If you are by any chance out of the loop, Xiaomi is currently under fire in Lithuania as the country's Deputy Defence Minister criticized the company for imposing censorship to its smartphones. The Chinese tech giant denied allegations and has now hired a third-party firm that's going to investigate the Lithuanian's government claims. It didn't say which company it hired, though, but it confirmed it's based in Europe. According to Lithuania's Defence Ministry, Xiaomi is blocking certain search terms such as "free Tibet", "long live Taiwan independence" and "democracy movement". The...
via shopmatrix
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Honor Magic V2 RSR Porsche Design is coming to Europe
Earlier today, Honor finally launched the Magic V2 in Europe, almost five months after its initial announcement. Don't miss our unboxin...
-
Introduction Like we've said time and time again, GSMArena is chuck full of true geeks and between us you can find veritable experts on...
-
Sony sent out the update to Android 14 to the Xperia 1 V, its mainstream sized flagship, back in early November, and for some reason it...
-
In less than 24 hours, OnePlus will finally introduce the OnePlus 12 for international markets, following the phone's initial announcem...
No comments:
Post a Comment