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iPhone owners lit up the Internet on New Year’s Day, fuming on Twitter and across blogs over the latest glitch in their beloved handhelds, as the device’s one-time alarms failed to go off.

At the stroke of midnight on January 1, 2011, the iPhone’s one-time alarm – but not the recurring alarm – ceased to work, according to technology news blog EnGadget . The glitch seemed to be affecting iPhones operation on iOS 4.0.2, iOS 4.1 and iOS 4.2.1.

Apple responded to EnGadget’s post about the glitch, offering a temporary fix to the issue and reassuring customers that the problem will be fixed soon.

The issue is related to non repeating alarms set for January 1 or 2. Customers can set recurring alarms for those dates and all alarms will work properly beginning January 3. Fortunately for some, the glitch came on New Year’s Day, a national holiday which this year also fell on a Saturday.

The issue is similar to a glitch on the iPhone in November of 2010 amongst European iPhone owners, whose alarms went off an hour late after daylight savings time. Similarly, in early October 2010, a bug affected Australian and New Zealand iPhone owners, whose alarms went off an hour early.

Two separate groups of iPhone and iPad users have sued Apple Inc alleging that certain software applications were passing personal user information to third-party advertisers without consent.

In the lawsuits seeking class action, filed in a federal court in California, the plaintiffs sought a ban on passing of user information without consent and monetary compensation, according to case documents.

At some point, both cases may be consolidated into one by the judges presiding over the cases, said Majed Nachawati, a partner at law firm Fears & Nachawati, one of the attorneys for the complainants.

Along with Apple, makers of popular apps such as Textplus4, Paper Toss, Weather Channel, Dictionary.com, Talking Tom Cat and Pumpkin Maker were also named co-defendants in the lawsuits filed on December 23.

The lawsuits follow a December 18 report in the Wall Street Journal that said smartphones apps may be sharing personal data “widely and regularly,” and that iPhone apps transmitted more data than apps on phones using Google’s Android operating system.

Concerns about user privacy have emerged with the rapid growth of smartphones that spawn apps, and social networking websites such as Twitter and Facebook.

The Unique Device ID that Apple assigns to its devices has become an attractive feature for third-party advertisers looking for a way to reliably track mobile device users’ online activities, one of the lawsuits said.

In April, Apple amended its developer agreement to ban apps from sending data to third parties except for information directly necessary for the functionality of the apps.

However, the lawsuits allege that Apple has taken no steps to actually implement its revised developer agreement or enforce it in any meaningful way due to criticism from advertising networks.

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