Nas intenções de aumentar suas vendas em 30% nos próximos cinco anos, a Mercedes se prepara pra expandir sua linha de veículos, mas focando seus esforços em carros pequenos e mais baratos (ok, não tão baratos assim, mas proporcional à marca).
Após 2012, mais três novos veículos estarão disponíveis, sendo eles um cupê, um crossover e um sedan, que serão baseados no modelo Classe B que atualmente é vendido na Europa. Após o Classe C ser lançado em 2013, a montadora também pretende lançar um conversível e alguns outros modelos a serem decididos. O CEO Ernst Lieb diz o seguinte:
“Todos querem ter um Mercedes-Benz. Eles (os clientes) estão procurando os modelos classe S e E. Com o classe C, nós estamos preparando um sedan de quatro portas e não faremos mais nada. Agora nós vamos nos concentrar em segmentos onde os concorrentes são fortes”.
Microsoft will announce this week several changes in the management of its Entertainment and Devices Division in an attempt to position the department responsible for telephone and consoles in a better place compared to its current rivals, Apple and Google.
James Allard, one of the great responsible for the launch of the first Xbox was leaving the company by its differences with Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft, because of the cancellation of his personal project, Courier based on a double touch screen tablet PC, which was attended to compete against Apple’s iPad.
Today the Wall Street Journal has provided a report which suggests a complete restructuring of the Entertainment and Devices Division at Microsoft, responsible for brand of Xbox, PC games, Zune device and mobile operating systems. A division has reported to the Microsoft company $ 165 million in the first quarter of fiscal year.
The Entertainment and Devices Division is the fourth largest operating units of Microsoft, behind Windows, Office and Server, and revenue forecasts for this fiscal year, which ends on June 30, is 8,000 million dollars.
Adapted from “Uncover Hidden Value with a Post-settlement Settlement,” first published in the Negotiation newsletter.
You’ve reached an agreement that you find satisfactory and your counterpart does as well-but you can’t shake the sense that you could have done even better. For example, you might be happy with the price you achieved in a purchasing contract but wonder if you could have factored better delivery terms into the equation.
After reaching a verbal agreement or inking a contract, negotiators may be able to generate even more value by engaging in a post-settlement settlement (PSS) process, according to Harvard Business School and Harvard Kennedy School professor emeritus Howard Raiffa. During a PSS process, parties try to negotiate better terms on certain issues while remaining free to return to the existing agreement if either one of them is ultimately dissatisfied with the new arrangement.
Here’s how it works. If you’re not 100% satisfied with the result of a recent negotiation, suggest to your counterpart that the two of you spend a little more time discussing potential improvements that might increase the value of the deal to everyone involved. Be sure to clarify that the discussion is informal and will not alter the existing deal unless you both believe it’s superior to the one you just signed.
Secure in the knowledge that you have a successful fallback, you and your counterpart may be able to invent novel terms that you hadn’t imagined during your initial deal making. One reason a PSS process can be so successful is that it capitalizes on the trust and goodwill you generated during your negotiation.
But beware that your counterpart may view your suggestion of a PSS process as your attempt to capture last-minute concessions. Be sure to stress that your PSS will replace the current deal only if it’s fully supported and desired by both parties.
Creating Web-based marketplaces for “crowdsourcing”—farming out digital piece-work to freelancers around the world—has been a hot business idea for the last half-decade. IStockphoto does it for stock images, TopCoder does it for enterprise software, Innocentive does it as a supplement to corporate R&D, and uTest does it for software quality assurance testing. But when push comes to shove, how well do these companies know and trust their networks of contributors, most of whom they’ve never met? A couple of weeks ago Boston-based uTest found itself at the mercy of its own crowd—and emerged with an encouraging story to tell.
At uTest, 25,000 software testers in more than 160 countries log on over the Web to do on-demand testing of software applications, helping the applications’ makers catch bugs and glitches, troubleshoot usability problems, and simulate performance under realistic loads. Twice a month, uTest pays its active testers via Paypal or Payoneer (a New York-based network that delivers payments using prepaid Mastercard cards).
According to Matt Johnston, uTest’s vice president of marketing and community, uTest ran into a glitch of its own the evening of Saturday, May 15, as it disbursed payments for the first half of May. It transferred funds to Paypal and Payoneer twice—meaning that all testers who had done any work in early May received double their usual fee.
“I won’t go into specific numbers, but it was a non-trivial amount of money,” Johnston tells Xconomy. (He also wrote about the episode on uTest’s blog last week.) “We’re talking well into the five figures”—way more than the venture-funded startup could afford to lose on a bookkeeping error.
But right away, uTest started to benefit from an unexpected side effect of being in the software-testing business. It wasn’t PayPal or Payoneer who detected the problem, but the testers themselves. And being testers, they sent in bug reports.
“If you saw an extra $200 sitting in your bank statement, you might go, ‘Huh,’” says Johnston. “But software testers, they say ‘Oh, this is an interesting defect.’ They are wired to point out flaws. The first reports we got were not just ‘Hey, you paid me twice’—they were, ‘It looks like I’ve got two separate transaction IDs for the exact same amount, seven seconds apart.’ They were diagnosing it for us, like it was just another software defect.”
This was late Saturday night, Johnston says. The company had to decide quickly what to do about the problem. PayPal and Payoneer politely informed uTest that there was nothing they could do—there’s no such thing as an “undo” button for electronic payment (for good reason—the idea of PayPal debiting your bank account without your consent is more than a little scary). “We ultimately came to the conclusion that we had to be really transparent about it, and tell our community …Next Page »
New research shows that chronic vitamin D deficiency may be a factor in heart disease, high blood pressure and metabolic syndrome.
Known as the “sunshine vitamin” because exposure to sunlight triggers the body to synthesize it, vitamin D has long been recognized as crucial to the development and maintenance of strong bones. But new studies and reviews are indicating vitamin D deficiencies are an important indicator of heart disease risk as well.
Low vitamin D levels related to incidence of heart attacks and heart disease
A 2008 Loyola University review cited a number of studies that link low levels of vitamin D to heart-related problems, noting that the rates of severe disease and mortality may be as much as 30 to 50 percent higher among heart disease patients who are sun-deprived.
In addition, a recent Harvard study concluded that low levels of vitamin D appear to be associated with higher risk of heart attack in men. The study used research statistics that show the rates of cardiovascular disease-related deaths are increased when exposure to vitamin D producing sunlight is reduced (at higher latitudes and during the winter months), but those same rates go down in conditions when exposure to sunlight is increased.
The study also compared medical records and blood tests from a group of several hundred men who had suffered a heart attack to those of men who had not suffered heart problems. The comparison indicated that men with a vitamin D deficiency (quantified as 15 nanograms per milliliter of blood or less) had an increased risk for heart attack compared with those with a sufficient amount (having 30 nanograms per milliliter of blood or more) of vitamin D.
Even a slight deficiency of vitamin D appears to raise the risk of cardiac problems. According to the study, men with intermediate levels of vitamin D had a higher risk of heart attack than those with sufficient vitamin D levels.
Screening and treatment for vitamin D deficiency recommended
A 2008 research paper published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology called vitamin D deficiency “an unrecognized, emerging cardiovascular risk factor, which should be screened for and treated.” The paper endorsed practical recommendations to screen for and treat low vitamin D levels, especially in patients with risk factors for heart disease or diabetes.
“Vitamin D deficiency is an unrecognized, emerging cardiovascular risk factor, which should be screened for and treated,” said James H. O’Keefe, M.D., cardiologist and director of Preventive Cardiology at the Mid America Heart Institute, Kansas City, MO. “Vitamin D is easy to assess, and supplementation is simple, safe and inexpensive.”
It is estimated that up to half of U.S. adults and 30 percent of children and teenagers have vitamin D deficiency, which predisposes them to hypertension and a stiffening and thickening of the heart and blood vessels. Vitamin D deficiency also alters hormone levels and immune function, which can increase the risk of diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
About the Author
Medical research is discovering more and more ways in which vitamin D is crucial to health, vitality, and preventing disease. Find out more about vitamin D benefits at Vitamin D Answers.
good vitamins brands for low sperm count?
i am 35 year old man with low sperm count .recently i came to know that zinc , vitamin c ,asian ginseng, L-arginine is very effective to increase sperm count so i have deceided to take this suppliments by pills .so plz advise me which is the best brands to buy the above vitamins i stay in usa (chicago).i went to walgreens and cvs to buy these vitamin pills but there were so many brands and i got so confused that i didnt buyed any .so plz tell me the name of good and effective brands of above medicines .thank u
You can try something like Vimax, it has all of the ingredients in one pill instead of having to take dozens of different pills at one time.
[phpbay]low vitamins, 100[/phpbay] Low vitamin D danger!
Low Vitamins is a post from the Vegetarian Vitamins Guide blog where you can find suggestions and advice from vegetarians and vegans on vegetarian diets, supplements, vitamins and overall nutrition.
Hulu videos can be viewed on any Android phone with Android 2.2 and Flash 10.1, Absolutely Android reported this weekend. Hulu blocks mobile phones for licensing reasons, but the trick to get them to play on Android handsets is actually pretty simple: Users just have to change the user agent setting of the phone’s Chrome web browser to make it think the phone is a desktop computer, and Hulu’s videos will start playing on the phones with no problem.
That’s a nice trick for Nexus One owners trying to catch the Lost series finale on the go, but the revelation also points to something much bigger: Hulu videos will inevitably find their way onto the Google TV platform when it launches this fall, and Hulu won’t be happy about it. In fact, the site’s corporate overlords could force it into an all-out war on over-the-top streaming devices, and the results could hurt both Hulu and Google.
Don’t believe me? Then consider this: Google TV Product Lead Rishi Chandra did a search for Housewhen he demoed the platform at the company’s developers conference last week. The search results clearly included episodes from Hulu. However, he didn’t demonstrate Hulu streaming and instead proceeded to watch a trailer from Amazon.com’s VOD platform.
Google’s VP of Engineering Vic Gundotra didn’t really want to say whether Hulu runs on Google TV. Technically it would be capable to, he said during an I/O press conference, but the ultimate decision would have to be made by the content owner. In other words: Google would like to play Hulu content on the Google TV, but it can’t promise that it will work. Hulu didn’t comment on whether it will play on Google TV or not when contacted by us.
Of course, that’s very similar to the issues Boxee dealt with a year ago when Hulu decided to lock out Boxee users. The difference is that Google TV is an open source operating system, capable of running a whole bunch of code that goes far beyond of what’s possible with Boxee.
Not only does the most recent version of Chrome for Android allow users to switch user agents, which means they’re essentially pretending to access a web site with a different browser and device, there’s also a number of third-party browsers that have been supporting this functionality for a while. In fact, there are even dedicated Android tools to mask the identity of your device. Many of these apps should run on Google TV out of the box, and one can be certain the developers will come up with new ways to extend the platform and in turn play Hulu videos.
Hulu will likely respond by stepping up the security cat-and-mouse game, which will result in developers coming up with even better ways to circumvent these roadblocks. Who will win? I think it’s too early to tell. It’s been more than a year since Hulu first went after Boxee, and Boxee’s users can still access the site’s content through the application’s integrated browser. Hulu eventually could get the upper hand by relying on Flash security, but that would mean to permanently lock itself out of HTML5, while other are starting to innovate with it.
Google and its partners on the other hand could have a hard time selling Google TV to consumers if their answer to “will this play Hulu” is “maybe it will, maybe it won’t.”
The solution would obviously be to make peace before the war starts. Hulu and its owners should give up on the notion that content is allowed to play on a 27″ screen, but not on a 32″ screen, and Google could help to make this happen by offering some insights into its plans for advertising on Google TV. Once the money is on the table, people will talk. But expect some more shots to be fired before that happens.
The life cycle of smartphones has reached the point where a single year means the difference between cutting edge and cutout bin, and Apple looks to be following — if not driving — that trend.
Though the latest model in Apple’s iPhone line has not been unveiled yet, America’s biggest retailer Wal-Mart has dropped the price of the iPhone 16GB 3GS to just $97 with a two-year AT&T contract; less than half of its former retail price. The 32 GB version, however, remains its same price of $297 with a two-year contract.
Time Warner Cable just pitched the major Hollywood studios a new idea: “home theater on demand.” It would allow people at home to watch movies just 30 days after they’re released in the theater for $20-$30. More »
Would ya looky here! Looks like someone over at Innovative Singapore has posted a video that shows what it would be like to turn on a WinPho 7 phone for the very first time.
The device shown in the video (and to the right) is the LG Panther, which has been making its way around the webs for a little while now.
It seems that LG will ditch the “Panther” monicker for a much more memorable “GW910″, which is an issue I’ll be taking up with their marketers directly*.
It’s clearly mentioned in the video (and original article) that this is still a pre-production device, sent out so apps can be tested on real hardware (rather than an emulator), and, as such, it’s stll very rough around the edges. Still, it’s nice to see the kind of UI experience you can expect from the Big M’s much overdue Windows Mobile revamp.
However, the most interesting thing in the video is the boot time: if you’ve ever booted a smartphone from the last 2 years or so, you’d know that it can often be an excruciatingly long experience. It remains to be seen if the production device can retain this speedy boot time after the final OS has been loaded, but it’s encouraging to see speeds like this at this time.
Also, prior to previous reports, a Live ID isn’t needed to boot the device (but will be for Xbox Live and Zune Marketplace integration). But, once again, pre production model blah blah…
A group of Democratic legislators spoke up Monday in favor of further cost-cutting as lawmakers resumed their efforts to piece together a new spending plan from the wreckage of Illinois’ budget.
The group called for about $1.3 billion in cuts, including $300 million from education and $300 million from administrative costs.
Among the leaders of the group was Rep. May, who said retired government employees need to pay more for their health care.
“As much as we love our retirees, this is a tough-love exercise,” said Rep. Karen May, D-Highland Park. “They have to feel the pain.
Content: Green Day Rock Band Demo Price: Free Availability: All Xbox LIVE regions except Hong Kong and India Dash Text: Experience Green Day like never before – as part of the band. Perform guitar, bass, drums, vocals (including 3-part harmonies) using the award-winning Rock Band technology. There are two songs available in this demo. Demo expires on July 13th.
On Tuesday, British Oil Company BP said that its own investigation team has been discussing the results of investigations regarding the cause, or causes, of the Deepwater Horizon accident in the Gulf of Mexico. According to their preliminary analysis, the fire and subsequent oil spill on the horizon were caused by the failure of several different processes, systems, and equipment.
Although there were a number of control mechanisms, which included both procedures and equipment, that should have stopped the accident from occurring, (to put it bluntly) they did not. Among these control mechanisms which are under investigation by BP include: cement intended to seal the reservoir from the well, pressure tests to insure that the well is sealed, an Emergency Disconnect System (EDS) which is activated by pushing one of many buttons located on the rig, and the execution of procedures meant to detect, and also control, hydrocarbons in the well.
BP’s self-investigation has been underway since April 21st, and is being carried out by the company’s Head of Group Safety and Operations. The oil company’s current financial situation stands as such: on Monday, shares closed at 493 pence, which values the company at GBP92.63 billion.
Content: Call of Duty 4 Price: Check pricing for your region Availability: All Xbox LIVE regions except Japan and United Kingdom Dash Text: (Online Interactions Not Rated by the ESRB) This game supports English. Download the manual for this game by locating the game on http://marketplace.xbox.com and selecting “See Game Manual". The new action thriller from the award-winning team at Infinity Ward Inc., Call of Duty® 4: Modern Warfare™ delivers the most intense and cinematic action experience ever. The epic title also features the added depth of multiplayer action for an all-new community of persistent, addictive, and customizable gameplay. There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.
Content: Battlestations: Midway Price: Check pricing for your region Availability: All regions except India and Japan Dash Text: (Online Interactions Not Rated by the ESRB) This game supports English, French, German, and Italian. Download the manual for this game by locating the game on http://marketplace.xbox.com and selecting “See Game Manual". An immense action game that drops players into the biggest air, sea and undersea battles of the Pacific War. There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.
Content: Battlefield 2: MC Price: Check pricing for your region Availability: Now available in Australia, Europe and New Zealand Dash Text: Download the manual for this game by locating the game on http://marketplace.xbox.com and selecting “See Game Manual". Battlefield 2: Modern Combat explodes onto Xbox 360, bringing the field of battle to life like never before. Bullets whiz by and score the environments around you, spent minigun shells rain down from hovering helicopters, and explosions shatter your field of vision. Delivering the over-the-top action of the award-winning Battlefield™ franchise, Battlefield 2: Modern Combat lets you wage modern war your way. Battlefield 2: Modern Combat delivers the Battlefield franchise’s trademark multiplayer action on Xbox Live, delivering ferocious 24 player online battles. Fighting for one of 4 sides – the US, the European Union, the Chinese, or the newly formed Middle East Coalition – and armed with the latest modern weaponry, you are given full control over the 30+ vehicles in the game. Battlefield 2: Modern Combat also features an adrenaline-soaked single player campaign where
Ever wanted to chose what to appear in your home screen Or to have a dynamic and easy access to your applications and utilities Want to personalize your Symbian touchscreen mobile phoneYou can have all this nowAnd even more…SPB Mobile Shell 3.5 for Symbian S60 5th edition released by SPB Software todayIt is a mobile shell that transforms completely your home screensNow you chose what to put on your home screen and what to leave for the other screens. The appl
I (MrGeekTonic) started out being a little underwhelmed by GoogleTV’s announcement at first – much like my friend Dave Zatz, but I’ve been trying to keep an open mind about it and listening to those who are closer to the Google action to see what they think. The following is a guest post by Sean Stuckless, someone who I respect a great deal because of his coding abilities (think SageTV Phoenix – stuff you may not realize yet but soon will) and also for his HTPC insight. Read on for a look at GoogleTV from an attendee of the Google IO conference.
NOTE: This is a guest post by Sean, a HTPC guru and developer. Sean attended the GogleIO conference so I asked him to contribute his thoughts on GoogleTV. Definitely a must-read for those interested in the future of TV – in particular GoogleTV’s vision.
This past week I had the pleasure of being one of the five thousand people to attend this year’s Google IO conference in San Francisco. There were many highlights, such as releasing the VP8 codec and announcing Android 2.2, but something especially interesting to me was GoogleTV. I had heard rumors about GoogleTV before, and the presentation on GoogleTV was not exactly impressive. This was partly because of technical issues and the fact that this is a still a "concept" rather than a full featured product. But the concept is intriguing.
GoogleTV – Android-Powered
If you are like me, then you have played with many different HTPC platforms over the years. You routinely hear people asking to surf the net from their TV, and while Google decided to show off that feature, it wasn’t the ability to actually surf the net the got my attention. It was the fact that GoogleTV is built on Android. Android has a marketplace with 1000s of Applications, many of which will just run on the TV. Android is a platform with a fast HTML5 capable browser. Now, at the click of button, you have access to 1000s of applications and rich web applications from your TV, with a way to build a custom TV experience. Applications can take over the viewing experience, such as a media library manager that will playback HD content from your HTPC server. Or it may simply sit on top of your current show in some non-obtrusive way. Consider as case where a twitter feed is displayed down the right hand side of the TV as you are watching American Idol. You can now engaging your TV shows in way that you could never do before. Or you are seeing real time content related to your shows as you watch them.
“I think the real potential here is the custom applications that you can access from your TV”
Being able to browse the web from your TV is fine, but I think the real potential here is the custom applications that you can access from your TV. Install them, remove them; Applications for Media Management, News Feeds, Pod Casts, etc, all from your couch. And, because it’s built on Android, it inherits the capabilities of the Android and Google Cloud platforms. Consider a case where where you are sitting with your tablet in the living room, and you find a cool YouTube video. Everyone could simply gather around the tablet and watch the video, or, you can send a message from the tablet to the TV and the TV will begin playing the YouTube video that you have selected in the Tablet. This isn’t simply displaying your content of the tablet on the TV, or firing up a remote application on the Tablet, this is real device communication where one device, such as a Tablet, phone or pc, can send intelligent messages directly to your TV, and your TV will understand what to do with them. Consider the flip side of this. What if you were watching a youtube video on your TV, and you had to leave. You can have your TV send a message from the TV to your Android phone where the phone would automatically start playing the current video from the TV at the current location in the video, but now on your phone, as you leave the house. This is one the exciting features in the new Android 2.2 release, and it something that will make it’s way into GoogleTV.
“Allowing your TV to become an extension of your existing devices”
GoogleTV is a much more innovative concept than simply watching the web on your TV, or searching for content from your TV, although that’s part of it. GoogleTV is making your TV interactive in way that has never been done before, and allowing your TV to become an extension of your existing devices.
About the author:Sean got his first taste of computers at young age of 7, entering byte code from magazines on his VIC20. Since that time he’s owned a Commodore64, a CoCo3, and numerous x86 machines (he currently have 7 active PCs in his home). When he’s not working diligently for a large software corporation architecting software, he spends his spare time tinkering with his SageTV setup and writing code for various SageTV projects, include Sage Remote APIs, Batch Metadata Tools, and the ever so secret Phoenix Initiative (not to be confused with the Dharma Initiative). Sean currently lives in a small city in Southwestern Ontario, and he’s really looking forward to Golf season to start. At which time, his indoor hobbies take a backseat to great outdoors.
South Korea’s President Lee Myoung-Bak has given support to officially reassuming the title of “main enemy” for their northern neighbors, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) according to reports. This comes after evidence has pointed towards North Korea as the culprit behind the sinking of the Cheosan, a South Korean naval ship.
President Lee, during a meeting with his senior staff, stated that South Korea has focused on exterior forces as opposed to threats closer to home: “Our military failed to clarify the notion of the main enemy for the past decade. We’ve been only focused on potential threats outside the Korean peninsula,” he stated.
This comes amidst other efforts to recognize the potential threats that may be posed by the North, including anti-submarine exercises with the US, a ban on DPRK access to South Korean waters, as well as stopping all bilateral trade between the two nations. The latter will prove to be the most decisive, considering the lack of trade partners for the North.
President Lee has attacked Pyongyang for their violations of UN sanctions as well as disregarding Korean War Armistice Agreement, and has warned that the South will not tolerate further violence.
President Lee also intends to increase the South’s self defence capabilities in case of further attacks by the DPRK and has threatened retaliations. In a nationally televised speech, the President expressed his strength as well as a stern warning to Pyongyang: “North Korea (DPRK) will pay a price corresponding to its provocative acts. I will continue to take stern measures to hold the North accountable.”
The term “main enemy” had been used officially since 1995, but was discarded in 2004 by Lee’s predecessor Roh Moo-Hyn. It was replaced with “direct military threat” amidst reconciliation efforts on both sides.
Blogger Monkeyfister has been watching the BP Live Cam all week and commenting on strange disruptions and gas explosions.
His account suggests the situation is worse than BP is letting on, and it’s deteriorating:
I’ve been watching the live Spillcam, and discussing it with folks, here all day long. About 5pm last night, we all started taking note of gas bubbling out of the seabed floor. It started earlier than that, actually– see pic a few posts down. About 1am this morning, the eruptions began to increase in spew volume.
At about 8am, CDT, as I watched, things started changing rapidly. Where the water around the two major gush points used to be very clear, it is now super turbid, and detritus is flying everywhere in a chaotic manner. seabed venting is obvious to see when ROV cameras pan around.
Yet-to-be-confirmed rumors are that the casing wall has finally worn through, about 300 feet below seabed, at an annulus (coupling), and the gas and oil are now finding a new way out to the seabed.
Not good news, as it will make the Top-Kill/Junk Shot nearly ineffectual… At the least, it means that more pressure and mud/cement is going to be required.
Can you really tell what’s going on in the grainy live cam image? Since the disruptions noted by Monkeyfister, BP has delayed Operation Top Kill and reduced estimates of the siphon collection rate.
PocketNow.com performed a series of mobile web browser speed tests between Android 2.2 (Froyo) on Nexus One, Safari on iPhone 3Gs and Opera 10 on HTC HD2 and showed overall Google’s claim that Froyo’s browser is the “fastest mobile web browser” may be true most of the time if you have Flash turned off.
Flash 10.1 beta for Android does give you more of a desktop experience however at the expense of slower page load, as the browser continues to load Flash content, as well as scrolling becomes choppy. Hopefully Adobe improves this and not give Apple more justification and ammunition in their spats.
Dos sentencias muy importantes en los últimos días para los que llevamos tiempo preocupados por los problemas legales derivados por comentarios en nuestros foros y blogs con la LSSICE. Hoy se ha conocido la de la Audiencia Provincial de Madrid, que da la razón Rankia por la denuncia que hizo Ausbanc, hace unos días otra del Tribunal Supremo en el caso QuejasOnline. En ambas sentencias se refleja que los prestadores de servicios de alojamiento no son responsables de los comentarios aportados por terceros y que por tanto no deben erigirse en jueces de los mismos.
Un respiro para muchos de los responsables de webs con participación de usuarios (blogs, foros, comunidades) y que vienen sufriendo una suerte de “matonismo judicial”: amenazas de meterte en litigios si no se borra todo lo que la marca aludido considere gravoso.