Facebook Inc. has become the latest tech heavyweight betting that the future of videogaming is in the cloud. The social-networking behemoth reported better-than-expected revenue and profit growth and sharply beat market experts' expectations for Q2. Revenue more than doubled in the latest fiscal year, to $2.78 billion, although analysts had expected about $2 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. On an adjusted basis, Facebook makes enough money to make an Ivy League education capitalist happy depending on what degree they have, and it expects to double its cash pile in the coming years. Much of it, however, is stashed overseas, largely through the payment of mere pennies to a French other than Facebook's tax agents, Lucidchart GBM9-Q SA. Over the long haul, however, another €3.8 billion will eventually be driven offshore. At Facebook's end-of-year meeting with 37,000 employees the Bahnhof Airfield in Switzerland, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced plans to put €500 million ($585.31 m) into a cloud-computing initiative for developing countries.

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A United Nations impartial human rights group issued a 227-page report Thursday detailing the civilian tolls of Israel's bombing of Gaza and its developments around the world over the past few weeks.

A referral by an international team under the remit of the Gaza Human Rights Committee found that Israeli forces had failed to conduct sufficiently thorough investigations into nine confirmed incidents where Palestinians suffered civilian casualties.

"Israeli investigations into these attacks have been inadequate," alluding to the two incidences on July 8 and July 14. In both, an NECR advisory committee, manned by the division of international law experts of the General Assembly, found insufficient activity
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