Update, Tuesday evening: Fortune editor Alan Murray issued an apology on the magazine’s website on Tuesday night, which read, “The cover of Fortune’s January 2016 international edition featured an illustration of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos as a Hindu deity. Neither the artist nor the editors of Fortune?had any intention of parodying a particular deity or of offending members of the Hindu faith. It is clear that we erred and for that, we apologize.”
Video: ‘Halo’ Spartan blows up mini-fridge to pitch Windows (0 comments)
Update, 12:15 p.m.: Carney has responded to Baquet’s response to Carney’s?original post from Monday morning — is your head spinning yet? — with six more paragraphs that again question the credibility of the Times’ reporting.
Using software to analyze social media comments and sentiments, researchers have found that 51 percent of tweets by private users of Twitter accounts contained stigma, when making reference to about Alzheimer's disease and the people who deal with this condition.
Vietnam exported .7 million worth of tra fish to China in the first quarter of this year, recording a year-on-year surge of 56.8 percent, the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP) said, noting that the export turnover to China accounted for roughly 19 percent of the total to the world market.
Various mainstream outlets have also been accused of providing uncritical and sympathetic platforms to neo-Nazi activists and figures associated with the alt-right. Australia's most prominent right-wing commentator, Andrew Bolt, has written of "a tidal wave of immigration".
网站优化自然排名
Update, Wednesday, July 29:?Amazon has removed three items from its new?Amazon Inspire educational tool over copyright concerns, just one day after launching the platform. Two of the lesson plans that have been removed were created by a rival educational site, according to?The New York Times.
Various 3D technology equipment models are on display at Additive Manufacturing Conference of China 2017 in Hangzhou, East China's Zhejiang province, on July 30, 2017. [Photo/VCG]
Users of Kindle Unlimited, Amazon’s monthly e-book subscription service, will finally be able to get around the company’s refusal to sell Kindle books on Apple’s platform. They can now directly download applicable books through the Kindle app, without having to go through Amazon’s storefront.
Uphold multilateral trading system