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On today's MadTech Daily, Dot brings you all the latest, including the struggles of the delivery giants Deliveroo, Just Eat Takeaway et al, The Trade Desk ranking premium publishers and China's court backing Apple in a row over app store fees. Further reading • MiQ's Michael Lampard Chisvo on fragmentation in CTV • Audigent's Drew Stein on Why Ad Tech is not Big Tech
Due to the advancement of technology, we now live in a more closely connected world that demands faster responses for work. This has made us more efficient, but at the cost of more overtime. Since COVID and remote work, it has become harder to account for our working time after office hours. If this is to become the new normal, we must find a way to make our extra efforts count. / Motivational Monday (20:35)! On the show: Laiming, Niu Honglin & Brandon Yates
Welcome back to today's episode of 'AI Lawyer Talking Tech'! In today's podcast, we will dive into the recent groundbreaking ruling by a Chinese court regarding the copyright of AI-generated images and the implications it holds for global copyright debates. We will also discuss the evolving landscape of AI regulation and law in 2023, including key developments in the UK, EU, China, and the US. Stay tuned as we explore the intersection of AI, copyright, and legal tech advancements. Chinese court declares that AI-generated image has copyright09 Dec 2023Technollama2023, AI and the Law06 Dec 2023GenAI-LexologyAt The TLTF Summit, It Was All About Making ‘Who Luck' Happen, To Drive the Future of Legal Tech11 Dec 2023LawSitesDSARs—motive and a coordinated action11 Dec 2023LexisNexis UKStanford Law School Introduces Innovative Student Loan Alternative11 Dec 2023JDJournalWith Launch of New AI Features, LawToolBox Is First Legal App Approved for Use with Copilot for Microsoft 36511 Dec 2023LawSitesHow private practice lawyers can keep up with the latest legal news11 Dec 2023LexisNexis UKNew Resource Catalogs and Makes Searchable Nearly 600 GPTs Related to Law, Tax and Regulatory Issues11 Dec 2023LawSites2023's best tech gifts for legal professionals11 Dec 2023NY Daily RecordHollysys to be Acquired by Ascendent Capital Partners for US$26.50 in Cash Per Share11 Dec 2023ChaseTrust us, says EU, our AI Act will make AI trustworthy by banning the nasty ones11 Dec 2023Tech RegisterSponsored Content: 6 Benefits of Electronic Payments for Lawyers11 Dec 2023LexBlogCommencement speaker to Elon Law grads: Get in the game on AI09 Dec 2023Elon University
“Hey! That was the Co's opportunity to sell baby formula!”___A Co that made infant formula had two shareholders: P as to 51%, DCo as to 49%: [1], [2]DCo was controlled by a married couple – D1 and D2 – who had roles including as the Co's former director and former CEO: [3]P alleged D1 and D2 breached their duties to the Co: [4]P said D1 and D2 caused an opportunity for the Co to promote and distribute a certain brand of infant formula to be diverted away from the Co, and toward entities related to D1, D2 and members of their family: [5] – [10]P said D1 and D2 caused the Co to transfer ownership of its trademarks to entities related to them: [11] – [15]P said D1 and D2 caused the Co to make payments to entities related to them based on fraudulent invoices and otherwise improperly: [16]P said the entities related to the Ds were aware of these breaches and knowingly took the benefit: [18], [19]P sought leave to bring a derivative suit to agitate these claims, and also alleged s232 corporate oppression: [23], [24]Interim freezing orders were made pending the outcome of this application: [24]The Court considered the five s237(2) criteria in relation to the proposed derivative suit.The 1st (the Co probably not commencing the proceedings), 2nd (the P coming in good faith on the basis that increasing the Co's value would increase their shares' value), 4th (the P showing there was a serious question to be tried) and 5th (the Ds had notice of the claim) were all met: [32] – [37]This left the question of whether the granting of leave would be in the best interests of the Co.P submitted that the nature of the claim, and its prospects, were so compelling in the context of the Co's affairs that a grant of leave would be in the Co's best interests even if supported by only a limited indemnity from P: [41], [42]The proceedings were likely to be factually and legally complex with claims against multiple defendants and an estimated 16 days needed for the final hearing: [45]The Court found that any grant of leave to P ought to include an indemnity from P to the Co for any adverse costs orders, but not to the extent pressed for by the Ds: [46]Many of the relevant Ds were based in China. The cost of enforcing the judgment in China was uncertain (as were the prospects – with expert evidence suggesting no judgment of an Australian Court had been registered and enforced by a Chinese Court). The Court found it would only be in the best interests of the Co for leave to be granted if P indemnified the Co in respect of this cost: [47]Leave was granted to P to bring the derivative suit, conditional upon the indemnities being provided: [78] ___ Please follow James d'Apice and Coffee and a Case Note on your favourite platform!
One Hong Kong-based U.S. citizen, nearly 80 years old and facing a life sentence, has just been convicted by a Chinese court. He was found guilty of spying and stripped of his political rights after heading off a number of pro-China groups overseas and visits with Beijing officials. It all started back in spring 2021, though few details are available. ⭕️ Watch in-depth videos based on Truth & Tradition at Epoch TV
78-Year-Old U.S. Citizen Sentenced to Life by Chinese CourtBeijing 'Unaware' of S. Korean Athlete Held in ChinaEx-NBA Star Hit with Backlash for Taiwan PromoFormer Exec. Files Lawsuit Against ByteDanceGermany Greenlights Hamburg Deal with ChinaChinese Graduates Struggle with Rising UnemploymentTortured in China for Practicing Falun Gong Engineer Smuggles Out Info, Finds New Life in Germanythe Future of the Int'l Order: China Vs. America
78-Year-Old US Citizen Sentenced to Life by Chinese Court
Watch this new podcast episode by clicking here:Or listen to the audio mp3 here:Order Taylor Marshall's new book: Antichrist and ApocalypseFollow this link to order Taylor's Best Selling book: Infiltration: The Plot to Destroy the Church from WithinCheck out Patreon Patron Benefits for Donating to Dr Taylor Marshall's Show!All these video discussions are free. Do you want to recommend a show, get signed books, and show support? Here's how: click on Patreon Patron link: Become a Patron of this Podcast: I am hoping to produce more free weekly podcast Videos. Please help me launch these videos by working with me on Patreon to produce more free content. In gratitude, I'll send you some signed books or even stream a theology event for you and your friends. Please become one of my patrons and check out the various tier benefits at: https://www.patreon.com/drtaylormarshallIf the audio player does not show up in your email or browser, please click here to listen.If you find this podcast episode helpful, please share this podcast on Facebook.Get more from the Taylor Marshall Show:Read Taylor Marshall's historical fiction Sword and Serpent Trilogy.Download the Study Guide at: http://swordandserpent.comTake classed with Dr Marshall at the New Saint Thomas Institute. Please visit newsaintthomas.com for more details.Please Share Your Feedback for Taylor Marshall Show:I'd love to read your feedback: While you listen to today's podcast, would you please take 30 seconds to write a review? Please click here to Rate this Podcast!iTunes: 3,549,958 downloadsYoutube: 10,311,915 downloadsSHOUT OUTS: A huge “shout out” to all 1,692 of you who wrote amazing 5-star reviews at iTunes. Please rate this podcast by clicking here. From there you can leave a review. I appreciate you for this! Thank you!How to Subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or Youtube:Apple/Mac Users: Please subscribe via iTunes by clicking here and then clicking on “View in iTunes.” Android Users: For listening to The Taylor Marshall Show on Android devices (free) using:Android Stitcher app.Android Beyond Pod app from the Google Play Store.Android Pocketcasts app.Spotify Users: For listening to The Taylor Marshall Show on Spotify, search in Spotify for “Taylor Marshall.” Our you can listen/watch to the Taylor Marshall Show via Youtube:If you like this podcast, please leave a review on iTunes.7 The post 890: 90 year old Cardinal Zen found GUILTY by Chinese court – Dr. Taylor Marshall [Podcast] appeared first on Taylor Marshall.
Watch this new podcast episode by clicking here: Or listen to the audio mp3 here: Order Taylor Marshall's new book: Antichrist and Apocalypse Follow this link to order Taylor's Best Selling book: Infiltration: The Plot to Destroy the Church from Within Check out Patreon Patron Benefits for Donating to Dr Taylor Marshall's Show! All these […] The post 890: 90 year old Cardinal Zen found GUILTY by Chinese court – Dr. Taylor Marshall [Podcast] appeared first on Taylor Marshall.
China's emperors were no strangers to the curse of bad data—and built their own secret system to avoid it.Read the article by Jeremiah Jenne: https://www.theworldofchinese.com/2018/02/court-confidential/Narrated by Elyse Ribbons.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://feedssoundcloudcomuserssoundcloudusers.wordpress.com/2020/11/28/chinese-court-details-the-crypto-assets-seized-during-the-plustoken-ponzi-scheme-crackdown-which-are-worth-4-2b-at-todays-prices-wolfie-zhao-the-block/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/you-betterknow4/message
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://feedssoundcloudcomuserssoundcloudusers.wordpress.com/2020/11/28/chinese-court-details-the-crypto-assets-seized-during-the-plustoken-ponzi-scheme-crackdown-which-are-worth-4-2b-at-todays-prices-wolfie-zhao-the-block/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/you-betterknow4/message
Chinese firms forced to delist in US; Chinese court sentences US citizen to death
During foreign minister Wang Yi's recent visit to Delhi, there was speculation that China might be willing to step back on its position in Eastern Ladakh. That seems unlikely now. ----more---- https://theprint.in/opinion/chinascope/pla-soldiers-mastering-hindi-and-chinese-court-jails-man-for-disrespecting-galwan-martyr/900780/
National Bank is buying Montreal-based fintech startup Flinks. A Chinese court bans to controversial 996 overtime policy. And Amazon-backed Tesla rival Rivian is looking to go public. The Peak Daily is produced by 306 Media Productions. Hosted by Brett Chang and Jay Rosenthal.
Spavor, a Beijing-based businessman who regularly traveled to North Korea, was sentenced after being found guilty of spying and illegally providing state secrets to foreign countries, the Dandong Intermediate People's Court said in a statement Wednesday. The court said Spavor would also be deported, without specifying whether it was before or after he served his prison sentence.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Bill Kelly Show Podcast: Canada's relationship with China has taken another hit. A day after a Chinese court upheld a death sentence for convicted of drug smuggler Robert Schellenberg….another Canadian, Michael Spavor, who was taken into custody in December of 2018 has been sentenced to 11 years in prison in a spying case He and fellow Canadian Michael Kovrig were detained shortly after an executive with Huawei was arrested at the Vancouver airport at the request of the U.S government. Although Chinese officials deny there's a direct link, they have repeatedly demanded she be released. Prime minister Justin Trudeau calls the decision, unacceptable and unjust. GUEST: Steven Chase, Senior Parliamentary Reporter for the Globe and Mail - Ontario is facing growing calls to mandate COVID-19 vaccinations for non-essential activities and health-care workers as infections rise, but the government is urging people to focus less on daily case counts and more on hospitalizations. Health Minister Christine Elliott held the line Tuesday on her government's staunch opposition to both mandatory vaccinations for health-care workers and requiring a vaccine certification system for places such as bars and gyms, as seen in some other jurisdictions. Saying "... We are not mandating vaccines for anyone." ALSO: Canada should consider Beijing Olympics boycott, O'Toole says GUEST: Andrew McDougall, Professor of Political Science with the University of Toronto - New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced his resignation Tuesday over a barrage of sexual harassment allegations in a fall from grace a year after he was widely hailed nationally for his detailed daily briefings and leadership during some of the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic. By turns defiant and chastened, the 63-year-old Democrat emphatically denied intentionally mistreating women and called the pressure for his ouster politically motivated. But he said that fighting back in this "too hot" political climate would subject the state to months of turmoil. "The best way I can help now is if I step aside and let government get back to governing," Cuomo said in a televised address. GUEST: Wayne Petrozzi, Professor in the Department of Politics and Public Administration at Ryerson University
Rachel Gilmore, National Online Journalist, Global News
The Bill Kelly Show Podcast: Fully vaccinated U.S citizens wasted little time yesterday seizing their first chance in 17 months to venture into Canada, while lawmakers south of the border urged the White House to hurry up and follow Ottawa's lead. To be eligible, travellers must live in the U.S., be 14 days past their last vaccine dose and show proof of a negative molecular test for COVID-19 that's no more than 72 hours old. The Canada Border Services Agency also requires visitors to use the ArriveCAN app or online web portal to upload their vaccination details. GUEST: Thomas Tenkate, Professor at the School of Occupational & Public Health with Ryerson University - What's the economic impact of the border reopening to Americans vs the public health impact? GUEST: Mory DiMaurizio, Chief Operating Officer of City Cruises in Niagara Falls - All eyes are on September following the Ontario government's recent unveiling of its back-to-school plan. Brock University Professor of Child and Youth Studies Dawn Zinga and Associate Professor Danielle Sirianni Molnar want to make sure teachers' voices are being heard and understood as schools reopen. To that end, the duo has launched a survey of teachers as part of their study “Teachers' Perspectives on the Pandemic.” The research team, which also consists of master's student Melissa Blackburn and other research assistants, is looking for 250 elementary or secondary school teachers who are certified with the Ontario College of Teachers and have at least two years of teaching experience in Ontario. GUEST: Danielle Sirianni Molnar, Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies at Brock University - Robert Schellenberg, who is facing the death penalty in China for drug trafficking, lost his appeal Tuesday and a second important verdict will be handed down by the country's courts later this week. The latter verdict will concern Michael Spavor, one of the two Canadian men who were arrested in apparent retaliation for Canada's detention of a Huawei executive. He is expected to learn his fate in Dandong, near the North Korean border. A judgment is expected Wednesday morning. The two verdicts, coming right before an expected federal election call in Canada, could make for a momentous week in Canada-China relations, which have sunk to their worst level since students were killed in Tiananmen Square in 1989. GUEST: Elliot Tepper, Emeritus Professor of Political Science with Carleton University - A U.N.appointed panel of experts said Monday that the Earth is getting so hot that temperatures in about a decade will probably blow past the most ambitious threshold set in the Paris accord. That increases the risk of extreme weather and long-term climate-related disasters. The Paris agreement called for limiting temperature increases to well below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) — and ideally to no more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial levels. The report was “a code red for humanity. The alarm bells are deafening, and the evidence is irrefutable: Greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and deforestation are choking our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk.” — United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres GUEST: Kent Moore, Professor of Atmospheric Physics with the University of Toronto
Peter Shurman talks to Professor Ian Lee about the sentence, the two Michaels, and how these cases relate to Meng Wanzhou and China's reputation in the world.
A Chinese court has upheld the death sentence of a Canadian man for drug crimes. Separately, another court is reportedly expected to deliver a sentence against another Canadian - Michael Spavor, a businessman who was charged with espionage and tried in secret in March. Both cases are being viewed as China retaliating against Canada - after the the arrest of Huawei exec Meng Wanzhou, whose lawyers have this week sought a stay of proceedings in her extradition case. Canada correspondent Laura McQullian spoke to Corin Dann.
Hour 1- Curtis takes Wyc Grousbeck to task for his comments regarding the Celtics going to the Eastern Conference Finals "three of the last four years;" Callers are calling for Danny Ainge's job following the Celtics latest embarrassing performance 02-25-21 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A court in Beijing has ordered a man to pay a full-time housewife 50,000 yuan in compensation, as the couple gets ready to divorce. In the meantime, the woman will receive her share of the family asset after it is divided. This is the first ruling of its kind after China's new Civil Code took effect in January.
A Beijing appellate court held e-commerce company Dangdang can't fire its transgender employee for absence without official leave when she, with her direct supervisor's oral approval, took time off to undertake a sex reassignment surgery.
A court in China announced overnight that it has given Canadian man Robert Lloyd Schellenberg the death penalty. Former Canadian diplomat, Phil Calvert, told the Simi Sara Show today that the sentence is an apparent retaliation for Canada's arrest of Huawei CFO, Meng Wanzhou in December.
• Dead Sea scrolls have fascinated scholars and historians since they were found around 70 years ago • Chinese Court condemns 6 Protestant Christians to prison • C of E to lobby the government over a raising number of Down Syndrome abortions •...
Faiza Patel (@FaizaPatelBCJ) serves as co-director of the Brennan Center's Liberty and National Security Program. She has testified before Congress opposing the dragnet surveillance of Muslims, organized advocacy efforts against state laws designed to incite fear of Islam, and developed legislation creating an independent Inspector General for the NYPD. Ms. Patel is the author of five reports: Rethinking Radicalization (2011); A Proposal for an NYPD Inspector General (2012); Foreign Law Bans (2013); What Went Wrong with the FISA Court (2015); and Overseas Surveillance in an Interconnected World (2016). She is a frequent commentator on national security and counterterrorism issues for media outlets such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Economist, The Guardian, MSNBC, Al-Jazeera, NPR, the New York Daily News, and the National Law Journal and has published widely in academic outlets as well. Before joining the Brennan Center, Ms. Patel worked as a senior policy officer at the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in The Hague, and clerked for Judge Sidhwa at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. Born and raised in Pakistan, Ms. Patel is a graduate of Harvard College and the NYU School of Law. In this episode, we discussed: a comparison of candidate Donald Trump's proposals to surveil Muslims to President Trump's policies. a description of the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS) program and its prospects under the Trump administration. the Fourth Amendment implications of police surveillance issues on the local level that potentially impact innocent civilians within the United States. Resources: Brennan Center for Justice Six Four by Hideo Yokoyama NEWS ROUNDUP The U.S. Senate passed a resolution last week by a vote of 50-48 to overturn the FCC's ISP privacy rules. The rules were designed to prevent ISPs from using sensitive data about their subscribers for the companies' own commercial purposes. Ali Breland and Harper Neidig have the story in The Hill. -- Jared Kushner, President Trump's son-in-law who is also a senior advisor to the president, will lead a new White House Office of American Innovation which, the President says, is indented as a sort of SWAT team that will seek to apply solutions from the world of business to the world of government. The new office will focus in things like Trump's $1 trillion infrastructure plan, which includes a broadband buildout component, as well as modernizing the federal government's technology and improving government operations. Ashley Parker and Philip Rucker report in the Washington Post. -- The Trump administration issued a ban of electronic devices on flights coming from 8 countries including Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates. The UK followed up with a similar ban. Authorities suspect a plot to bring down a plane with explosives hidden in an iPad, according sources cited by Ewen Macaskill in The Guardian. -- Google has been battling over the past week to prevent ads from showing up adjacent to hateful and offensive content. The glitch led major advertisers to withdraw spots from YouTube. AT&T and Verizon were among the companies that pulled their advetising from the platform. Google responded by giving advertisers greater control over where their ads appear. Google's Chief Business Officer Phillipp Schindler also apologized. But reports of ads placed next to offensive content were still coming in as of Monday. Mark Scott reports in The New York Times. -- Apple has succeeded in persuading a Chinese Court that its iPhone 6 and 6 Plus don't infringe the patents of Shenzhen Baili Marketing Services, a now-defunct Chinese smartphone manufacturer. If the patent infringement decision against Apple had been upheld, it was seen as threatening to Apple which is under intense competition in China. But Baili is expected to appeal. Eva Dou and Yang Jie report in the Wall Street Journal. -- Mark Bergen and Eric Newcomer reported in Bloomberg that an accident in Tempe has prompted Uber to suspend its autonomous vehicle tests in Arizona. According to police, Uber was not at fault and no injuries resulted from the accident. -- A New York attorney named David Thompson has discovered via a Freedom of Information Act request that on over 400 occasions between 2011 and 2013, the New York City Police Department deployed officers to videotape or surveil activities of Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter protesters. Importantly, the NYPD was unable to produce documentation showing the surveillance was authorized by a judge or higher ups within the NYPD. George Joseph has the story in the Verge. -- Aida Chavez of the Hill covered a House Oversight hearing last week in which lawmakers grilled witnesses from the FBI about how they use facial recognition technology. Lawmakers were highly concerned about the impact the FBI's facial recognition database would have on communities of color as well as the public in general -- The FCC voted unanimously Thursday to clamp down on robocalls. The National Do Not Call list has failed to prevent robocalls. Phone companies will now themselves be permitted to identify numbers associated with robocalls and block the calls from ever reaching their customers.
Historian David Silbey returns to New Books in Military History with his second book, The Boxer Rebellion and the Great Game in China (Hill and Wang, 2012). The popular uprising known as the Boxer Rebellion has long only been vaguely understood, with Hollywood playing as great a role in shaping common perception of the event as historians have. The result has been a generally misplaced understanding of the event, focusing more on the besieged Western consulates and t he relief expeditions than on the complex interactions between the Boxers and the Chinese Court, both between themselves and individually and together against the West. Silbey has written a very accessible account of the Boxer Rebellion that also conveys the complexity of these relationships and the often successful resistance Chinese forces raised against the advancing relief columns. As the West imposed its will over the Manchu court, the stage was set for the nation’s first halting steps into the modern era, setting in motion a long history of exploitation and conflict that would end with the rebirth of China as a world power. An interesting study in the nexus between imperialism, racial ideology, and military history, Silbey’s book again provides the reader with a window onto a misunderstood and often ignored incident that remains relevant even now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Historian David Silbey returns to New Books in Military History with his second book, The Boxer Rebellion and the Great Game in China (Hill and Wang, 2012). The popular uprising known as the Boxer Rebellion has long only been vaguely understood, with Hollywood playing as great a role in shaping common perception of the event as historians have. The result has been a generally misplaced understanding of the event, focusing more on the besieged Western consulates and t he relief expeditions than on the complex interactions between the Boxers and the Chinese Court, both between themselves and individually and together against the West. Silbey has written a very accessible account of the Boxer Rebellion that also conveys the complexity of these relationships and the often successful resistance Chinese forces raised against the advancing relief columns. As the West imposed its will over the Manchu court, the stage was set for the nation’s first halting steps into the modern era, setting in motion a long history of exploitation and conflict that would end with the rebirth of China as a world power. An interesting study in the nexus between imperialism, racial ideology, and military history, Silbey’s book again provides the reader with a window onto a misunderstood and often ignored incident that remains relevant even now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Historian David Silbey returns to New Books in Military History with his second book, The Boxer Rebellion and the Great Game in China (Hill and Wang, 2012). The popular uprising known as the Boxer Rebellion has long only been vaguely understood, with Hollywood playing as great a role in shaping common perception of the event as historians have. The result has been a generally misplaced understanding of the event, focusing more on the besieged Western consulates and t he relief expeditions than on the complex interactions between the Boxers and the Chinese Court, both between themselves and individually and together against the West. Silbey has written a very accessible account of the Boxer Rebellion that also conveys the complexity of these relationships and the often successful resistance Chinese forces raised against the advancing relief columns. As the West imposed its will over the Manchu court, the stage was set for the nation’s first halting steps into the modern era, setting in motion a long history of exploitation and conflict that would end with the rebirth of China as a world power. An interesting study in the nexus between imperialism, racial ideology, and military history, Silbey’s book again provides the reader with a window onto a misunderstood and often ignored incident that remains relevant even now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Historian David Silbey returns to New Books in Military History with his second book, The Boxer Rebellion and the Great Game in China (Hill and Wang, 2012). The popular uprising known as the Boxer Rebellion has long only been vaguely understood, with Hollywood playing as great a role in shaping common perception of the event as historians have. The result has been a generally misplaced understanding of the event, focusing more on the besieged Western consulates and t he relief expeditions than on the complex interactions between the Boxers and the Chinese Court, both between themselves and individually and together against the West. Silbey has written a very accessible account of the Boxer Rebellion that also conveys the complexity of these relationships and the often successful resistance Chinese forces raised against the advancing relief columns. As the West imposed its will over the Manchu court, the stage was set for the nation’s first halting steps into the modern era, setting in motion a long history of exploitation and conflict that would end with the rebirth of China as a world power. An interesting study in the nexus between imperialism, racial ideology, and military history, Silbey’s book again provides the reader with a window onto a misunderstood and often ignored incident that remains relevant even now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Hong Kong-Based NGO Says Foxconn is Pulling the Wool Over FLA’s Eyes Former Wintek Employees Call on Apple Customers to Sign SumOfUs.org Petition for Worker Rights for Apple Supply Chain NYT: Apple and Proview Face Off in Chinese Court, Receive No Ruling from Court Barclays Analyst Pumped for Second iPhone Carrier in China and the Approach of Mountain Lion iPodNN: Japan Gets Access to iTunes in the Cloud; iTunes Match Still Missing MacNN: iTunes Match for iTunes Japan Should Hit in Second-Half of 2012; Other iTunes Features Added This Week Apple Sells Beatles Ringtones Through iTunes on iThings Apple to Open Amsterdam Store at 10am on Saturday 3 March TUAW: Apple Encouraging MobileMe Users to Make the Migration to iCloud Ahead of June Deadline California AG: Major App Store Operators to Require Privacy Policies for Personal-Data-Skimming Apps Business Insider: CA AG Solution Good for the One-Percent Losing Sleep Over AddressBookGate