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Microsoft asks federal court to throw out ruling giving contract workers more rights

Microsoft Corp has asked a federal court to throw out a ruling by a U.S. labor board extending the responsibility of companies for contract workers, arguing that the case would have big implications for the technology company.

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Federal judge investigates Uber over allegations of fraud in antitrust case

Uber must hand over documents to a New York judge probing whether private investigators hired by the ride-hailing company fraudulently sought information about its opponents in an antitrust case, according to a court ruling on Tuesday.

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Here are 5 crazy made-up drugs from video games

The reasons for video games featuring made-up drugs, rather than real ones, may not be entirely noble—avoid any need for any scientific accuracy; dodge any accusations of “promoting” real drugs; demonize drug users with impunity because it’s all just imagination-land—but they also allow for some fantastical and entertaining effects. Here are five of the best:

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WATCH: Elon Musk explains why we're already cyborgs — and probably living in a videogame

We've long thought of cyborgs -- that is, human beings that are part biological and part mechanical -- as science-fiction tropes that are a long way from becoming a reality. However, SpaceX and Tesla CEO Elon Musk thinks that cyborgs are already here, whether we realize it or not. What's more, he says we're going to have to upgrade our hardware very soon or risk becoming obsolete.

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Oracle hit with whistle-blower lawsuit over accounting in cloud services

Oracle Corp was sued on Wednesday by a former senior finance manager who claimed she was terminated in retaliation for complaining about improper accounting practices in Oracle's cloud services business.

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Trail in Ecuador cyberheist leads to gamers’ crash pad in Hong Kong

The paper trail left behind by $2 million stolen from a hacked Ecuadorian bank runs cold in a windowless gamers’ crash pad in a gritty industrial area of Hong Kong.

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Apple plans to sell $1 billion of 30-year bonds in Taiwan: sources

Apple Inc plans to issue bonds in Taiwan for the first time with the aim of raising $1 billion, sources familiar with the matter said, joining a queue of big global names that have sold billions of dollars on the island's busy debt market.

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Siri won't listen to millions of Americans -- here's why

Apple's voice-enabled personal assistant Siri has become a staple for millions of iPhone users across the world but there are millions of Americans who still can't use it due to speech impediments. As Scientific American notes, voice-enabled computer technology "cannot be used by more than nine million people in the U.S. with voice disabilities like Mattes nor by stutterers or those afflicted with cerebral palsy and other disorders."

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US Nuclear Command is still using floppy disks

What can you do with a floppy disk these days? Apple retired floppy drives with its original 1998 iMac, PC manufacturer Dell followed suit in 2003 and now they are but a distant memory. But, according to a recent US government public accounts committee report, legacy computer systems using floppy disks are still used today for controlling part of the US Nuclear Command.

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Trump Hotel bookings plunge online as other companies enjoy growth

Donald Trump promises to "make America great again" if he's elected president -- but he might have a problem making Americans want to stay at his hotels again after his obnoxious campaign is over.

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'Guccifer' hacker who exposed Hillary Clinton's email server pleads guilty

A Romanian computer hacker who revealed the existence of a private email server used by Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state pleaded guilty to hacking-related offenses on Wednesday, the U.S. Justice Department said.

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Twitter drops photos and videos from 140-character limit

Twitter Inc said on Tuesday that user names and media attachments such as photos and videos will no longer count toward the length of a tweet but the 140-character limit will remain.

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From disrupter to disrupted: Apple could be next

Tech giant Apple’s share price, that peaked above US$132 a year ago, is now around US$94. This is despite the news that Warren Buffett’s investment conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway had recently acquired more than 9.8 million Apple shares. Since last year’s market peak, Apple has lost around one quarter of a billion dollars in market capitalisation, with a reduced valuation just above US$500 billion.

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