Top Items:
Think Secret:
Apple, Think Secret settle lawsuit — PRESS RELEASE: Apple and Think Secret have settled their lawsuit, reaching an agreement that results in a positive solution for both sides. As part of the confidential settlement, no sources were revealed and Think Secret will no longer be published.
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, Today @ PC World, Epicenter, IP Democracy, Insider Chatter, rexblog.com, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Cult of Mac, MacUser, The Mac Observer, CrunchGear, Digital Trends, Practical Blogging, Between the Lines, TechBlog, p2pnet, Technovia, MacMegasite, Gadget Lab, Apple Gazette, WebProNews, Boing Boing Gadgets, jkOnTheRun, Mashable!, Guardian Unlimited, Dan Blank, The Last Podcast, Life On the Wicked Stage, Macsimum News, The Unofficial Apple Weblog, ParisLemon and Digg
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Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
Apple Forces Rumors Site To Shut Down — For a few years now, there's been a legal battle going on between Apple and Think Secret, a very popular Apple rumors site for publishing certain rumors. The lawsuit had many people up in arms, as they pointed out that Think Secret should be protected …
Duncan Riley / TechCrunch:
Oh My God! Apple Killed Think Secret! Those Bastards! — Apple and Apple blog Think Secret have settled their long running legal dispute over leaked Apple secrets, and under the deal Think Secret will cease operation. — According to a statement from ThinkSecret (via CrunchGear)
Discussion:
Profy.Com
Mathew / mathewingram.com/work:
Think Secret: Damn you, Steve Jobs — The Apple rumour site Think Secret has posted a note saying that it has reached a settlement with Apple over the lawsuit the computer company filed against it for leaking company secrets, and that it is “a positive solution for both sides.”
Discussion:
Smalltalk Tidbits …
Federal Trade Commission:
Federal Trade Commission Closes Google/DoubleClick Investigation — Proposed Acquisition “Unlikely to Substantially Lessen Competition" — The Federal Trade Commission today announced that it will not seek to block Google Inc.'s proposed $3.1 billion acquisition of Internet advertising …
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Adam Kovacevich / Google:
Federal Trade Commission Clears Google's Acquisition of DoubleClick — Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) today welcomed the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's clearance of its planned acquisition of DoubleClick Inc., a premier provider of display ad serving technology and services.
Discussion:
Search Engine Watch Blog, paidContent.org, GigaOM, Screenwerk, CNET News.com and Online Marketing Blog
Greg Sterling / Search Engine Land:
FTC's Xmas Gift To Google: Approval Of DoubleClick Acquisition — The US Federal Trade Commission has granted its approval for Google to purchase DoubleClick. Google has a press release up with the news, and the FTC announcement is here. — The many parties have raised privacy issues with the deal …
Discussion:
Electronista, Tech Check with Jim Goldman, VentureBeat, Google Watch, Techland and PC World
PC World:
Intel Capital Invests in Online Storage (PC World) — Intel Capital Invests in Online Storage — Intel's venture-capital arm has invested in Nirvanix, a San Diego start-up company that offers a scalable online storage service. — Yahoo, America Movil partner on mobile Web search
Discussion:
WebProNews
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David Chartier / Infinite Loop:
Making sense of sharing video with iPod and iPhone — As the iPod evolved, so did its features for sharing pictures and video out via various ports. With the introduction of the iPhone and iPod touch this year, Apple upped the ante with new capabilities, some requiring new accessories.
Discussion:
PC World
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Stefan Constantinescu / IntoMobile:
7 pictures of the Nokia N96 leak! This isn't a render folks, this is real hardware — All 7 images can be found on my Flickr account here, the images came from Mobile Review. Immediate thoughts are it looks like an N81, but even larger. No specifications are known, but people say it is an N95 in a new shell.
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Barry Schwartz / Search Engine Land:
Google, Yahoo & Microsoft To Pay $31.5M For Illegal Gambling Ads — Microsoft, Google, Yahoo to Pay $31.5M Over Illegal Gambling Ads from ABC News reports the big three search engine companies settled with the US Justice Department to pay $31.5 million to educate that online gambling is illegal in the United States.
Discussion:
Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim
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BBC:
BitTorrent search site loses case — A website which facilitated the online exchange of films, music and TV programmes without permission has lost a US copyright case. — TorrentSpy was taken to court by the Motion Picture Association of America. — A judge made a default ruling in favour …
Michael Krigsman / IT Project Failures:
Twitter is dangerous — Twitter is rapidly becoming a serious threat to corporate information protection. The program's great strength — many-to-many messaging — becomes its great weakness in this context. — Imagine this scenario: 20 people are in a confidential meeting, one of them using Twitter.
Discussion:
WebProNews, Practical Blogging, Search Marketing Gurus, Hightouch, Dembot and The Yourdon Report
Business Wire:
ESPN Acquires SchoolSports Inc. - Publisher of RISE Magazine — NEW YORK—(BUSINESS WIRE)—ESPN announced it has reached an agreement to acquire SchoolSports Inc., a leading high school-focused sports and lifestyle media company. SchoolSports reaches teen athletes and fans through RISE …
Andrew Orlowski / The Register:
Digital music: Go legal, get screwed — The Big Four record labels want us to think that the sound recording business is a reformed character these days. Recently, we've heard ritualistic self-flagellations from a succession of top executives. There was Ed Bronfman at Warner's, prostrating himself in front of Apple.
Bill Ray / The Register:
N95 struggles to find itself — The latest firmware for the Nokia N95 offers many new features and much better memory management, and is free to download - but it also takes away the tracking feature from Nokia Maps, which the company now claims was a limited-time promotional offer.
Chris O'Brien / The Docu-Drama Blog:
Some warm fuzzies for NetSuite's IPO... Larry Ellison's NetSuite (ticker:N) went public today. Read our story here. And read NetSuite's SEC filing here. The company had bumped up its offering price to $26 per share from an initial target range of $13-$16.
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider