space gratis, it bumped up the $ 0.99 per month plan from 20GB to 50GB, lowered the price of the 200GB plan by 25 percent to $ 2.99 monthly, and halved the 1TB plan’s price to $ 9.99.

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