2011年7月31日 星期日

Yahoo! News: Internet News: Float Reader aims to make reading social, courtesy of Scribd (Appolicious)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Float Reader aims to make reading social, courtesy of Scribd (Appolicious)
Jul 31st 2011, 17:30

Eighty

Review for Float Reader

Posted July 31, 2011 12:30pm by Kathryn Swartz Tags: News, RSS Readers

I don't really feel like my Internet reading needs to be more social, but the team at Scribd, the web publishing company, feels a bit differently, as evidenced by its new social reading app Float Reader, for iPhones 3GS and 4 and third- and fourth-gen iPod Touch. I've hit my personal limit for social networks, so it's a good thing that Float is more than a timeline aggregator. My immediate impression of Float was that, although it still needs work, the app offers a solid concept with striking design.

For its launch, Float, which is a digital reading service, has connected with 150 publications — such as Time, the Atlantic, GOOD and Apartment Therapy — all of which are viewable in Float's soon-to-be signature formatting, which was my favorite part of the app. Float strips out formatting and advertisements, presenting readers with clean, moveable copy. The text "floats," which means that if you prefer it to be larger and pinch to zoom, the type automatically adjusts and rewraps. It's exactly what's missing when you're reading websites on iPhone's small screen. Float also offers a number of fonts and backgrounds to choose from that gives flexibility for reading, including serif and sans serif typefaces, decreased brightness for nighttime or sunlight reading to help with surrounding glare.

You'll find the included sites — you can't access content manually right now — in the favorites tab. Here you can add sites to your favorites or find stories to download and add to your offline reading list. You'll see continually updated feeds of a site's content. Swiping across each story will give you the intro and a button to add it to your reading list. You can also tap the story to open it immediately. All content you view is stored in the library tab, which could be useful if you need to reference something in the future.

I enabled sharing of my social networks, which enables Float to work a bit differently than traditional timeline readers. Instead of pulling in all posts from Facebook, Scribd or Twitter, Float only pulls in posts with attached links, allowing users to keep on top of what their friends are posting. It's a cool idea — if Float were functioning correctly. My social feed is stuck on information posted three days ago, and neither the pull-to-refresh function nor shutting down the app, will override the problem. (As I write this, the five most recent tweets on my timeline all have links attached, so this isn't for lack of available content.)

The service can sync with the Web app, and an iPad version is in the works. Float might not be free forever, though. According to Wired.com, Scribd will be including ads in Float and is considering a paywall for subscribers in the future.

Download the free Appolicious iPhone app

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2011年7月30日 星期六

Yahoo! News: Internet News: India police 'arrest online survey firm officials' (AFP)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
India police 'arrest online survey firm officials' (AFP)
Jul 30th 2011, 10:53

MUMBAI, India (AFP) – Indian police have arrested two top officials of Singapore-based online survey company Speak Asia in Mumbai for allegedly duping investors of $294 million, reports said Saturday.

Police identified those arrested as Tarak Bajpai, Speak Asia's chief operating officer in India, and financial manager Ravi Khanna, according to the Press Trust of India and other media. Two web technicians were also held.

The suspects were arrested "in connection with a financial fraud", said joint crime police commissioner Himanshu Roy, according to the Times of India.

Roy told the Press Trust of India the company had allegedly told investors they would get 54,000 rupees ($1,221) a year in return for investing 11,000 rupees annually, cheating investors out of 13 billion rupees ($294 million).

Speak Asia is a Singapore-based online survey company which pays its members to take part in surveys for their clients. The firm claims to have more than one million people in India participating in its surveys.

Its bank accounts in India have reportedly been frozen.

There was no immediate comment available from the Mumbai police or from lawyers representing the suspects on Saturday. Emails to the company's offices in Delhi and Singapore were not immediately responded to.

The accused appeared at a Mumbai court on Friday and were remanded in police custody until August 4, Roy was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India and other media.

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2011年7月29日 星期五

Yahoo! News: Internet News: Senator supports online sales tax reform (Reuters)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Senator supports online sales tax reform (Reuters)
Jul 30th 2011, 02:40

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Cash-strapped states seeking to collect billions in taxes from online transactions gained an ally in Washington on Friday when a senator introduced a bill for a federal solution to the problem.

Struggling with weak economies, states will lose an estimated $10 billion this year and $11.4 billion next year in sales taxes that go uncollected on online purchases, according to studies by three professors at the University of Tennessee.

Although the fate of the bill by Democratic Senator Dick Durbin was uncertain given the anti-tax environment on Capitol Hill, his measure is backed by the National Governors Association and the National Retail Federation and even earned a pledge of cooperation from giant online retailer Amazon.

"It's being brought to a head by actions at the state level," said Indiana state Senator Luke Kenley, who heads the Streamlined Sales Tax Governing Board, a group of 24 states that has been lobbying Congress to enact a uniform sales tax for all retailers -- online and bricks and mortar alike.

Also pushing the issue to the forefront has been the sheer size of the online retail market -- $165 billion last year, according to Bernstein Research, which predicts 15 percent annual growth over the next decade.

"Online sales are growing exponentially and this loophole is creating winners and losers based on the tax code," says Jason Brewer of the Retail Industry Leaders Association, a trade group in favor of federal rules.

Durbin argued his bill involved no new taxes and applied only to taxes already imposed by the states that are not being collected. His goal is to provide states with the clear authority to require retailers to collect sales taxes already owed, treat all retailers equally regarding sales tax collection, and release consumers, currently expected to calculate and send in the taxes themselves, from that responsibility.

AMAZON

Amazon, the largest e-retailer, has been locked in a series of state-by-state battles over the non-collection of taxes. Amazon declined comment on Durbin's bill. But in a letter to Durbin, the company's vice president for global public policy, Paul Misener, supported returning discussion of the interstate collection of sales tax to Congress and pledged to cooperate.

On a state level, Amazon has been less accommodating. It is backing a referendum to end California's new tax collection policy and has pushed for and gotten incentives in Tennessee and South Carolina tying sales tax holidays to putting Amazon facilities and jobs in those states. The company argues the current sales tax system is too complex for it to handle reasonably.

A recent study by analysts at William Blair & Co of more than 2,000 items for sale at 24 retailers found more than half the products were also available on Amazon.com at an average of 11 percent below store prices. If Amazon collected all state sales taxes, that price discount would drop into a "mid single-digit" range, the analysts said.

Amazon warned in a recent SEC filing that if states or foreign countries succeeded in forcing the company to start collecting taxes where it did not do so already, it "could result in substantial tax liabilities, including for past sales, as well as penalties and interest."

Brick and mortar retailers have been waiting for federal action for nearly two decades since a Supreme Court decision encouraged Congress to come up with some kind of national framework for remote sales taxes.

(Reporting by Nanette Byrnes in Chapel Hill, North Carolina; additional reporting by Alistair Barr in San Francisco; Editing by Peter Cooney)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Americans press Congress on debt via phones, Twitter (Reuters)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Americans press Congress on debt via phones, Twitter (Reuters)
Jul 29th 2011, 21:39

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Americans took to the phone lines and the Internet on Friday after President Barack Obama urged them again to call lawmakers and weigh in on a war over raising the U.S. debt limit that has sharply divided Congress.

Obama was making his second televised appeal in a week, asking Americans to press lawmakers to make a deal. The Treasury says Congress has four days left to raise the U.S. debt limit and avoid an unprecedented debt default.

"Now, on Monday night, I asked the American people to make their voice heard in this debate, and the response was overwhelming," Obama said, referring to the massive response by telephone and email after he asked Americans to let lawmakers know if they wanted to see a compromise on Capitol Hill.

"So please, to all the American people, keep it up," he said, appearing on many TV networks in midmorning. "If you want to see a bipartisan compromise -- a bill that can pass both houses of Congress and that I can sign -- let your members of Congress know. Make a phone call. Send an email. Tweet. Keep the pressure on Washington, and we can get past this."

Shortly after his speech, telephone circuits in the Capitol were overwhelmed by a high volume of external calls, resulting in busy signals or difficulty getting through jammed phone lines.

An hour after Obama's speech, the House Call Center sent out a system alert warning that telephone circuits were near capacity, resulting in outside callers getting busy signals, instead of having calls bounce to a free line.

By midday, Dan Weiser, communications director for the chief administrative officer in the House, said there was about a 10 percent increase in calls over normal numbers.

Several calls to the office of House Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress who is trying to get a short-term debt limit increase through but is receiving resistance from his own party, could not get through.

At first the only response was a busy signal, but in successive attempts the phone was answered by an automated message and patriotic music played after callers were told to wait to be answered in the order the call was received.

But a spokesman for Boehner's office said the amount of phone and email traffic had been holding pretty steady over the past week or so with no real increase after Obama's speech.

TWITTER

Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid's office received several thousand calls on Friday supporting a bipartisan long-term compromise, his spokesman Zac Petkanas said.

Obama also used 21st century communications, sending messages to his 9.4 million Twitter followers asking them to contact their lawmakers.

"The time for putting party first is over. If you want to see a bipartisan #compromise, let Congress know. Call. Email. Tweet.-BO," said one Tweet, using his initials to show that it was a personal appeal from the president, not his staff.

But then his staff kept Obama's Twitter feed busy, posting Twitter handles of Republican representatives and senators from each state so people could personalize their appeal.

The "compromise" hashtag, which helps categorize Tweets into themes -- was flooded with messages from people using the 140-character Twitter limit to make their wishes heard.

One example came from the Twitter account of John McMullen, who describes himself as a designer from California. The Tweet, addressed to Colorado Republican representatives Cory Gardner, Mike Coffman and Scott Tipton, read.

"@RepTipton @repcorygardner @RepMikeCoffman Please stop the madness. Support a bipartisan #compromise to deficit reduction. Enough."

(Editing by Philip Barbara)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Phone companies present rural broadband plan (AP)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Phone companies present rural broadband plan (AP)
Jul 29th 2011, 21:14

WASHINGTON – AT&T Inc., Verizon Communications Inc. and four other telecom companies are offering a proposal to overhaul an $8 billion federal phone subsidy program in order to pay for high-speed Internet access in rural and other underserved areas.

They say the plan, which was filed with the Federal Communications Commission on Friday, would bring broadband service to nearly all Americans within five years.

The proposal is one of dozens the FCC will likely receive as it seeks to bring the subsidy program, called the Universal Service Fund, into the digital age. But the new plan is significant since it has the backing of six major companies that are among the largest recipients of federal dollars to provide phone service in rural and poor areas.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Anonymous says hacked U.S. government cyber supplier (Reuters)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Anonymous says hacked U.S. government cyber supplier (Reuters)
Jul 29th 2011, 21:24

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Hackers with the loose-knit group Anonymous said on Friday they had broken into the network of U.S. government contractor Mantech International Corp and posted some NATO-related correspondence online.

Anonymous, tweeting as AnonymousIRC, offered the correspondence between Mantech and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as proof of the breach. Two involve NATO contracting offices, and one discusses deploying staffers to an unnamed "NATO Theater of Operations" for what appears to be tech services.

Mantech, which claims the U.S. Defense, State and Justice Departments among its clients, declined to comment. It offers cyber security among its services.

Hackers associated with Lulz Security and Anonymous have claimed responsibility for cyber attacks on the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, the U.S. Senate, Sony Corp websites and the website of Murdoch's British newspaper group, News International, among others.

Authorities made some arrests in connection with the breaches, including a teenager detained at a house in the remote Shetland Islands, off Scotland's northeast coast.

There have also been other arrests in Britain and in the United States.

The group has urged supporters to boycott eBay Inc's PayPal electronic payment service, or to close existing accounts. It has previously attacked PayPal to show opposition to the service's refusal to process payments to WikiLeaks, the website founded by Julian Assange that published copies of secret U.S. government diplomatic cables.

(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Gary Hill)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: If You Use IE, You Might Be, Um, Dumb, IQ Test Suggests (NewsFactor)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
If You Use IE, You Might Be, Um, Dumb, IQ Test Suggests (NewsFactor)
Jul 29th 2011, 20:49

A new study from AptiQuant suggests there may be a correlation between a web surfer's browser selection and his or her cognitive abilities. The Vancouver-based psychometric consulting firm based its conclusions on the results of an IQ test it administered online to more than 100,000 English-speaking subjects.

According to AptiQuant's report, individuals on the lower side of the IQ scale tend to resist performing browser upgrades. "The subjects using any version of Internet Explorer ranked significantly lower on an average than others" on the IQ test, the firm's researchers reported. Out of all the IE versions, however, "subjects using IE8 fared a little better."

About 34 percent of the test subjects with the lowest scores were using IE7, AptiQuant's researchers noted. IE7 usage declined to less than four percent for the group with the highest IQ scores.

Opera Users Are Smarter

AptiQuant found no statistically significant differences between the IQ scores of subjects using Chrome, Firefox and Safari. On the other hand, these subjects had a higher IQ score, on average, than IE users. Additionally, the participants with the highest IQ test scores were using Opera, Camino and IE in combination with Chrome Frame.

AptiQuant's researchers compared their results to another unreleased study of a similar nature undertaken in 2006. "The comparison clearly suggests that more people on the higher side of the IQ scale have moved away from Internet Explorer in the last five years," the report's authors wrote.

Still, AptiQuant's survey didn't account for the fact that many business professionals have no choice when it comes to the browsers they use for business purposes, since IT administrators often make these decisions. "The people who took the test could either be using their home computers or office computers," admitted AptiQuant President Leonard Howard in an e-mail Friday.

IT Considerations

Part of the resistance to change that AptiQuant's study attributes to the cognitive abilities of its test subjects may be due to the fact that enterprises tend to adopt new technologies at a slower rate than consumers. That's because IT administrators must consider a variety of issues that may be far more important to business goals than innovation.

IT departments are often locked into specific IE versions because of factors such as the operating system in use as well as legacy issues surrounding the performance of business documents, forms and processes that may not function the same if another browser is used. This last issue represents one of the major reasons why many businesses have not adopted the free OpenOffice instead of Microsoft's expensive Office productivity suite.

The continuous use of older versions of IE by millions of people around the world causes major headaches for web developers, which AptiQuant blamed on Microsoft's adoption of technologies in older IE versions that do not comply with web standards. "This trend not only makes their job tougher, but has also pulled back innovation by at least a decade," AptiQuant said.

These days, however, Microsoft recognizes that continuing use of its aging IE6 browser is an impediment to innovation. For this reason, earlier this year Microsoft inaugurated a campaign to encourage users of IE6 to upgrade to a modern browser such as IE8 or even IE9, which features compatibility with web standards such as HTML5.

Global IE6 usage currently stands at 10.7 percent -- down 7.5 percentage points from the same time last year. In the United States, however, IE6 usage currently amounts to just two percent.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Americans press Congress on debt via phones, Twitter (Reuters)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Americans press Congress on debt via phones, Twitter (Reuters)
Jul 29th 2011, 19:16

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Americans took to the phone lines and the Internet on Friday after President Barack Obama urged them again to call lawmakers and weigh in on a war over raising the U.S. debt limit that has sharply divided Congress.

Obama was making his second televised appeal in a week, asking Americans to press lawmakers to make a deal. The Treasury says Congress has four days left to raise the U.S. debt limit and avoid an unprecedented debt default.

"Now, on Monday night, I asked the American people to make their voice heard in this debate, and the response was overwhelming," Obama said, referring to the massive response by telephone and email after he asked Americans to let lawmakers know if they wanted to see a compromise on Capitol Hill.

"So please, to all the American people, keep it up," he said, appearing on many TV networks in midmorning. "If you want to see a bipartisan compromise -- a bill that can pass both houses of Congress and that I can sign -- let your members of Congress know. Make a phone call. Send an email. Tweet. Keep the pressure on Washington, and we can get past this."

Shortly after his speech, telephone circuits in the Capitol were overwhelmed by a high volume of external calls, resulting in busy signals or difficulty getting through jammed phone lines.

An hour after Obama's speech, the House Call Center sent out a system alert warning that telephone circuits were near capacity, resulting in outside callers getting busy signals, instead of having calls bounce to a free line.

By midday, Dan Weiser, communications director for the chief administrative officer in the House, said there was about a 10 percent increase in calls over normal numbers.

Several calls to the office of House Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress who is trying to get a short-term debt limit increase through but is receiving resistance from his own party, could not get through.

At first the only response was a busy signal, but in successive attempts the phone was answered by an automated message and patriotic music played after callers were told to wait to be answered in the order the call was received.

But a spokesman for Boehner's office said the amount of phone and email traffic had been holding pretty steady over the past week or so with no real increase after Obama's speech.

TWITTER

Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid's office received several thousand calls on Friday supporting a bipartisan long-term compromise, his spokesman Zac Petkanas said.

Obama also used 21st century communications, sending messages to his 9.4 million Twitter followers asking them to contact their lawmakers.

"The time for putting party first is over. If you want to see a bipartisan #compromise, let Congress know. Call. Email. Tweet.-BO," said one Tweet, using his initials to show that it was a personal appeal from the president, not his staff.

But then his staff kept Obama's Twitter feed busy, posting Twitter handles of Republican representatives and senators from each state so people could personalize their appeal.

The "compromise" hashtag, which helps categorize Tweets into themes -- was flooded with messages from people using the 140-character Twitter limit to make their wishes heard.

One example came from the Twitter account of John McMullen, who describes himself as a designer from California. The Tweet, addressed to Colorado Republican representatives Cory Gardner, Mike Coffman and Scott Tipton, read.

"@RepTipton @repcorygardner @RepMikeCoffman Please stop the madness. Support a bipartisan #compromise to deficit reduction. Enough."

(Editing by Philip Barbara)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Icelanders hand in draft of world's first 'web' constitution (AFP)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Icelanders hand in draft of world's first 'web' constitution (AFP)
Jul 29th 2011, 18:14

REYKJAVIK (AFP) – A group of 25 ordinary citizens on Friday presented to Iceland's parliamentary speaker a new constitution draft, which they compiled with the help of hundreds of others who chipped in online.

The group had been working on the draft since April and posted its work on the Internet, allowing hundreds of other citizens to give their feedback on the project via the committee's website and on social networks such as Facebook.

"The reaction from the public was very important. And many of the members were incredibly active in responding to the comment that came through," Salvor Nordal, the head of the elected committee of citizens from all walks of life, told reporters.

Katrin Oddsdottir, a lawyer who had shared her experience on the committee through micro-blogging site Twitter, said she believed the public's input was "what mattered the most" in preparing the draft.

"What I learned is that people can be trusted. We put all our things online and attempted to read, listen and understand and I think that made the biggest difference in our job and made our work so so so much better," she said.

Iceland's constitution was barely adapted from Denmark's when the island nation gained independence from the Scandinavian kingdom in 1944.

"Since then, a holistic re-examination of the constitution has always been on the agenda, but always halted because of political infighting in the parliament," committee member Eirikur Bergmann, a political science professor at Iceland's Bifroest Unioversity who also tweeted his way through the committee's work, told AFP.

But after Iceland's economic collapse in 2008, which triggered massive social movements, pressure mounted for a revamp of the constitution and for the process to be led by ordinary citizens, he said.

The committee's website (www.stjornlagarad.is, in Icelandic and English) quickly became an incubator for comments, with more than 1,600 propositions and comments on the suggested text.

Moreover, the council was present on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Flickr, allowing Iceland -- and the world -- to follow its progress.

Most of the suggestions had to do with an economic model for the island nation of 320,000, committee member Silja Omarsdottir told AFP.

"The other proposals ... that form a noticeable trend have to do with the Internet, web neutrality, transparency and freedom of access to the Internet," she said.

Some citizens also gave specific suggestions.

"It would be be more natural that a parliamentarian would have to resign from parliament should he take on the position of a minister," Bjarni Kristinn Torfason suggested on the council's webpage.

Helgi Johann Hauksson thought the council should be more specific: "who we 'all' are needs to be defined when it is written 'all of us are equal in the eyes of the law," he posted.

The comments of international observers ranged from admiration to the occasional bizarre idea.

"Iceland, you are truly a BIG small country! You bring hope to the hearts of people who are gathering on the squares and streets of Europe these days," said Greek university student Charalampos Krekoukiotis, while others from abroad suggested Iceland "kill all capitalists" or "legalise marijuana."

"It is messy. It is completely messy," Bergmann said of ploughing through the public's comments.

"But take your average legislation in your average parliament in your average country," he said. "That's messy as well."

Parliament's speaker Asta Ragnheidur Johannesdottir said the draft would be examined by a parliamentary committee starting October 1.

"I'm grateful for your work," she told the members. "It is my hope, that in time, Icelanders won't only have a constitution that they accept, but one which they are proud of," she added.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Japan denies censorship over nuclear crisis (AFP)

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Internet News
Japan denies censorship over nuclear crisis (AFP)
Jul 29th 2011, 18:09

TOKYO (AFP) – Japan on Friday denied that a government project to monitor online news reports and Twitter posts about the Fukushima nuclear crisis was an attempt to censor negative information and views.

Some Western online reports have charged that Japan had passed a law with the intent of "cleansing" the Internet of negative reports and commentary about the accident at the tsunami-hit Fukushima Daiichi atomic plant.

Chikako Ogami, a spokeswoman at the energy agency of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), told AFP: "Our government will never censor information at all. These are erroneous news reports."

Ogami said the agency had set aside funds in the nation's disaster reconstruction budget for a project to monitor "inaccurate" online information that may lead to harmful rumours against residents of Fukushima.

"But we will never ask Internet providers or web masters to delete such information or pin down the senders," Ogami said. "We will simply explain our thoughts on our own website and our own Twitter account."

The controversy was triggered when METI's Agency for Natural Resources and Energy earlier this month opened a call for bids for its so-called Nuclear Power Safety Regulation Publicity Project.

The bid said the agency needed a contractor "to monitor blogs on nuclear power and radiation issues as well as Twitter accounts around the clock".

The contractor would be asked to "conduct research and analysis on incorrect and inappropriate information that would lead to false rumours and to report such Internet accounts to the agency", it said.

The contractor would then "publish correct information in question-and-answer format on the agency's website and Twitter account, after consulting with experts and engineers if necessary", said the call for tenders.

Asatsu DK, a major Japanese advertising company, won the contract for 70 million yen ($897,000) which expires at the end of March 2012.

The Fukushima Daiichi plant was hit by nuclear meltdowns and explosions after it was damaged by a powerful quake and tsunami on March 11, and it has since continued to release radiation into the air, soil and sea.

The disaster has forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of people and led to bans on farm produce, including some vegetables, mushrooms, dairy products and most recently beef after cattle ate contaminated straw.

The crisis has hit the local farm and fisheries sectors hard.

Many residents in Fukushima prefecture have reported facing painful discrimination and harmful rumours, such as claims that they spread radioactivity when they travel outside their home region.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Google buys IBM patents to beef up portfolio (AFP)

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Internet News
Google buys IBM patents to beef up portfolio (AFP)
Jul 29th 2011, 19:05

NEW YORK (AFP) – Google has bought more than 1,000 technology patents from IBM as the Internet giant seeks to build up its portfolio and head off potential intellectual property suits.

"Like many tech companies, at times we'll acquire patents that are relevant to our business needs," a Google spokesman said in a statement Friday. "Bad software patent litigation is a wasteful war that no one will win."

The Google spokesman declined to comment on the financial details of the transaction. IBM declined comment.

According to the blog SEO by the Sea, Google recorded with US authorities in mid-July that it had been assigned 1,030 patents from IBM on a range of topics, "from the fabrication and architecture of memory and microprocessing chips, to other areas of computer architecture, including servers and routers."

Google recently lost out on an auction for some 6,000 patents held by bankrupt Canadian firm Nortel. The winning $4.5 billion bid came from a consortium consisting of Apple, EMC, Ericsson, Microsoft, Research in Motion and Sony.

The huge sum spent on the patents and the involvement of many of the world's top tech companies reflected the fierce battle for intellectual property in the tech industry, where firms are often hit with patent-infringement lawsuits.

Google is currently being sued by software giant Oracle over technology used in its Android smartphone operating system.

The threat of more such lawsuits spurred Google to make its $900 billion bid to buy the patent portfolio of Nortel, a once-pioneering developer of wireless and fiber-optic technology.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Hulu accused of infringing program guide patent (Reuters)

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Internet News
Hulu accused of infringing program guide patent (Reuters)
Jul 29th 2011, 16:28

WILMINGTON, Delaware (Reuters) – Rovi Corp sued Hulu, accusing the online video site of infringing patents that cover electronic program guides.

Rovi, created from Macrovision Corp's acquisition of Gemstar-TV Guide International Inc in 2008, provides technology that powers the streaming services provided by Blockbuster On Demand and Best Buy Co Inc's CinemaNow, according to the complaint, filed on Friday .

Rovi licenses its technology to Apple Corp, Microsoft Corp and Comcast Corp, among others, and said Hulu's infringement "presents significant and ongoing damages to Rovi's business."

Rovi said it is seeking compensation for lost license revenue and treble damages.

Hulu did not immediately reply to a request for a comment.

Hulu has been put up for sale by its owners, which include Walt Disney Co, News Corp, Comcast Corp's NBC Universal and Providence Equity Partners.

A dozen potential buyers have entered preliminary sale talks, including Google Inc and Microsoft, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.

The case is Rovi Corp et al v Hulu LLC, U.S. District Court, District of Delaware, No. 11-00665

(Reporting by Tom Hals; additional reporting by Paul Thomasch in New York; editing by John Wallace)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Google buys IBM patents to defend Java use, updates Gmail for Android (Appolicious)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Google buys IBM patents to defend Java use, updates Gmail for Android (Appolicious)
Jul 29th 2011, 13:30

Google buys IBM patents to defend Java use, updates Gmail for Android

Posted July 29, 2011 8:30am by Kristen Nicole Tags: Google, Java, ibm, google mail

Google is facing at least six lawsuits regarding its use of Java source code behind its Android OS, and while it faces Oracle in court, the search engine behemoth is bulking up its patent portfolio. So when a batch of patents from IBM became available, Google snapped them up. The deal came weeks after Google lost out on the Nortel patents, as its rivals came together to outbid Google's efforts to add more patents to their books. It has been an uphill battle for Google, as recently uncovered emails implicate the search engine giant as knowingly taking a risk in utilizing Java code without a licensing deal.

Battles on the OS & device fronts

But even as Google seeks shelter from the barrage of infringement suits, the mobile operating system industry is facing more competitors. This week alone saw developments from three major players, two of which are brand new to the mobile OS game. Microsoft's newest Windows Phone Mango brings their mobile OS up to speed, matching many of the features found on Android and iOS. Mozilla is looking to further open mobile OS standards with plans to build its own platform, while international competition comes from Alibaba, which launched a cloud-based mobile OS called AliCloud.

And while the platform sector begins to really heat up, manufacturers face their own battles, especially in the tablet market. Samsung is rightly boastful of its smartphone and tablet sales worldwide, a feat validated by the latest Nielsen report. But their success has come at the expense of Motorola, which has seen a decline in Xoom tablet sales and earnings estimates. Competition is getting serious on a global scale, as Dell is reportedly expanding its Android tablet lineup to include a 10-inch device, to be first released in China. Acer is also gearing up for an Android tablet launch, setting an August release date for the Iconia Tab A100.

Gmail mobile closer to web experience

So things are looking up for Android overall, with steady support from manufacturers and consumers. Google continues to improve its own native apps for its mobile OS, with some major updates to Gmail. Version 2.3.5 has a few practical improvements that bring it closer to the web experience, including the option to remember "show pictures" for individual senders, and the option to download attachments, whereas only preview options were available before. Gmail for Android will also save bandwidth and battery by only syncing priority mail, and you can now use label notifications to mash up filters, labels and ringtones.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Video creators look for bigger audiences at VidCon (AP)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Video creators look for bigger audiences at VidCon (AP)
Jul 29th 2011, 13:38

LOS ANGELES – At a weekend conference for online video, one might expect cute puppies or unlucky skateboarders to be in attendance. Perhaps a "Twilight" cast member or Rebecca Black would be there?

Yet none of the above is present, though one panel — "I Got This, You Got This, Now You Know It" — is named after a lyric from Black's viral music video sensation "Friday."

The attendees at the second annual VidCon, which runs through Sunday at a Century City hotel, are decidedly more aspirational than accidental. They are sketch comedians, musicians, make-up artists, animators, acrobats and other creative-types seeking to build their online followings and meet like-minded online video creators.

More than 2,400 attendees are expected to attend — and record — sessions on such topics as how to create special effects on the cheap and how to juggle a job and passion for crafting online video. Online video luminaries like "Annoying Orange" creator Dane Boedigheimer and singing sensation Jimmy Wong will be among the speakers.

"YouTube really is a cult of personalities," said Ben Relles, the mastermind behind the "Obama Girl" viral video who now works at YouTube developing online video talent. "As you'll see this weekend, people who have big-time personalities and are able to rally fanbases around them tend to do really well on the platform. It's a really social platform."

During a Thursday panel about growing audiences, Relles advised creators to be consistent, trim what's unnecessary and pay attention to the first 15 seconds of their videos. He said the algorithm that YouTube uses to promote videos measures how long viewers actually watch them. If watchers don't make it past the first 20 seconds, it's as if they didn't click on it.

In recent years, thousands of amateurs have gone pro on YouTube, transforming their part-time hobbies into full-fledged careers by becoming one of the Google Inc.-owned company's "partners," a group of uploaders with whom YouTube shares advertising revenue. Despite the popularity of online video, many creators still want mainstream success.

Ryan Pino, a 21-year-old college student from Long Beach, Calif., who posts videos of himself playing and teaching guitar on the "pinoguy321" channel, came to VidCon looking to meet future collaborators. His goal with his YouTube channel is to reach 100,000 subscribers. He currently has just over 5,000 followers. Ultimately, he wants to sell his own tunes.

"YouTube is great, but it's definitely not the endgame," said Pino. "The endgame is playing shows and touring."

Rhett McLaughlin and Link Neal, pioneers of the online video realm with a series of silly creations, crossed over from YouTube to IFC this year with "Rhett & Link: Commercial Kings," a half-hour series documenting the duo as they produce over-the-top local commercials. Neal doesn't think of online videomaking as just another way to break into Hollywood.

"We want to have a hand in all genres," said Neal, "even writing books."

With the proliferation of online video beyond computers on devices like smartphones and TVs, attendees of the sold-out conference — including organizers John and Hank Green, known online as the Vlogbrothers — think there's room for growth, including for VidCon itself.

While it's not quite another Comic-Con just yet, next year's VidCon is expanding from a modest hotel to a larger venue: the Anaheim Convention Center.

___

Derrik J. Lang can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/derrikjlang/.

___

Online:

http://www.vidcon.com/

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Alibaba, Yahoo, Softbank reach pact over Alipay (Reuters)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Alibaba, Yahoo, Softbank reach pact over Alipay (Reuters)
Jul 29th 2011, 13:31

NEW YORK (Reuters) – China's Alibaba Group said it has reached an agreement with Softbank Corp and Yahoo Inc that promises Alibaba could receive up to $6 billion from an initial public offering or liquidation of its e-payment unit, Alipay.

The agreement between the three parties capped months of intense negotiations sparked by a highly public spat over the transfer of Alipay to a company wholly owned by Alibaba founder Jack Ma, a move that Yahoo claimed it was not aware of.

Under the terms of the deal, Alibaba Group will receive no less than $2 billion and no more than $6 billion in proceeds from an initial public offering of Alipay or other "liquidity event."

Alipay is an Alibaba subsidiary that was transferred to a separate entity controlled by Ma in order to meet Chinese regulations relating to foreign ownership.

Yahoo owns 43 percent of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group, which it acquired for $1 billion in 2005. The relationship between the two companies has grown strained since Carol Bartz took the CEO reins at Yahoo two years ago.

Yahoo's stake in Alibaba and its 35 percent ownership in Yahoo Japan are considered the U.S. Internet company's most valuable assets. Softbank holds a major stake in Alibaba and also 42 percent of Yahoo Japan.

At least one analyst said Friday's deal will benefit all parties.

"The key thing here is that they got the deal done," said BGC Financial analyst Colin Gillis.

Gillis added that while the deal will protect Yahoo's interest by ensuring that the Alibaba group receives money from Alipay, Yahoo still needs to find a way to make money off its Asian assets to benefit its shareholders.

"All that's happening is that this money is flowing to the Alibaba group. It doesn't fix the issue of how Yahoo can take this paper holding in Alibaba Group and turn it into cash on its balance sheet," Gillis said.

Yahoo shares rose 5.4 percent to $14.15 in premarket trading.

Shares in Alibaba.com, the listed unit of Alibaba, fell 0.9 percent in Hong Kong.

(Reporting by Melanie Lee in Shanghai and Liana Baker in New York, Writing by Franklin Paul in New York; Editing by Derek Caney, Dave Zimmerman)

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Yahoo, Alibaba, Softbank come to agreement (AP)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Yahoo, Alibaba, Softbank come to agreement (AP)
Jul 29th 2011, 12:30

NEW YORK – Yahoo, Japan's Softbank and the Chinese Internet company Alibaba Group have agreed on a compensation plan involving the Web payment service Alipay.

Yahoo holds a 43 percent stake in Alibaba. In May, Yahoo shocked investors with news that Alibaba had spun off Alipay in March without giving the Internet company anything in return.

Under the new agreement, Yahoo Inc., Softbank Corp. and Alibaba said that Alibaba will continue to participate in Alipay's future financial performance. Alibaba will get at least $2 billion and up to $6 billion upon a possible IPO or sale of Alipay.

Alipay says it is China's biggest third-party online payment platform.

Yahoo shares are up almost 7 percent in premarket trading.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Yahoo! settles Alipay dispute with Chinese partner (AFP)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Yahoo! settles Alipay dispute with Chinese partner (AFP)
Jul 29th 2011, 12:17

NEW YORK (AFP) – US Internet firm Yahoo! and Japan's SoftBank said Friday they had reached agreement with their Chinese partners at Alibaba Group in a dispute over online payments platform Alipay.

Alibaba Group -- which is 43 percent owned by Yahoo! -- "will continue to participate in Alipay's future financial performance, including a future IPO or other liquidity event," the companies said in a joint statement.

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Yahoo! News: Internet News: Google+ Gets a Feature Update Center (Mashable)

Yahoo! News: Internet News
Internet News
Google+ Gets a Feature Update Center (Mashable)
Jul 28th 2011, 21:10

In response to user feedback, Google has launched a new section of the Google+ center dedicated to Google+ feature updates. The "What's new in Google+" section is essentially a list of release notes for the Google+ Project. The updates are smaller than Google's traditional blog posts, but longer than most of its Help Center pages. It's a centralized location for finding out what new features Google has added to its social network.

[More from Mashable: 10 Tips for Better Startup Marketing]

Most of the "posts" include YouTube video explanations about the feature updates (recorded by Googlers), along with a link to the Google+ post where the feature was announced. The search giant is clearly trying to eat its own dog food when it comes to Google+.

While we appreciate the centralized location for getting updates about Google+ features, we believe the company would be better served setting up a blog for the Google+ project and updating that on a regular basis. At least that way we could subscribe to the updates in our Google Readers (which still counts as the big G eating its own dog food).

[More from Mashable: Google+ One Month Later: What's Next?]

Check out the video explanation of the "What's new in Google+" section from Google+ Community Manager Natalie Villalobos below:

This story originally published on Mashable here.

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