Apple slammed over iPhone, iPad location tracking

Privacy watchdogs are demanding answers from Apple Inc. about why iPhones and iPads are secretly collecting location data on users — records that cellular service providers routinely keep but require a court order to disgorge. It’s not clear if other smartphones and tablet computers are logging such information on their users. And this week’s revelation that the Apple devices do wasn’t even new — some security experts... [more]

Japan PM declares no-go zone around nuclear plant

Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan on Thursday declared the 20-kilometre (12-mile) evacuation area around the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant a legal no-entry zone. The move, due to come into effect at midnight local time (1500 GMT), came after police found more than 60 families still living inside the zone around the plant that was hit by the March 11 quake and tsunami. The plant, where reactor cooling systems were knocked out, has... [more]

Second Swedish woman reports ‘fake rape’ slur

Greek authorities were saying that Swedish women were out to cash in on fake rape claims as early as 2002. Another Swedish woman has come forward telling the story of how she was mistreated after reporting a rape on the island of Kos in 2002. Last week the case of ‘Anna’, who was told she was trying to cash in on a special Swedish ‘rape insurance’ after reporting a rape in 2008, kicked off a media storm in Sweden. The second woman,... [more]

Spanish police snatch Sicilian mafia fugitive

Spanish police said on Wednesday they had arrested Sicilian mafia fugitive Claudio Adriano Giusto after 13 years on the run for murder and robbery. Giusto, who had been sentenced to 28 years in Italy for shooting dead a man in 1998, was arrested in the northeastern Spanish town of Alcarras by police working with their Italian colleagues and Interpol. “After a search of more than 13 years he was arrested in the Lerida town of Alcarras... [more]

Dutch watchdog ticks off Google

American internet giant Google has been intercepting private information in the Netherlands via people’s insecure wireless networks, says the Dutch Data Protection Authority (CBP). Google has destroyed the information: the company was threatened with damages imposed on a daily basis in case of non-compliance. The privacy watchdog says Google vehicles, which were taking photographs of Dutch streets for its Street View service, collected... [more]

Fire breaks out in Barcelona’s Sagrada Familia

Fire erupted Tuesday in a suspected arson attack on Barcelona’s historic Sagrada Familia church, forcing 1,500 tourists to evacuate, officials said. Firefighters extinguished the fire in the sacristry before it could consume the stonework of Antoni Gaudi’s world-renowned masterpiece, but some furnishings were damaged, they said. Ambulances ferried away four men working on the church who had inhaled smoke belching out from the... [more]

Portugal bailout talks start under Finnish shadow

European and IMF officials went into tough talks with Portugal Monday on the terms and conditions of a bailout as a Finnish anti-EU party’s election success cast doubt on its viability. Negotiations on a deal expected to be worth up to 80 billion euros ($115 billion) follow a technical mission last week to Lisbon by the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The government of Prime Minister... [more]

Robots in Japanese reactors detect high radiation

Readings Monday from robots that entered two crippled buildings at Japan’s tsunami-flooded nuclear plant for the first time in more than a month revealed a harsh environment still too radioactive for workers to enter. Nuclear officials said the radiation data for Unit 1 and Unit 3 at the tsunami-flooded Fukushima Dai-ichi plant — collected by U.S.-made robots that look like drafting lamps on treads — do not alter plans for stabilizing... [more]

Russia makes little progress against drugs: Medvedev

Russia has failed to make progress in fighting a growing drug epidemic that cuts economic growth by up to three percent every year, President Dmitry Medvedev said on Monday. Russia has the world’s third-largest heroin abuse rate and accounts for a third of all heroin deaths worldwide, feeding into a demographic disaster that experts say will drain one million people from the workforce every year until 2017. “In spite of the fact... [more]

Medical mistakes kill 3,000 Swedes a year

Around 3,000 people die every year in Sweden because of deficient patient safety, according to two leading doctors, who argue that Sweden needs to follow other countries in debating how to address the problem. “We can’t remain blind to the serious mistakes that are committed and which cause suffering and costs and sometimes lead to death,” write Ulf Ljungblad, head doctor at Östra Hospital in Gothenburg, and former County... [more]

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