Jason Chen – Signature9 http://198.46.88.49 Lifestyle Intelligence Mon, 19 Jul 2010 13:48:04 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 Louis Vuitton Beirut, Balding Gracefully, $250 Billion Counterfeits: Monday Morning Brief http://198.46.88.49/s9/louis-vuitton-beirut-balding-gracefully-250-billion-counterfeits-monday-morning-brief http://198.46.88.49/s9/louis-vuitton-beirut-balding-gracefully-250-billion-counterfeits-monday-morning-brief#respond Mon, 19 Jul 2010 13:48:04 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?p=14329 In case you didn’t know, the Brief is where we round up interesting stories from around the web that we may not be able to cover in depth. No formulas, no algorithms, just hand picked headlines that catch our attention as we go about our daily research. Here’s your Monday morning roundup of the best of the best from last week.

Style

Christy Turlington: ‘There’s Nothing Rewarding About Modeling’

eBay’s Newest iPhone App Takes Fashion Mobile

Men’s Style

George Clooney to Italian Court: ‘I Don’t Wear Long Jean Shorts’

Balding Gracefully: Tips and Hairstyles for Balding Men

Lifestyle

Beirut: Louis Vuitton Store Opening

Luxury Brands Losing $250 Billion a Year to Counterfeit Goods

Electrotech

DA Withdraws iPhone 4 Warrant, Returns Gizmodo Editor Jason Chen’s Possessions

Steve Jobs: “We’re Not Perfect.”

6 Crucial Social Media Tips for Traditional Media

Design

Beekeepers add buzz to Japanese urban jungle

Food

The Newest Apple: Red to the Core

Counterfeiting wine: low-end edition

Travel + Culture

5 signs you’ve been traveling in a developing country

<a href=”http://198.46.88.49/brief”><img class=”alignleft size-full wp-image-13704″ title=”s9brieflogo-lg” src=”http://198.46.88.49/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/s9brieflogo-lg.gif” alt=”” width=”180″ height=”180″ /></a>In case you didn’t know, <a href=”http://198.46.88.49/brief”>the Brief</a> is where we round up interesting  stories from around the web that we may not be able to cover in depth.  No formulas, no algorithms, just hand picked headlines that catch our  attention as we go about our daily research. Here’s your Monday morning roundup of the best of the best from last week.
<h3>Style</h3>
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What Do You Get for Buying an Unreleased iPhone? A Police Raid and Busted Door http://198.46.88.49/electrotech/what-do-you-get-for-buying-an-unreleased-iphone-a-police-raid-and-busted-door http://198.46.88.49/electrotech/what-do-you-get-for-buying-an-unreleased-iphone-a-police-raid-and-busted-door#respond Tue, 27 Apr 2010 11:41:53 +0000 http://198.46.88.49/?p=10609 At least that’s what Gizmodo editor Jason Chen received. {Gizmodo}

"A friend of a friend went to a bar, and all I got was a lousy police raid"

Gizmodo received heavy media coverage for publishing photos and specifications of an unreleased iPhone prototype, but some – including Apple, have questioned the legality of how the company came into possession of the top-secret device. According to Gizmodo accounts, the phone was left in a bar by Gray Powell, an Apple employee out celebrating his 27th birthday. {Gizmodo}

Powell left the iPhone prototype at the bar where he’d been drinking, and someone who’d been sitting next to him eventually ended up with the phone. Despite a few phone calls and emails to Apple, no one returned the inquiries about how to return the device. A few weeks later, with no word from Apple, the person who found it sold it to Gizmodo for $5000.

In California, buying stolen property is a crime, but that’s where things get a bit fuzzy. If the person at the bar who found Powell’s phone had indeed made efforts to return it to Apple, did he actually steal it? Further, if his account is accurate, could it be considered stolen property if the owner never responded to attempts to return it?

Apparently Apple, who is notorious for secretive testing and release practices that make the military look chatty, thinks so.

So last Friday, San Mateo police armed with a search warrant broke down Chen’s door while he was at dinner with his wife and seized business cards, 3 MacBooks, 2 digital cameras, 1 Dell desktop, an IBM Thinkpad, 2 external hard drives,  a Motorola phone, an iPhone, an iPad and a server.

Our first thought is that Chen would be a really good friend to have if you ever needed to use a computer, but a close second is that in addition to seeming pretty heavy handed, it doesn’t seem legal unless there’s some indication that the person who found the phone in the first place didn’t make an effort to return it to Apple. Additionally, there are questions surrounding the legality of seizing the items from a journalist, since the investigation seems to focus on revealing more information on the source who sold the lost iPhone.

We’re guessing this means Gizmodo is officially off of the Apple press preview list.

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