Top Items:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Yahoo Implements OpenID; Massive Win For The Project — The rumor last week was that Google (as well as Verisign and IBM) were mulling over the idea of joining the OpenID 2.0 single sign-on framework. But the real news comes today, as Yahoo and its roughly 250 million user IDs officially jump on the bandwagon.
Discussion:
Zero Day, Google Watch, Search Engine Journal, InfoWorld, Search Engine Land, paidContent.org, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, BetaNews, CyberNet, Compiler, TECH.BLORGE.com, Basement.org, 901am, unstruc chitchatting …, WebProBlog, Mark Evans, WeBreakStuff, Signal vs. Noise and The Progress Bar
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Caroline McCarthy / CNET News.com:
Yahoo throws weight behind OpenID standard — In one of the most significant moves yet in the growing push toward service interoperability on the Web, tech giant Yahoo announced Thursday that it is supporting the OpenID 2.0 standard for a universal Internet log-in.
Larry Dignan / Between the Lines:
Yahoo puts its heft behind OpenID 2.0 — Yahoo said Tuesday that it plans to support the OpenID 2.0 single sign-on framework and bring its 248 million users to the Web's interoperability party. — When it comes to frameworks like OpenID my eyes typically glaze over. Why?
Discussion:
Furrier.org
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Yahoo! to Provide OpenID - Will It Take the Next Step? — Yahoo! announced this morning that the company will authenticate the identities of its 248 million users if they chose to login to OpenID supporting sites with their Yahoo! ID. — Like the AOL announcement of roughly the same thing …
Associated Press:
Time Warner links web prices with usage — Time Warner links web prices with usage — NEW YORK - Time Warner Cable will experiment with a new pricing structure for high-speed Internet access later this year, charging customers based on how much data they download, a company spokesman said Wednesday.
Discussion:
Mashable!
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Yinka Adegoke / Reuters:
Time Warner to test Internet billing based on usage
Time Warner to test Internet billing based on usage
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider, The Tech Report, TechBlog, DSLreports and The Technology Liberation …
Cyndy Aleo-Carreira / Profy.Com:
Time Warner to Test Tiered Pricing... By Bandwidth
Time Warner to Test Tiered Pricing... By Bandwidth
Discussion:
TECH.BLORGE.com
Tim Wu / Slate:
Has AT&T Lost Its Mind? — A BAFFLING PROPOSAL TO FILTER THE INTERNET. — Chances are that as you read this article, it is passing over part of AT&T's network. That matters, because last week AT&T announced that it is seriously considering plans to examine all the traffic it carries …
Discussion:
IP Democracy, mathewingram.com/work, DSLreports, p2pnet, Boing Boing Gadgets, Silicon Alley Insider and Slashdot
RELATED:
David A. Utter / WebProNews:
The Digg Reel Courts Viacom Anger — New video best-of show includes copyrighted works — Former TechLive lead anchor and co-founder of TheFempire.com, Jessica Corbin, opened The Digg Reel with a video of a cute bunny opening an envelope with its teeth. Aww.
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Wilson Rothman / Gizmodo:
TiVo Makes You Look Cultured By Bringing Jaman's Obscure Foreign and Indie Movies To Your DVR — TiVo today announced it would soon add Jaman Internet Movie Service to all Series2 and Series3 broadband-connected DVRs, giving users access to Sundance and international award winning movies …
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Eric Bangeman / Ars Technica:
Exonerated RIAA defendant scores double victory in court — A US District Court judge in Oregon has reaffirmed a magistrate's award of attorneys' fees and the dismissal of exonerated RIAA defendant Tanya Andersen's counterclaims against the RIAA without prejudice so that her class-action lawsuit …
Brian Jones / Open XML Formats:
Mapping documents in the binary format (.doc; .xls; .ppt) to the Open XML format — I wanted to call everyone's attention to a few interesting developments in Ecma's proposed disposition document related to the Office binary formats. There were a few comments from national bodies that asked …
Stefanie Olsen / CNET News.com:
Twitter, Facebook called on for higher purpose — Google.org's technology project to help save lives in the event of natural disasters or public health threats is set to launch Thursday. — The project, called Innovative Support to Emergencies, Diseases and Disaster (InSTEDD) …
Discussion:
The Social Times, Confessions of a Non-Profit …, Search Engine Roundtable and All Points Blog
Mike Masnick / Techdirt:
Is It Time To Redefine Fair Use? — from the outdated-concepts-that-need- refreshing dept — We've covered the first and second parts of the NY Times “debate” over copyright issues between Rick Cotton and Tim Wu. In both of those, we focused on Cotton's assertions, which were understandable given …
Matt Buchanan / Gizmodo:
All-You-Can-Eat Broadband Is Dead: Time Warner to Charge by the Byte — Reason number 149 I won't move to Texas: Time Warner confirmed it'll be testing a new pricing plan in Beaumont that's based on how much bandwidth you eat up. That's right, hard caps. Totally made-up example …
Discussion:
Electronista
Christina Warren / The Unofficial Apple Weblog:
Will iTunes rentals play on a 5G iPod? Nope. — The long-rumored iTunes rental service is finally up and running. For many users, the most attractive part of the service (and certainly the only part that really sets it apart from any of the other online rental options) …
Brian Lam / Gizmodo:
Interview: Sony's Thoughts On the MacBook Air — During the Keynote, Jobs compared the Macbook Air to Sony's TZ ultraportable, implying it had a small keyboard and screen, was too thick, and was not that good. Here's what Sony thinks of the Apple MacBook Air: