Top Items:
Mark Zuckerberg / Facebook Blog:
Update on Terms — A couple of weeks ago, we revised our terms of use hoping to clarify some parts for our users. Over the past couple of days, we received a lot of questions and comments about the changes and what they mean for people and their information.
Discussion:
New York Times, Silicon Alley Insider, ReadWriteWeb, The Register, Feeds, Tech Central, dot.life blog, Guardian, Inside Facebook, paidContent.org, TechCrunch, Between the Lines, BoomTown, Security Watch, UMBC ebiquity, FaceReviews, yojibee, Techdirt, Webware.com, HighTouch, Consumerist, Alexander van Elsas's Weblog …, GMSV, internetnews.com, All Facebook, Mashable!, MarketingVOX, broadstuff and Slashdot, Thanks:sampad
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Eric Eldon / VentureBeat:
Facebook reverts to old terms of service, working on new version that “everybody can understand” — Well, that was pretty fast. Facebook has reverted to its prior terms of service — due to a backlash from some users, media outlets and privacy groups — while it works out a new version.
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, BBC, SitePoint, Business Week, AppScout, Smalltalk Tidbits …, The Technology Chronicles and SiliconBeat
PC World:
Facebook Privacy Change Sparks Federal Complaint — JR Raphael, PC World — facebook faces privacy backlash over change in terms of use of network — The backlash against Facebook's updated privacy policies is about to expand. The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) …
Discussion:
the Econsultancy blog, geeksugar, HotHardware.com News, Webware.com, All Facebook, ZDNet Government, BetaNews, Consumerist, Pulse2 and Mashable!
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
BoomTown Decodes the Zuckerberg Terms of Service My-Bad Memo (Now With 10 Percent More “So Very Sorrys!") — Under cover of darkness last night, Facebook Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced on the social networking site's blog that it would “return to our previous terms of use while we resolve the issues that people have raised.”
Jessi Hempel / Fortune:
How Facebook is taking over our lives — President Obama used it to get elected. Dell will recruit new hires with it. Microsoft's new operating system borrows from it. No question, Facebook has friends in high places. Can CEO Mark Zuckerberg make those connections pay off?
Discussion:
The Equity Kicker
Julian Sanchez / Ars Technica:
Stimulus-tracking Recovery.gov site goes live — Recovery.gov launches to track stimulus spending—but will it be a triumph of transparency or an exercise in spin? — President Obama signed The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 today, and while much of the $789 billion …
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Devin Coldewey / CrunchGear:
Canon releases 10 cameras in one night - thanks, Canon — Just when I thought it was safe to relax and read a little bit, my inbox lights up with a damn tidal wave of point-and-shoots. If you're in the market, you'll be doing more in-depth research and of course the outliers of this batch …
Discussion:
Gizmodo, Crave, Imaging Insider, I4U News, Canon USA, Engadget, Electronista and Canon Rumors
Kevin Poulsen / Threat Level:
Anonymous Caller? New Service Says, Not Any More — A new service set for launch Tuesday allows cellphone users to unmask the Caller ID on blocked incoming calls, obtaining the phone number, and in some cases the name and address, of the no-longer-anonymous caller.
Discussion:
Gizmodo, CNET News, I4U News, VOIP IP Telephony, TECH.BLORGE.com, Obsessable, Lifehacker and Boing Boing Gadgets
Cecilia Kang / Post I.T.:
Obama Tech Adviser Says More to Come on Broadband Push — A tech adviser to President Obama said today that $7.2 billion in stimulus funds to bring broadband lines to rural areas is just the start of the administration's plan to bring high-speed Internet to the entire nation.
Katie Marsal / AppleInsider:
Battery, RAM, and HD access on new 17-inch Macbook Pro — Apple's new unibody 17-inch MacBook Pro began shipping earlier this week and a new tear-down of the high-end notebook reveals the steps needed to access the system's internal memory, hard drive, and battery components.
Eric Krangel / Silicon Alley Insider:
Anonybloggers, Be Gone! Tumblr Boots Griefers — Last September, we noted the unfortunate reality that every social network has its troublemakers, and Tumblr — which was plagued by so-called “anonybloggers” — is no exception. — No more. In a post today on the official Tumblr blog …
Thom Holwerda / OSNews:
Freescale To Use Android, Aims for Half of Netbook Market — Earlier this year, Freescale announced it would enter the netbook market with its own set of chips based on the ARM architecture, claiming they would yield better battery life than the Atom-based netbooks of today.
Jesus Diaz / Gizmodo:
Android G2 Hands On: Close to Perfection — HTC and Google are getting closer to perfection with the new Android G2, the HTC Magic. Nice finish, great form factor. Check out our video, including the obligatory comparison with Apple's iPhone, and hands-on impressions:
Eric Goldman / Technology & Marketing Law Blog:
Google Street View Case Dismissed—Boring v. Google — Boring v. Google, Inc., 2:08-cv-00694-ARH (W.D. Pa. Feb. 17, 2009) — You may recall the Boring case from last Spring. A Pennsylvania couple sued because Google's camera car drove up their private driveway and the resulting pictures were posted to Google's Street View.
Discussion:
CNET News
Jessica Vascellaro / Digits:
Startup Sues Google Using Microsoft's (Outside) Lawyers — By Jessica E. Vascellaro — TradeComet.com LLC, which operates a small search engine for industrial products, has sued Google, alleging that the search giant tried to put it out of business by increasing its advertising prices.
Aaron Wall / Learn. Rank. Dominate.:
Mahalo Caught Spamming Google With PageRank Funneling Link Scheme — Jason “SEO is dead” Calacanas, founder of Mahalo, used “SEO is dead” as a publicity stunt to help launch his made for AdSense scraper website. In the past we have noted how he was caught ranking pages without any original content …
James Rowley / Bloomberg:
Antitrust Pick Varney Saw Google as Next Microsoft — Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Christine A. Varney, nominated by President Barack Obama to be the U.S.'s next antitrust chief, has described Google Inc. as a monopolist that will dominate online computing services the way Microsoft Corp. ruled software.
Caroline McCarthy / The Social:
Source: NYC to announce start-up workspace partnership — The city of New York is about to step up its efforts to help nascent businesses and laid-off professionals, CNET News has learned. — On Wednesday, the city's Economic Development Corporation (NYC EDC) plans to announce a new initiative …
Sue Marek / FierceWireless:
Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson win Verizon LTE deal — At this morning's highly anticipated keynote address at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Verizon Communications' executive vice president and CTO Dick Lynch named the key vendors for the company's LTE network deployment.
Aidan Malley / AppleInsider:
Apple execs rethinking iPhone pricing strategy for 2009 — While the likelihood of Apple releasing new iPhones this year is all but certain, a discussion between analysts and Apple's top brass has also dropped clues that the iPhone's pricing may not be static this year.
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Macsimum News
Hiptop3.com:
The Sidekick 2009 in the wild — We knew it was coming. We knew they were visiting and they answered the call. Ladies and gentlemen, it's the photo we've all been waiting for. May we present to you, the Sidekick 2009 aka the Sidekick Blade.
Nina Kang / Google LatLong:
1000 is the new 10 — Ever wish you could see more than just ten local search results at once? Us too. — So we've added a search layer for local search results that activates when there are more relevant results than we can show on one page. Instead of just plotting the first page …
Tom Reestman / TheAppleBlog:
Microsoft Finally Found a Group They Can Impress — Joe Wilcox has an article on Microsoft Watch about Microsoft's new ads with kids. The series is called The Rookies, and there's a second spot up. — Joe is less impressed with the second spot than the first, but goes on to explain …
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Did Hulu Just Pull The Plug On Its Deal With TV.com? — Something is up at TV.com, the CBS-owned site that recently relaunched as a competitor to Hulu. Since last summer, when TV.com was owned by CNET and was still primarily a community hub, the site has featured content from NBC and News Corp through a partnership with Hulu.
Ubergizmo:
Samsung SWD-M100 MID Hands-On (WiMax) — Now, there's a MID (mobile internet device) that we could use to blog on the go. The Samsung SWD-M100D is a WiMax + WiFi device that has both a touch display and a sliding QWERTY keyboard. The most important feature (for live blogging) …
Mike Snider / USA Today:
eGuiders cuts through clutter of a gazillion videos online — In the golden age of television, TV Guide arrived on newsstands to let viewers know what was being broadcast and when. — Whether this is the golden age of Web videos is debatable. But a new Hollywood-based site, eGuiders.com …
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NewTeeVee
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
WeddingBook Marries Search Aggregation With Wedding Vendor Listings — With upwards of 200,000 wedding vendors in the U.S. alone, the wedding industry can be both fiercely competitive and highly profitable for businesses. A new website, WeddingBook, is attempting to become …
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Kelsey Group Blogs
Kara Swisher / BoomTown:
With a King's Ransom in Cash, Why Is There Still No Buying Spree in the Tech Space Yet? — Even in the midst of the economic meltdown, consider these mega-billion-dollar cash hoards of big tech companies: — Microsoft (MSFT): $20.7 billion — Cisco (CSCO): $29.5 billion — Apple (AAPL): $25.6 billion