 | Izps North Korea says it tested crucial new rocket launch system At the heart of Apples shocking FaceTime bug, which allowed just about anyone to turn an iPhone into a live microphone, stands a 14-year-old boy who stumbled upon the eavesdropping flaw more than a week before Apple took action. The thing that surprised me the most was that this glitch happened in the first place, said Grant Thompson, a high school freshman in Tucson, Arizona. Im only 14 and I found it by accident, instead of the people at Apple that get paid to find glitches. Not only that, but Grant and his mom said they spent a week unsuccessfully trying to get Apple to do something about the bug in its FaceTime group-chatting feature. It took nine days for us to get a <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>stanley thermos</a> response, he said. My mom contacted them almost every single day through email, calling, faxing. Of the fax, he jokes, Im not even sure what that is. Its probably older than I am. This聽eavesdropping scare聽is over now that Apple has disabled group chats, but the problem could dog the company for much longer. New York state officials have opened a consumer rights investigation. Others are raising questions about how lon <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.it>stanley italy</a> g it took Apple to address the bug.In a statement Friday, Apple thanked the Thompsons as it聽announced that聽it has identified a fix a <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.ca>stanley cup canada</a> nd will release it next week. FaceTime group chatting will resume then.Grant, a straight-A student who plays basketball, does community volunteering and enjoys the video game Fortnite, was calling friends to play the game on a Saturday night, Jan. 19, when h Kaxb Harris to launch task force on online harassment, abuse By Shuhei Kuromi / Yomiuri Shimbun Staff WriterNovember 3, 2021This is the second installment of a series that explores where the countrys politics go after the recent House of Representatives election. We will achieve growth with a Reiwa-era version of policies to double incomes, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said at a press conference on Monday. The fruits of these efforts will be felt by each and every citizen in the form of higher salaries. Kishida repeated the word growth five times, as well as mentioning the goal of doubling incomes, an expression that was missing from the Liberal Democratic Partys campaign platform in the recent House of Representatives election.When Kishida was promoting his centerpiece new capitalism policy during the election, he often in <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.ca>stanley cup canada</a> cluded the catchphrase virtuous cycle of growth and <wealth> distribution in his speeches.In closely con <a href=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.ca>stanley tumblers</a> tested constituencies, he used the word growth more frequently than the word distribution, because it was difficult for the LDP to demonstrate how its campaign pledges were different from those of opposition parties, which all promised large handouts and tax cuts.In some speeches at the height of the campaign, Kishid <a href=https://www.stanleycups.cz>stanley quencher</a> a did not even mention the word distribution. Among the LDP candidates whose campaigns Kishida supported in their constituencies, more than 80% managed to secure lower house seats, including those who won seats in the proportional representation blocks.An official close to Kishida said, Th |