Top Items:
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Apple iPhone ad banned by Advertising Standards Authority over misleading internet claims — A TV ad for Apple's iPhone has been banned by the UK's advertising watchdog for misleading consumers after it over-hyped the internet capabilities of the smart phone.
RELATED:
asa.org.uk:
Number of complaints: 2 — Media: — Sector: — Computers and telecommunications — Agency: — TBWA London — Ad — A TV ad, for the iPhone, showed the phone in someone's hand and a finger switching it on to reveal the menu page. The finger touched the weather icon showing …
Discussion:
CNET News - Apple, Valleywag, Gadget Lab, Tim Anderson's ITWriting, iTWire and VentureBeat
BBC:
iPhone ad rapped as ‘misleading’
iPhone ad rapped as ‘misleading’
Discussion:
Apple 2.0, Simon's Blog, mocoNews.net, TUAW, Boing Boing Gadgets, Gizmodo, iLounge and MobileBurn.com
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Apple bans a comic book, firestorm ensues — Murderdrome is not Ulysses, Lolita or Lady Chatterley's Lover. It's a dark, bloody comic strip marked by the type of over-the-top violence that has made its genre so popular among young readers with a lot of pent-up rage.
RELATED:
Aza Raskin / Mozilla Labs:
Introducing Ubiquity — An experiment into connecting the Web with language. — It Doesn't Have to be This Way — You're writing an email to invite a friend to meet at a local San Francisco restaurant that neither of you has been to. You'd like to include a map.
Discussion:
Technologizer, Why does everything suck?, Between the Lines, Mark Evans, Portfolio.com, 43 Folders, Macworld, Lifehacker, Scobleizer, Aza's Thoughts, Ajaxian, InformationWeek, TechCrunch, Webreakstuff, mathewingram.com/work, GottaBeMobile, Mozilla Links, CNET News.com, BetaNews, TECH.BLORGE.com, VentureBeat, webmonkey, eWeek, Social Media, Mashable! and How To Split An Atom
RELATED:
Rafe Needleman / Webware.com:
Mozilla Ubiquity, Microsoft IE8, and the fracturing of Web pages
Mozilla Ubiquity, Microsoft IE8, and the fracturing of Web pages
Discussion:
ben barren
Peter Lattman / Wall Street Journal:
A Photobucket Bonanza, for Insiders — A Web-Site Bet Was Lucrative For Venture Firm, but Not Its Investors — When the photo-sharing Web site Photobucket.com was acquired last year for about $300 million, executives at New York-based venture-capital firm Insight Venture Partners made a small fortune.
Discussion:
Valleywag
RELATED:
Peter Kafka / Silicon Alley Insider:
Who Hates Photobucket Investors Insight Venture Partners? — The WSJ's Peter Lattman spends several hundred words today exploring the behind-the-scenes story at Photobucket and Insight Venture Partners, the primary investor in the photo-sharing site prior to its 2007 sale to News Corp. The gist …
Discussion:
CNET News.com
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
Huge iPhone Security Flaw Puts All Private Information at Risk — There's a huge security problem in the latest iPhone 2.0.2: if you have your JesusPhone password protected, using a very simple trick gives anyone full access to your cellphone private information in Mail, SMS, Contacts, and even Safari.
RELATED:
Bill Ray / The Register:
iPhone passwords not worth the paper they're written on — iPhones protected by a password aren't actually protected at all, as just by pressing a few keys a miscreant can access all the phone's functions without needing the password at all. — The trick, reported by MacRumours …
Discussion:
Zero Day
Chase Jarvis Blog:
Chase Jarvis RAW: Advance Testing the Nikon D90 — Woot! Today I get to be among the very first to share with you the planet's newest camera: the much-anticipated Nikon D90. You may have been attuned to all the recent leaks, buzz and rumors of a new Nikon camera coming soon, but I can assure you, this here ain't no rumor.
Discussion:
CrunchGear, 1001 Noisy Cameras, Thomas Hawk's Digital …, Gizmodo, Engadget, Imaging Insider and Photography Bay
RELATED:
BBC:
Computer viruses make it to orbit — A computer virus is alive and well on the International Space Station (ISS). — Nasa has confirmed that laptops carried to the ISS in July were infected with a virus known as Gammima.AG. — The worm was first detected on earth in August 2007 and lurks …
Om Malik / GigaOM:
Why Cisco Bought Mail Startup PostPath for $215 Million — In order to fight its ongoing battle against Microsoft & Google on the whole issue of “collaboration”, Cisco today added yet another weapon to its arsenal. — The San Jose-based company today announced that is buying PostPath …
Discussion:
Techland
RELATED:
Liz Gannes / NewTeeVee:
lonelygirl15's Second Incarnation: The Resistance — There may never be another lonelygirl15, especially given its origin as a hoax and as one of the first experiments in what episodic web content could be. But now that it's finally over, more than 500 episodes later …
RELATED:
Jon Healey / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
RIAA nears win (by default) in Atlantic vs. Howell — So much for that one. A federal judge in Arizona has all but dispensed with an intriguing legal battle between the Recording Industry Assn. of America and an accused music infringer, ruling that the defendant acted in bad faith by destroying evidence …
RELATED:
Kim Zetter / Threat Level:
Revealed: The Internet's Biggest Security Hole — Two security researchers have demonstrated a new technique to stealthily intercept internet traffic on a scale previously presumed to be unavailable to anyone outside of intelligence agencies like the National Security Agency.
Entertainment Weekly / Wall Street Journal:
TiVo Enters Partnership to Expand Reach — Deal Will Allow Users To Record Shows Picked — TiVo Inc. hopes to make it easier for consumers to record top television shows by taping recommendations from Entertainment Weekly magazine. — The Silicon Valley company on Wednesday plans …
Kelly Fiveash / The Register:
Microsoft dishes dirt on IE8 ‘pr0n mode’ — Microsoft has outlined the new privacy tools available in its forthcoming browser Internet Explorer 8 (IE8). — Earlier this week the company's program manager Andy Zeigler confirmed rumours from last week that Microsoft would include …