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If photos from a person who is not connected to you pop up in your search results, you might assume those photos are public and thus fine to share outside of the network, but that may not be the case.
FORBES: Connect
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It is thus able to fine-tune them, for instance to keep power consumption low or make touch screens react faster.
ECONOMIST: The battle in the mobile industry takes an unexpected turn
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Thus the regulator getting upset and thus, eventually, the fine (see the story in the sidebar over this).
FORBES: China Tightens Its Oversight On Apple
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Thus you now need to fine people for producing too much milk.
FORBES: The Great Norwegian Butter Famine
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Thus, paying high prices for fine wine can be justified by new consumers as in their minds it is something that gives pleasure and does them good.
BBC: Viewpoint: Asia's evolving taste for wine
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That would increase global revenues to the firm and thus the size of the possible fine: despite the EU having no obvious nor logical right to the results of greater IP protection in China.
FORBES: The EU Could Fine Microsoft $7.4 Billion
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Thus, one-quarter of the money is not a fine but an estimate of foregone revenue under an agreement to cut fees over the next five years.
ECONOMIST: A big legal settlement has more bark than bite
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The studies, one on mice and one on people, have identified two hormones that seem to fine-tune the perception of sweetness, and thus regulate the intake of sugar independently of the previously known mechanism of satiation that is located in the brain.
ECONOMIST: Hormones influence how sensitive taste buds are to sugar
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One could argue that the euro existed for a time without Greece and functioned fine, that allowing Greece to join was a mistake, and thus that a euro without Greece would be more stable.
FORBES: Would A Greek Exit Really Be Manageable?