orders

Maine Toys R Us Receives $10K Payment From Secret Santa Couple To Pay Off Layaway Orders

A husband and wife in Portland, Maine, served as anonymous Secret Santas as they paid off $10,000 in layaway orders for other families. WGME-TV reports that the couple is local but that they chose to remain anonymous with regards to their generous payment at the South Portland store. Store manager Jay Roes says the money […]

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US court orders Google not to comply with Canadian court’s order delisting search results

A federal court in California has blocked implementation of a Canadian Supreme Court ruling that ordered Google to delist websites associated with a company called Datalink from Google’s global index. The Canadian decision (Google Inc. v. Equustek Solutions) was an example of a court in one country asserting authority over global activity outside its jurisdiction. Because Google exhausted

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Kochava expands into blockchain for ad insertion orders

New blockchain-focused startups are springing up right and left, but this week an established mobile measurement firm is jumping on the bandwagon. Kochava began in 2011 as a provider of attribution and other marketing analytics for mobile, and, in recent times, it has expanded into web, desktop, Xbox, Oculus VR and other channels. The Idaho-based

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Amazon orders with 3rd-party sellers will soon be authorized for automatic returns

Amazon has announced a new automatic return policy rolling out October 2 that makes it mandatory for third-party sellers to accept returns for all in-policy orders. Under the current policy, buyers must first contact sellers to get a return approved so that the seller can review the return request and approve on a case-by-case basis.

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Canada’s Supreme Court orders Google to de-index site globally, opening door to censorship

The Canadian Supreme Court has ordered Google to de-index an e-commerce site globally. This sets a disastrous precedent that opens the door for other governments (and private parties) across the globe to try to control or censor Google’s search results. The case was Google Inc. v. Equustek Solutions. The plaintiff, a small tech company in British Columbia,

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