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This Is What Internet Ads Should Really Say
It might shock you to hear that it's not always easy to earn $5,000 from home, get a six-pack without exercise or enlarge your penis (not that you need to) via internet ads. This is what those ads should perhaps actually say. [Truth Facts]
Apple Is Fighting The Release Of A Video Of Steve Jobs, Saying The Media Wants To See 'A Dead Man'
Apple's lawyers are doing everything they can to prevent the release of a video that shows Steve Jobs giving testimony, The Verge reports.
The video is part of the iPod antitrust case against Apple, in which the company is accused of deleting music from iPods without telling customers. The plaintiffs say Apple wiped music that wasn't downloaded from iTunes off of iPods without telling customers.
One of the most important parts of the case is video testimony by Apple cofounder Steve Jobs. Recorded in 2011, the video shows Jobs' being grilled in a deposition about Apple's iTunes service.
The team of lawyers representing Apple in the antitrust lawsuit really does not want the video to be made public. Here's what one lawyer representing Apple said Tuesday night:
The marginal value of seeing him again, in his black turtleneck — this time very sick — is small. What they want is a dead man, and they want to show him to the rest of the world, because it's a judicial record.
It's understood that the video of Jobs was recorded in 2011, the year of his death. That means that Jobs will most likely appear unwell in the video, as his pancreatic cancer forced him to take a leave of absence from Apple at the start of that year.
Apple was notoriously cagey about Jobs' health while he was suffering from cancer. It insisted that his health was a private matter — even though he was the founder and CEO of the company with the most widely held stock in the world — and tried as hard as it could to avoid releasing details of his cancer treatment.
It's not the contents of the video that Apple wants to avoid being released (the media has already reported on a segment of the video shown in court). Instead, the company feels that the media is seizing upon the video for its own purposes.
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First episode of Telltale's 'Game of Thrones' series lands on Android
If you're anything like us, you cannot get enough of Game of Thrones.The fifth season of the hit HBO show won't be debuting for a while, but that doesn't mean you can't get your Westeros fix from other avenues. Telltale is here to assist in doing just that by launching the first episode of its Game of Thrones series on Android.
The Most Intricate Images of Live Nerves Ever Captured
You're looking at some of the most intricate images of live nerve endings ever captured, in which it's possible to make out individual nerves and touch receptors in unprecedented detail.