•  
Online threats cases

Online threats cases

YOKOSUKA, Japan - Photo taken on Feb. 10, 2013 on Enoshima Island in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, shows a cat thought to have been used by the man suspected of sending a series of threatening e-mails in 2012. A memory card containing a virus that can remotely control computers had been attached to the collar of a cat on the small island. A man caught on a security camera (back C) approaching the cat resembles a man arrested in Tokyo on Feb. 10, 2013, over the e-mails, the police said.

  •  
E-mail threats arrest

E-mail threats arrest

YOKOSUKA, Japan - Photo taken on Feb. 10, 2013 on Enoshima Island in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, shows a cat thought to have been used by the man suspected of sending a series of threatening e-mails in 2012. A memory card containing a virus that can remotely control computers had been attached to the collar of a cat on the small island. A man caught on a security camera (upper right) approaching the cat resembles a man arrested in Tokyo on Feb. 10, 2013, over the e-mails, the police said.

  •  
E-mail threats arrest

E-mail threats arrest

YOKOSUKA, Japan - Photo taken on Feb. 10, 2013 on Enoshima Island in Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, shows a cat thought to have been used by the man suspected of sending a series of threatening e-mails in 2012. A memory card containing a virus that can remotely control computers had been attached to the collar of a cat on the small island. A man caught on a security camera approaching the cat resembles a man arrested in Tokyo on Feb. 10, 2013, over the e-mails, the police said.

  •  
Person claiming responsibility for online threats sends message

Person claiming responsibility for online threats sends message

TOKYO, Japan - Lawyer Yoji Ochiai holds a tablet computer in Tokyo on Nov. 14, 2012. An unidentified person sent an e-mail to Ochiai and several news organizations on Nov. 13, claiming to be the culprit behind a spate of threatening messages posted online or sent as e-mails from remotely controlled personal computers, investigative sources said on Nov. 14.

  •  
Person claiming responsibility for online threats sends message

Person claiming responsibility for online threats sends message

TOKYO, Japan - Photo taken on Nov. 14, 2012, shows message e-mailed by an unidentified person to lawyer Yoji Ochiai and several news organizations on Nov. 13, claiming to be the culprit behind a spate of threatening messages posted online or sent as e-mails from remotely controlled personal computers.

  •  
Softbank eyes enabling e-mail on Tokyo subway trains

Softbank eyes enabling e-mail on Tokyo subway trains

TOKYO, Japan - Softbank Corp. President Masayoshi Son (R) and Tokyo Vice Gov. Naoki Inose meet at the Tokyo metropolitan government building on Jan. 20, 2011. Son proposed that the mobile phone service provider improve telecommunications to allow cellphone users to send e-mails from Tokyo Metro subway trains at any time.

  •  
Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

TOKYO, Japan - Yoshiharu Shimoyama, a judge at the Utsunomiya District Court, arrives at a House of Councillors building in Tokyo on Dec. 24 to attend the second session of the parliamentary Judges Impeachment Court. The court issued a ruling for the dismissal of Shimoyama, who was convicted of harassment for sending threatening e-mails to a female subordinate.

  •  
Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

TOKYO, Japan - Iwao Matsuda (C), a House of Councillors member who heads the parliamentary Judges Impeachment Court, speaks at a news conference in Tokyo on Dec. 24 after the court issued a ruling for the dismissal of Yoshiharu Shimoyama, an Utsunomiya District Court judge, who was convicted of harassment for sending threatening e-mails to a female subordinate.

  •  
Softbank Mobile unveils new fee system

Softbank Mobile unveils new fee system

TOKYO, Japan - Softbank Mobile Corp. President Masayoshi Son holds up a sign board showing users will pay no charge for calls and e-mails between subscribers under the company's new fee system during a press conference in Tokyo on Oct. 23.

  •  
25 harassment cases reported against Chinese interests in Japan

25 harassment cases reported against Chinese interests in Japan

TOKYO, Japan - Photo shows some of the threatening mails made public by the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo on April 19. A total of 25 harassment incidents against Chinese interests, including diplomatic missions and schools, have been reported in Japan since April 9, when the first wave of anti-Japanese demonstrations and vandalism took place in China, the National Public Safety Commission said.

  •  
Guinness mails world's oldest woman certificate to Hongo

Guinness mails world's oldest woman certificate to Hongo

KAGOSHIMA, Japan - Kamato Hongo, a 115-year-old resident of Kagoshima, receives a certificate Sept. 24 that officially recognizes her as the oldest living female in the Guinness Book of World Records. The certificate, mailed by the British publication, reached Hongo six months after she became the world's oldest person when 115-year-old American Maude Farris-Luse died March 18.

  •  
Protest against alien registration cards

Protest against alien registration cards

Chong A Yong (right), a permanent Korean resident in Japan, mails his alien registration card to Japan's Justice Minister Takao Jinnouchi at Osaka Central Post Office on June 5 in protest against a Japanese law that requires foreign residents to carry their alien cards all the time. The placard behind Chong reads ''No to alien registration card.'' The card-carrying requirement will remain intact even though the government plans to decriminalize the punishment against violators.

  •  
New public phone enabling e-mail

New public phone enabling e-mail

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (NTT) unveils Jan. 7 a next-generation public pay telephone machine that will enable users to send and receive e-mails and forward color images they photographed with digital cameras. NTT will set up the ''ComBase'' phones across the nation starting this fall.

  •  
CHINA-MACAO-POST-DISINFECTION (CN)

CHINA-MACAO-POST-DISINFECTION (CN)

(220323) -- MACAO, March 23, 2022 (Xinhua) -- A staff member with Macao Post disinfects mails in south China's Macao, March 23, 2022. (Xinhua/Cheong Kam Ka)

  •  
Softbank Mobile unveils new fee system

Softbank Mobile unveils new fee system

TOKYO, Japan - Softbank Mobile Corp. President Masayoshi Son holds up a sign board showing users will pay no charge for calls and e-mails between subscribers under the company's new fee system during a press conference in Tokyo on Oct. 23. (Kyodo)

  •  
Japan Pension Service mails apology letter over data leak

Japan Pension Service mails apology letter over data leak

Japan Pension Service employees prepare at its headquarters in Tokyo on June 3, 2015 to mail letters of apology over the recent leaking of data of some 1.25 million people. Names, pension ID numbers plus other personal information leaked as a result of a cyberattack. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

  •  
FBI says Clinton not to face criminal charges after new e-mail review

FBI says Clinton not to face criminal charges after new e-mail review

File photo shows U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton. FBI Director James Comey said on Nov. 6, 2016 in a letter to members of Congress that a review of newly discovered e-mails sent or received by Clinton has not changed its conclusion that she should not face criminal charges. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

  •  
25 harassment cases reported against Chinese interests in Japan

25 harassment cases reported against Chinese interests in Japan

TOKYO, Japan - Photo shows some of the threatening mails made public by the Chinese Embassy in Tokyo on April 19. A total of 25 harassment incidents against Chinese interests, including diplomatic missions and schools, have been reported in Japan since April 9, when the first wave of anti-Japanese demonstrations and vandalism took place in China, the National Public Safety Commission said. (Kyodo)

  •  
Cell phone companies losing battle against junk mail

Cell phone companies losing battle against junk mail

TOKYO, Japan - Cell phone companies' pamphlets on how to combat nuisance mails. (Kyodo)

  •  
Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

TOKYO, Japan - Iwao Matsuda (C), a House of Councillors member who heads the parliamentary Judges Impeachment Court, speaks at a news conference in Tokyo on Dec. 24 after the court issued a ruling for the dismissal of Yoshiharu Shimoyama, an Utsunomiya District Court judge, who was convicted of harassment for sending threatening e-mails to a female subordinate. (Kyodo)

  •  
Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

Impeachment panel rules judge be dismissed for harassing woman

TOKYO, Japan - Yoshiharu Shimoyama, a judge at the Utsunomiya District Court, arrives at a House of Councillors building in Tokyo on Dec. 24 to attend the second session of the parliamentary Judges Impeachment Court. The court issued a ruling for the dismissal of Shimoyama, who was convicted of harassment for sending threatening e-mails to a female subordinate. (Kyodo)

  •  
Softbank eyes enabling e-mail on Tokyo subway trains

Softbank eyes enabling e-mail on Tokyo subway trains

TOKYO, Japan - Softbank Corp. President Masayoshi Son (R) and Tokyo Vice Gov. Naoki Inose meet at the Tokyo metropolitan government building on Jan. 20, 2011. Son proposed that the mobile phone service provider improve telecommunications to allow cellphone users to send e-mails from Tokyo Metro subway trains at any time. (Kyodo)

  •  
Japan Post

Japan Post

A woman mails an envelope at a postbox in Tokyo on Nov. 16, 2018. (Kyodo) ==Kyodo

  •  
Protest against alien registration cards

Protest against alien registration cards

Chong A Yong (right), a permanent Korean resident in Japan, mails his alien registration card to Japan's Justice Minister Takao Jinnouchi at Osaka Central Post Office on June 5 in protest against a Japanese law that requires foreign residents to carry their alien cards all the time. The placard behind Chong reads ''No to alien registration card.'' The card-carrying requirement will remain intact even though the government plans to decriminalize the punishment against violators. ==Kyodo

  •  
New public phone enabling e-mail

New public phone enabling e-mail

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corp. (NTT) unveils Jan. 7 a next-generation public pay telephone machine that will enable users to send and receive e-mails and forward color images they photographed with digital cameras. NTT will set up the ''ComBase'' phones across the nation starting this fall.

  • Main
  • Top
  • Editorial
  • Creative
  • About Us
  • About ILG
  • Terms of use
  • Company
  • BEHIND
  • Price List
  • Single Plan
  • Monthly Plan
  • Services
  • Shooting
  • Rights Clearance
  • Support
  • FAQ
  • How To Buy
  • Contact Us
  • Become a Partner

© KYODO NEWS IMAGES INC

All Rights Reserved.

  • Editorial
  • Olympics
  • News
  • Sports
  • Japan
  • Tech
  • Royal
  • Disaster
  • NorthKorea
  • Old Japan
  • SNS
  • Creative
  • Food
  • Japan
  • Landscape
  • Animal
  • Popular
  • #Ukraine
  • #Thailand
  • #coronavirus
  • #N. Korea
  • #Russia
  • #China
  • #Ukraine
  • #Thailand
  • #coronavirus
  • #N. Korea
  • #Russia
  • #China
  • Food
  • Japan
  • Landscape
  • Animal
  • Olympics
  • News
  • Sports
  • Japan
  • Tech
  • Royal
  • Disaster
  • NorthKorea
  • Old Japan
  • SNS