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Google Leaves Gulf Nameless, Enrages Iran

Iran on Saturday criticized Google for leaving the body of water separating it from the Arabian Peninsula nameless on its online map service, saying it would hurt the Internet giant's credibility.

"Google fabricating lies... will not have any outcome but for its users to lose trust in the data the company provides," a deputy in Culture and Islamic Guidance Ministry, Bahman Dorri, told the official IRNA news agency.

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Facebook Execs Hit the Road to Persuade Investors

Facebook already assured of becoming one of the most valuable U.S. firms when it goes public later this month, now must convince investors in the next two weeks that it is worth all the hype.

Top executives at the world's leading social network have kicked off their all-important road show on Wall Street -- an intense marketing drive ahead of the company's expected trading launch on the tech-heavy Nasdaq on May 18.

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Google-Oracle Jury Clashes on One Point

Jurors in a high-stakes court battle between Google and Oracle told a judge on Friday that they were in unison regarding verdicts on all but one of the four copyright counts in the case.

US District Court Judge William Alsup sent the 12-member jury home for the weekend, telling them to return Monday to either reach agreement on the final count or, failing that, reveal what they have decided.

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Hedge Fund Demands Yahoo! CEO Fired Over Resume

A hedge fund with a large stake in Yahoo! on Friday demanded the immediate ouster of chief executive Scott Thompson, saying he had lost credibility by misrepresenting his educational background.

The move by the investment fund Third Point stepped up an ugly battle over control of the struggling Internet pioneer.

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Apple iPad Outmuscles Android in Global Tablet Sales

Apple's iPad outmuscled its Android-powered tablet computer rivals in early 2012, in a global market suffering from post-holiday hangover, a survey showed Thursday.

Global shipments of tablet devices and e-readers slumped 38.4 percent in the first three months of 2012 to 17.4 million, compared with a fourth quarter pumped up by the holiday gift-giving season, according to research firm IDC.

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News Corp. App 'The Daily' Expanded to iPhone

The Daily, a digital newspaper created by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp., has been launched as an application for the iPhone, the creators said Thursday.

The app was launched last year for the iPad tablet with much fanfare, generating what the company said was "hundreds of thousands" of downloads.

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Facebook Pushes IPO Ahead, Value Set Above $70 bn

Facebook moved closer toward its hotly anticipated share offering Thursday, setting a price range that values the social network below some expectations but establishes it as one of the most valuable tech firms.

An updated regulatory filing called for shares to be priced between $28 and $35, which would value the California firm between $70 billion and $87.5 billion.

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Samsung Galaxy S3 Debuts in London

South Korea's Samsung Electronics on Thursday unveiled its latest flagship smartphone at a London launch as it seeks to cement its position as the world's best-selling mobile phone maker.

The Galaxy S3 boasts a 4.8-inch screen (12.2cm), 22 percent larger than the Galaxy S2, the hugely popular predecessor that helped the company overhaul Nokia as the world leader.

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YouTube Promotes Channels, Pledges $200 mil in Ads

In a flashy presentation to advertisers, YouTube promoted its new channels of original programming, while pledging to spend $200 million to help market them.

That's roughly twice what the Google Inc.-owned video site has spent launching some 100 channels of niche-oriented programming. The channels are an ambitious initiative from YouTube, approximately halfway through its rollout.

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Nokia Files Patent Suits against HTC, RIM, ViewSonic

Nokia, one of the world's leading mobile phone makers, said Wednesday it had filed patent infringement lawsuits against mobile phone and electronics groups HTC, RIM and ViewSonic in the United States and Germany.

"Though we'd prefer to avoid litigation, Nokia had to file these actions to end the unauthorized use of our proprietary innovations and technologies, which have not been widely licensed," Nokia said in a statement.

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