Top Items:
Wall Street Journal:
Google Wants Its Own Fast Track on the Web — The celebrated openness of the Internet — network providers are not supposed to give preferential treatment to any traffic — is quietly losing powerful defenders. — Google Inc. has approached major cable and phone companies that carry Internet traffic …
Discussion:
Google Blogoscoped, Google Watch, DSLreports, TeleRead, Silicon Alley Insider, Gizmodo, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, ReadWriteWeb, broadstuff, Broadband Politics, Paul McNamara's blog, Sidecut Reports, Telecompetitor, paidContent.org, Between the Lines, The Toybox, Data Center Knowledge, Slashdot and NewTeeVee
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Om Malik / GigaOM:
Google NOT Turning Its Back on Network Neutrality — Updated @ 9:30 pm: In response to an earlier story in The Wall Street Journal, Google offered a clarification and reaffirmed its stance on network neutrality and pointed out that it is not backing away from it. It has dismissed the WSJ story as confused.
Discussion:
Techdirt, Communications …, What's That Noise?!, Technology Live, TeleRead and John Battelle's Searchblog
Lessig Blog:
The made-up dramas of the Wall Street Journal — I got off the plane from Boston to find my inbox filled with anger about an article in the Wall Street Journal. To those who were angry, I hope you will direct any anger at the Wall Street Journal after you read what follows.
Richard Whitt / Google Public Policy Blog:
Net neutrality and the benefits of caching — One of the first posts I wrote for this blog last summer tried to define what we at Google mean when we talk about the concept of net neutrality. — Broadband providers — the on-ramps to the Internet — should not be allowed to prioritize traffic based …
Peter Burrows / Business Week:
Palm Pins Its Hopes on Nova — The smartphone maker debuts its new operating system, code-named Nova, at January's CES. Palm says its phones for it will bridge the BlackBerry-iPhone gap — Jon Rubinstein got the call in mid-2007 while he was living on the Pacific Coast of Mexico …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Boy Genius Report, Gizmodo, CrunchGear, I4U News, Engadget, Mobile Tech Addicts, SlashPhone, Unwired View, PalmAddicts, Electricpig.co.uk and TheNextWeb.com
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Q: What Do You Get When You Add Karate Belts To a Q&A Service? Mahalo Answers. — Mahalo is now answering your questions. The human-curated search engine/ condensed wiki guide is adding a Q&A service called Mahalo Answers to its mix. It is a combination of Yahoo Answers …
Arn / MacRumors:
iPhone Nano Rumors Revived in Otherwise Quiet Lead-in to Macworld — Questionably reliable iDealsChina publishes information and renderings of what it claims to be an “iPhone nano”. — It is the same height as the just release Nano but wider and thicker and with the same iPhone 3G contours.
Jenna Wortham / New York Times:
News About News, in 140 Characters — With staff changes and reductions across the media industry, even a blog post can be too time-consuming a way to announce who is in and out of a job. That is why a public relations employee turned to the instant-blogging platform Twitter to create The Media Is Dying …
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
OpenX Shows Impressive Growth, Ramps Up Revenue Streams — OpenX (which used to be called Openads), provider of an open-source ad serving solution for web publishers - we use it at TechCrunch -, is growing like weed under the leadership of former AOL CEO Jonathan Miller, who is the company's chairman …
Abbey Klaassen / AdAge:
Ways to Monetize Twitter — Plus Ways to Waste Time on the Web — 1. CHARGE FOR IT — Of course, companies can already use the service for free, so what, exactly, would be new? Ian Schafer, CEO of Deep Focus, has some ideas: more-customizable profile pages, a dashboard to manage followers and tech support.
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Zapproved launches its decision-making email application — Zapproved, the web application that uses email to simplify group decision-making, is officially launching today. That means it's taking the beta testing tag off its product and rolling out its plans to make money.
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
NetShelter raises $11.1 million for online media network — NetShelter Technology Media is announcing today that it's raised $11.1 million in a first round of funding as the nine-year-old ad network for tech properties seeks to expand the reach of its 150 technology content web sites.
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Stickam API Lets You Build Your Own Live Video Site — Stickam, a live video streaming service that competes with the likes of Justin.tv and Ustream.tv, is releasing a new API that effectively allows anyone to build their own streaming video startup with a minimal amount of effort.
Discussion:
Mashable!
DigiTimes:
Taiwan iPhone 3Gs are SIM unlocked out-of-the-box — Contrary to earlier expectations, iPhone 3Gs bought in the Taiwan market are not restricted to only using SIM cards from Chunghwa Telecom (CHT), leaving owners the option to switch service providers, or use their smartphones with a local SIM card when traveling.
Andrew Noyes / Tech Daily Dose:
Google CEO, Former HP Chief Talk Politics — Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who hit the campaign trail on behalf of President-elect Barack Obama in the weeks leading up to Election Day and now serves on his economic advisory board, appeared on NBC's “Meet the Press” on Sunday to discuss …
Bill Ray / The Register:
ADSL - the VoIP killer — Weak link in reliability chain — Over half of UK businesses are avoid VoIP 'cos their ADSL broadband connections to branch offices aren't up to scratch, according to research coming out of Enterprise-VoIP specialists Viatel. — Viatel hired Omniboss to talk …
Discussion:
VoIP Watch
Bill Ray / The Register:
Are iPhone users just tight? — I'd buy that for a dollar — Analysis Companies developing software for the iPhone are seeing their creations drown in a sea of one-dollar mediocrity as they struggle to gain visibility in the increasingly cluttered Application Store, and some have taken their complaints to Steve himself.
Alejandro Lazo / Washington Post:
In First Step, Delta to Offer WiFi on Selected Flights — Delta Air Lines plans to begin offering wireless Internet service tomorrow on board half of its shuttle flights between Washington's Reagan National, New York's LaGuardia and Boston's Logan airports. — But don't get too used to it.
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