Top Items:
Amy Schatz / Wall Street Journal:
FCC Head Pushes Free Web Plan — Outgoing Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin is pushing for action in December on a plan to offer free, pornography-free wireless Internet service to all Americans, despite objections from the wireless industry and some consumer groups.
Stuart Cohen / Business Week:
Open Source: The Model Is Broken — The open-source business model that relies solely on support and service revenue streams is failing to meet the expectations of investors — For anyone who hasn't been paying attention to the software industry lately, I have some bad news.
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
Huffington Post Nabs $25 Million in Funding-Here's a BoomTown Interview With Oak Investment's Fred Harman — The Huffington Post will announce this morning that it has raised $25 million, in a single investment from Oak Investment Partners. — The large round by Oak, which was led by Palo Alto …
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Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
The End Of Online Anonymity — It seems we're approaching a new age here on the Internet. Instead being anonymous, faceless IP addresses, social computing and changing technologies have allowed the lines between the “real” world and the “virtual” world to blur.
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broadstuff
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Chris Soghoian / CNET News:
MySpace ruling could lead to jail for lying online daters
MySpace ruling could lead to jail for lying online daters
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Homotron.net
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
The Simpsons mocks (m)Apple — Few have been spared the satire of Matt Groening's long running animated sitcom. Last night, The Simpsons took on Apple, or uh, Mapple for a full 6 minutes of lampoonery — a pretty harsh ride at a two-joke per minute pace. It all starts when the Springfield mall gets …
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VentureBeat, TechFlash, CNET News, Mashable!, Microsoft Pri0, Hardware 2.0, Apple 2.0, The iPhone Blog, Global Nerdy, TheNextWeb.com and techeblog.com
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Peter Kafka / MediaMemo:
The Simpsons Meet Steve Jobs, and Hulu Captures the Moment — Did you miss “The Simpsons” last night? Me too. Actually, the show's been off my radar for a long time, which means I wouldn't have seen last night's parody of Apple (AAPL) and Steve Jobs unless someone pointed it out to me.
Sinead Carew / Reuters:
Clearwire to use “Clear” brand instead of “Xohm” — NEW YORK (Reuters) - Clearwire Corp said on Monday that it would call its high-speed wireless WiMax service “Clear” instead of the “Xohm” brand its venture partner Sprint Nextel has been using. — The new name was announced after Clearwire closed …
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Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Nokia's touchiest week — We've arrived in Barcelona, Spain for Nokia World, a week where Nokia talks to its top customers. — When we got here a Nokia executive met me and bragged that the Internet has no clue what they will announce this week. I asked “what about the touch screen cell phone that I've seen rumors about?”
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Apple 2.0:
Mac Internet share hits record 8.87%; Windows drops below 90% — Apple's (AAPL) slice of the Internet pie grew measurably in November as both the Mac and the iPhone hit record numbers in a Net Applications Web survey issued overnight Monday. — At the same time, Microsoft's (MSFT) …
Andrew D. Smith / Dallas Morning News:
Blockbuster, Microsoft team up on mobile services — asmith@dallasnews.com — Blockbuster Inc. caught up to the competition last week by introducing a set-top box that brings rentals from the Internet to the television. — Now, the Dallas-based company hopes to pass the pack by teaming …
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Ryan Stewart / The Universal Desktop:
The widget conundrum — There's a pretty good article in Advertising Age about the benefits of widgets and the fact that not a lot of people are using it. AdAge says that “entire segment” will amount to around $100 million. That sounds like a chunk of money, and especially one for an industry …
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Bob Garfield / AdAge:
Widgets Are Made for Marketing, So Why Aren't More Advertisers Using Them?
Widgets Are Made for Marketing, So Why Aren't More Advertisers Using Them?
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Adrants
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
FCC leaks tiny VAIO with WWAN — Sony's first netbook? — They might not like it, but Sony looks ripe to enter the netbook market in the US. Unveiled today is the backside of this tiny “notebook PC” as described by the FCC under the model numbers PCG-1P1L and PCG-1P2L (PCG synonymous with Sony's VAIO laptop brand).
Richard Bennett / The Register:
Bittorrent declares war on VoIP, gamers — The next internet meltdown — Gamers, VoIP and video conference users beware. The leading BitTorrent software authors have declared war on you - and any users wanting to wring high performance out of their networks.
Fortune:
Now hiring in Silicon Valley — High-profile openings at Microsoft, Yahoo, and ... Google? — (Fortune Magazine) — Nature abhors a vacuum, but apparently not in Silicon Valley, where it may not be easy to fill some very prominent vacancies. Right now you've got Jerry Yang abdicating at Yahoo …
Dave Zatz / Zatz Not Funny!:
Blockbuster OnDemand Unboxing & Setup — So much for a day of vacation recovery... UPS just arrived with the new Blockbuster OnDemand movie rental box, by 2Wire. If you recall, $99 gets you the box and 25 video rental credits. Once those have been consumed, content begins at $1.99 a pop.
New York Times:
CNN Pitches a Cheaper Wire Service to Newspapers — CNN, in the afterglow of an election season of record ratings for cable news, is elbowing in on a new line of business: catering to financially strained newspapers looking for an alternative to The Associated Press.
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Epicenter, Beyond Search, Alley Insider, Recovering Journalist, paidContent.org, BuzzMachine, Romenesko, Lost Remote and Gawker
Stephen Shankland / CNET News:
Google reveals Chrome extensions plan — Google has published its plan to build into Chrome what is arguably its most requested feature: the ability to accept extensions that can customize how the open-source Web browser operates. — And guess what? Google's dependence on advertising notwithstanding …
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Ajaxian
Chris Foresman / Infinite Loop:
Apple offers free licensing for Mini DisplayPort spec — When Apple recently introduced its revamped notebook line, it also introduced the world to the Mini DisplayPort. It turns out that the company is offering no-fee licenses to anyone interested in developing products that use the Mini DisplayPort specification.
Yahoo!:
Yahoo! Reviews A Year in Search — Through Billions of Searches in 2008, People Sought to Make Sense of — the World Around Them, Witnessing a Year of Passionate Politics, Olympic — Records, New Celebrities on the Rise and Market Meltdowns — Today Yahoo! Inc (NASDAQ:YHOO) …
David Chartier / Ars Technica:
Online-only outlets see Black Friday boost over 2007 — The numbers from Black Friday are in, and traffic measurement firms have released their initial 2008 holiday shopping studies. Brick-and-mortar stores saw an unfortunate (though unsurprising) drop in online visitors and spending dollars …
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Andrea on Amazon …
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Six Apart acquires and shuts down Pownce — Blogging company Six Apart has acquired micro-blogging startup Pownce for undisclosed financial terms. It looks like one of those acquisitions where the buyer was more interested in the people than the product — the Pownce service will shut down in two weeks.
Jevon MacDonald / The FASTForward Blog:
The uncertain future of Blogging — Blogging is near and dear to my heart. — I admit freely that I am attached to the concept. I think it is better than something (whatever that is), and that is creates a lot of value. — I don't know what the fate of blogging is …
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Mark Evans