Showing posts with label Marissa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marissa. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

Mark Zuckerberg and Marissa Mayer field questions about Prism

The CEOs of Yahoo and Facebook were each on the hot seat Wednesday answering questions about the U.S. government’s data surveillance programs.

Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, in an on-stage interview at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference in San Francisco, said she couldn’t say more about the programs than Yahoo already has because doing so could be “treason.”

“We can’t talk about these things because they’re classified,” she said.

Marissa Mayer (4)Martyn WilliamsMelissa Mayer, Yahoo CEO

Pressed by TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington about what would happen if she revealed details about the government’s data requests, Mayer said she could go to prison.

“It makes sense for us to work within the system,” she said. For Yahoo, Mayer said, that means examining each request it receives and pushing back if it seems unreasonable.

In a separate interview, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was more outspoken. The U.S. government “blew it” by not communicating better about its surveillance efforts and made it harder for U.S. Internet firms to do business overseas, he said.

“It’s our government’s job to protect all of us, and also to protect our freedom and the economy, and I think they did a bad job of balancing those things,” Zuckerberg said.

“I think the government blew it,” he said.

The U.S. government, when asked about the surveillance programs, has said it was not spying on American citizens, Zuckerberg noted. That wasn’t helpful to Internet companies that do business overseas, he said.

“I think that was really bad.”

Both executives highlighted their efforts to push for greater transparency, and both said their goal is to protect their users. Both companies, along with Google and Microsoft, have filed lawsuits to force the government to let them disclose how many national security-related data requests they receive.

Those efforts have so far been unsuccessful. Earlier this week, the companies asked again for permission to provide more information about the data requests.

The latest round of leaks revealing U.S. government surveillance programs, including a data collection program known as Prism, were published in June by the Guardian and The Washington Post.

Since then, tech firms have come under scrutiny for the extent of their involvement with the government programs, and to what extent they have cooperated. They have all said they have cooperated only to the extent they are required to legally.


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My Yahoo gets the Marissa Mayer redesign treatment

Marissa Mayer’s ongoing quest to change absolutely everything about Yahoo continues with a redesign of My Yahoo, the site’s customizable landing page.

My Yahoo was last refreshed in 2008, and boy was that obvious. My Yahoo is still a landing page for your most-used services—calendars, stocks, sports, etc. But the portal now looks a million times better. Gone are the boring blue background and white, text-heavy cards containing your news, e-mail, weather, and more.

The My Yahoo redesign offers customized themes from big-name designers, artists, and musicians.

The redesign allows you to customize your Yahoo page with themes from artists, fashion designers, and bands. Want Oscar de la Renta’s personal stamp on your My Yahoo page? Do it. My Yahoo also lets you pull in content from your favorite sites, like Epicurious and Politico. The cards and columns are now transparent overlays, so you can see that awesome background you picked to express your personality.

The redesign comes as no surprise. Mayer is leaving no stone unturned in her campaign to bring Yahoo into the 21st century. A redesigned home page paved the way for new and revived products, apps, and even a new logo. Yahoo News, Yahoo Mail, the company’s Weather app, Flickr, and more have all gone through the Marissa Mayer overhaul this year.

Not every change has been a popular one—that logo could still use some work—but Mayer’s persistence is noteworthy, and by some measures, it’s been successful.

If you want to give My Yahoo a try, you can import your settings from Google and let us know how the transition goes. If you liked My Yahoo the way it was before, you can keep it. But why would you want to?

Caitlin writes about all things social media. She is addicted to the 24-hour news cycle and Mission burritos.
More by Caitlin McGarry


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