Twitter launches two-factor authentication  

USA Today By : Staff Reporting

Twitter has added two-factor authentication to its social network, bolstering security after several high-profile account hacks including the Associated Press.

Users can set up the security measure by going into their Account Settings and choose to have a verification code sent to a smartphone. - More


Target Corporation Cites Weather  

Value Walk By : Staff Reporting

Target Corporation (NYSE:TGT) posted a lower-than-expected earnings performance for the first quarter of fiscal 2013. The company said that soft sales and weather related categories affected its results.

The company reported an income of $498 million or $0.77 per share for the first quarter.

During the same period last year, Target Corporation reported a profit of $697 million or $1.04 earnings per share. - More


Tim Cook Defends Apple  

Market Watch By : Staff Reporting

A day after a Senate report blasted Apple for not paying U.S. taxes on billions of dollars in overseas income, Cook insisted that Apple  pays the taxes it legally owes.

 
“There’s no shifting going on,” said Cook in his first appearance before Congress. “We pay all the taxes we owe, every single dollar.” Read recap of hearing on live blog. - More


Yahoo to Buy Tumblr for $1.1 Billion  

Wall Street Journal By : Staff Reporting

Yahoo board has approved a deal to acquire blogging startup Tumblr, people familiar with the matter said Sunday.

Yahoo has agreed to pay $1.1 billion in cash for the company, one of the people said.

Tumblr would continue to operate largely as an independent business, the people said. - More


Google To Compete With Spotify  

NY Times By : Staff Reporting

Google is set to introduce a subscription music feature to compete against fast-growing streaming services like Spotify, according to several people briefed on its plans.

Google is planning to introduce the new service as early as Wednesday at Google I/O, the company’s annual conference for software developers. - More


Wells Fargo ordered - again - to pay $203M in overdraft case  

NBC News By : Staff Reporting

A federal judge has again ordered Wells Fargo to pay $203 million to settle class action litigation accusing it of imposing excessive overdraft fees on checking account customers, reviving an award that had been thrown out last year.

U.S. District Judge William Alsup reinstated on Tuesday a penalty he first imposed in August 2010, saying the fourth-largest U.S. bank violated a California law that protects consumers against fraudulent misrepresentations. - More


Deere results beat estimates, but company cautious  

The Globe and Mail By : Staff Reporting

Deere & Co. reported higher-than-expected quarterly results on Wednesday and forecast a record profit for the full year, but it said it was cautious because of weakness in the construction market.

The company, the world’s largest maker of farm equipment, slashed its forecast for sales to the construction industry, citing concerns about the outlook for U.S. economic growth and other factors. - More


Yields on peso bonds due in December 2014 dropped two basis points  

Bloomberg By : Staff Reporting

Mexican shorter-term bond yields declined to record lows on speculation policy makers will further reduce benchmark borrowing costs amid signs of slowing economic growth.

Yields on peso bonds due in December 2014 dropped two basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, to 3.77 percent at 10:22 a.m. in Mexico City, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. - More


Defense Department to Let Apple Devices Onto Pentagon Network  

All Media NY By : Staff Reporting

Defense department to let Apple devices onto Pentagon network The U.S. Defense Department plans to let its employees use Apple's mobile devices on its military network.

Pentagon employees may soon start using Apple mobile devices, like iPhones and iPads, on the U.S. Defense Department's secure network.

The department expects to clear the devices for use on its network early next week, Bloomberg reported Friday. - More


Jobless claims lowest since January 2008  

Market Watch By : Staff Reporting

The fewest Americans in more than five years applied for new unemployment benefits last week, a surprising decline that may reflect seasonal quirks more than a sudden improvement in the jobs market. Initial jobless claims — a rough gauge of layoffs — sank by 18,000 to a seasonally adjusted 324,000 in the week ended April 27, the Labor Department said Thursday.

That’s the lowest level since January 2008. - More


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