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7:00 PM ET, November 22, 2007

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
Nick / Rough Type:
Is the social graph Web 3.0?  —  Well, it looks like there'll be no escaping the "social graph" term.  World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee, in a blog post last evening, not only bestowed his blessing on the social graph but elevated it to the capitalized Social Graph, a sign that we have a New Paradigm on our hands.
RELATED:
Timbl / Decentralized Information Group …:
Giant Global Graph  —  Well, it has been a long time since the last blog.  So many topics, so little time.  Some talks, a couple of Design Issues articles, but no blog.  To dissipate the worry of expectation of quality, I resolve to lower the bar.  More about what I had for breakfast.
Dan Farber / Between the Lines:
Tim Berners-Lee: From World Wide Web to Giant Global Graph  —  On this Thanksgiving morning in the U.S., the Facebook Beacon storm continues to rage (Techmeme).  It's simply growing pains for the social graph.  In fact, the social graph (which Mark Zuckerberg defines as the network …
Discussion: Mashable! and Read/WriteWeb
Phil Windley / Between the Lines:
The fine line between advertising and recommendations  —  Facebook Beacon has the 'Net riled up over what many see as an invasion of their privacy.  A Wall Street Journal article gives a good description of how the opt-out process works: … The problem seems to be that like everything else on Facebook …
Dan Ackerman Greenberg / TechCrunch:
The Secret Strategies Behind Many "Viral" Videos  —  This guest post was written by Dan Ackerman Greenberg, co-founder of viral video marketing company The Comotion Group and lead TA for the Stanford Facebook Class.  Dan will graduate from the Stanford Management Science & Engineering Masters program in June.
Barry Schwartz / Search Engine Roundtable:
Thanksgiving 2007 from Google, Yahoo, Ask.com, Dogpile & The Search Industry  —  Today is one of my most favorite holidays, Thanksgiving!  This will probably be our only post today, but I wanted to share the logos and search forum threads from around the search industry.
RELATED:
Alice Miles / Times of London:
The Word is out: Microsoft will face online fight on core software  —  The co-founder of Hotmail, the web-based e-mail service bought by Microsoft for $400 million a decade ago, is challenging the American software giant's core $20 billion (£9.7 billion) office desktop business.
Discussion: Slashdot
Mike Butcher / TechCrunch UK:
Rumour: News Corp to buy LinkedIn  —  [Get the RSS feed or see right for the newsletter.  Digg this story.  Got a story?  Get in touch]  —  An unconfirmed rumour has reached me via a reliable source that LinkedIn is in talks with media giant News Corporation over a possible buyout in January 2008.
Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Microsoft: XP contains random number generator bug  —  Microsoft admits recently discovered Windows 2000 flaw exists in XP too  —  Windows XP, Microsoft's most popular operating system, sports the same encryption flaws that Israeli researchers recently disclosed in Windows 2000, Microsoft officials confirmed late Tuesday.
Discussion: Slashdot
RELATED:
Computerworld:
Microsoft confirms that XP contains random number generator bug
Discussion: Neowin.net and WinBeta
Terry Heaton / Terry Heaton's PoMo Blog:
THE INCOMPARABLE UMAIR HAQUE  —  I've sung the praises of London Business School grad and new media economist Umair Haque here before.  The guy is on a serious roll lately, and I thought a few little snippets of his recent thinking might open eyes to the economics of the media disruption.
Esquire:
Six Ideas That Will Change the World  —  They are making orange peel plastic and robots that can heal themselves.  They are six researchers with six ideas that will one day change the world.  —  Breaking Down the Firewall  —  Internet censorship is the book burning of the modern age …
Discussion: Forever Geek and Digg
David Pogue / New York Times:
An E-Book Reader That Just May Catch On  —  You've got to have a lot of nerve to introduce an electronic book reader in 2007.  —  Sure, the idea has appeal: an e-reader lets you carry hundreds of books, search or jump to any spot in the text and bump up the type size when your eyes get tired.
RELATED:
Danny Bradbury / Guardian:   Can Amazon's Kindle e-book wean us off paper?
Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
Six things to be thankful for in technology, 2007  —  Today is Thanksgiving in the US.  Typically, that means gathering with friends and loved ones, eating prodigious amounts of turkey, mashed potatoes, and stuffing, and watching the Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys play football.
Anne Zelenka / GigaOM:
Giving Thanks for...Facebook?  —  In this season of giving thanks, Netizens feel grateful for the sense of connectedness and reconnectedness brought by online social networks.  The big news, after all, isn't that our Facebook profiles will soon turn into virtual Tupperware parties but rather that we can use them to stay in touch.
Discussion: All Facebook and Tech~Surf~Blog
 
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 More Items: 
Dion Almaer / Ajaxian:
Wikipedia Offline with GearsMonkey
Associated Press:
LEDs will light up Rockefeller Christmas tree
Discussion: geeksugar, Engadget and Gizmodo
Eric Pfanner / New York Times:
Data Leak in Britain Affects 25 Million
Royal Pingdom:
Microsoft's social network clocking the most downtime
Times of India:
Sony to introduce Playstation phone
 Earlier Items: 
Mario Sundar / Marketing Nirvana:
Facebook Beacon lights a firestorm in a teacup?
Philipp Lenssen / Google Blogoscoped:
Google Replaces Video Link with Products Link
Discussion: Mashable!
Katie Marsal / AppleInsider:
Apple on track to sell 25 million iPods this quarter
Jennifer Steinhauer / New York Times:
YouTube, MySpace and California's D.M.V.
Discussion: Mashable!
 

 
From Mediagazer:

A.G. Sulzberger / New York Times:
A.G. Sulzberger says the role of a free press is under attack, and that the anti-press playbook used in eroding democracies is now being deployed in the US

Benjamin Mullin / New York Times:
CEO Mark Thompson tells employees that CNN plans to launch a streaming service in the fall; cable subscribers will have free access to the service

Alex Sherman / CNBC:
ESPN's forthcoming standalone streaming service will cost $30 per month, or $36 per month in a bundle with Disney+'s and Hulu's ad-supported tiers

 
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