While Steve Jobs would not have to make available for the announcement of the iPhone from Verizon earlier this year, co-founder of Apple (AAPL) and Chief Executive Officer is everywhere defend the practices of the company store data of localization on iOS devices.
"We did not been follow someone," Mr. Jobs said journalist of the New York Times Miguel Helft earlier today. "Never have." "Never will."
Additional jobs of Helft:
"The first thing we always do when a problem is brought to us is we are trying to isolate it and whether it is true," he said. "It took us about a week to investigate and write a response, which is fast enough for something, this complicates technically."
Jobs considered longer with things digital mobilized columnist Ina Fried.
"As a new technology that is in the company there is a period of adjustment and education." We do not, as an industry, is a very good job educating people, I think, to some of the things more subtle going on here. As such, (people) jumped to a lot of wrong conclusions in the last week. I think that the right time to educate people is when there is no problem. I think we we will probably ask how we can make it, as an industry. ?
Other notable news coming out of the public relations today, campaign that began with a Q & A published on location data and later Apple involved interviews with jobs and other senior Apple Phil Schiller and Scott Forstall :
An upcoming software update should fix the current problems of the location.Jobs and co. had no comment about how Google deals with similar concerns on Android.Emplois devices looks forward to testify to Congress next month.It may perhaps grease Al Franken and other with a white iPhone, which has officially out tomorrow.
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