Top Items:
Elinor Mills / CNET News:
Twitter, Facebook attack targeted one user — A Russian activist blogger with accounts on Twitter, Facebook, LiveJournal and Google's Blogger and YouTube was targeted in a denial of service attack that led to the site-wide outage at Twitter and problems at the other sites on Thursday, according to a Facebook executive.
Discussion:
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Dan Goodin / The Register:
Researcher: Twitter attack targeted anti-Russian blogger — Joejobbing Cyxymu — Free whitepaper - Avoiding 7 common mistakes of IT security compliance — As Twitter struggled to return to normal Wednesday evening, a trickle of details suggested that the outage that left 30 million users unable …
Discussion:
Guardian, Telegraph, CNET News, GMSV, Graham Cluley's blog, Epicenter, TECH.BLORGE.com, Technologizer, eWeek and UMBC ebiquity
Clint Boulton / eWeek:
How Google Was Impacted By The Twitter-Facebook Denial of Service Attacks — A small group of users of Google's Blogger blogging service and Google Sites wiki experienced an hour-long outage. However, Google's core Web services, including its search engine, Gmail and Docs …
Chris Dannen / Fast Company:
Think You're Pissed at Facebook and Twitter? — This morning you logged on to Facebook and Twitter, only to find you had no way of announcing to the world that you were starting a new diet. Or eating Raisin Bran. Or hungover. So you stormed away from your computer, irate: how could the intertubes have failed you so utterly?
Biz / Twitter Blog:
Update on Today's DoS Attacks
Update on Today's DoS Attacks
Discussion:
broadstuff, contentious.com, PC Magazine, VentureBeat, CNET News, Bits, Infocult, Twitterrati and bub.blicio.us
Arik Hesseldahl / Business Week:
Schmidt's Apple Gig: He Worked for Free — Former Apple director Eric Schmidt took no salary or stock for his board service. What did the Google chief accept? Lots of Apple gear — Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt served on Apple's board essentially without pay …
David Pogue / New York Times:
New Entry in E-Books Is a Paper Tiger — Suppose there are two rival companies — let's call them A and B. Each wants to dominate the blossoming world of electronic books. — Company A (that's A as in “Amazon") began life selling physical books online. Its reading gadget, the Kindle …
Discussion:
TeleRead
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Corynne / Electronic Frontier Foundation:
The Kindle Lawsuit: Protecting Readers From Future Abuses — Not surprisingly, Amazon's recent deletion of George Orwell's 1984 and Animal Farm from its customers' Kindle e-book readers has sparked a class action lawsuit by Kindle users. After all, not only was the remote deletion “stupid …
Discussion:
Podcasting News
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Brainstorm Tech:
Apple's curious PR problem — Senior VP Phil Schiller. Image: Apple Inc. — The tech press is buzzing this week with the news that a senior Apple (AAPL) vice president took the time to e-mail a blogger. — The senior VP was Phil Schiller, one of Steve Jobs' top lieutenants.
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John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
Phil Schiller Responds Regarding Ninjawords and the App Store
Phil Schiller Responds Regarding Ninjawords and the App Store
Discussion:
New York Times, Softpedia News, GMSV, TechCrunch, iPhone Buzz, Guardian, SlashGear, IntoMobile, GPS Obsessed, MacRumors iPhone Blog, Macworld, TeleRead, Gizmodo, The Register, TheAppleBlog, Ars Technica, CNET News, InformationWeek, EverythingiCafe, Life On the Wicked Stage, The iPhone Blog, Technologizer, Pulse2, mocoNews, AppleInsider, MobileCrunch, Engadget, 9 to 5 Mac, Edible Apple, TidBITS, MacRumors, Silicon Alley Insider, Download Squad, Marco.org and Techdirt, Thanks:mostlyyes
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Brainstorm Tech:
Apple's $1.2 billion tablet computer — Apple's next gadget? Image: Piper Jaffray — Piper Jaffray senior analyst Gene Munster took another crack at the Apple (AAPL) tablet computer he's been writing about for months, issuing a report to clients Friday that included …
Elinor Mills / CNET News:
Is Adobe the next (pre-2002) Microsoft? — If you are a criminal and you want to break into a network a common attack method is to exploit a hole in software that exists on most computers, has its fair share of holes and isn't automatically updated. — In 2002, that would have been Windows.
Ross Miller / Engadget:
Google Wave dev preview hands-on and impressions — After an impressive debut at Google I/O, the company's newest experiment and collaborative chat client has been making its way into the hands of developers in the lead-up to a torrent of new testers on September 30th.
Discussion:
TheNextWeb.com
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
This Is Quite Possibly The Spotify Cap Table — Hot European music startup Spotify is back in the news today. On August 4 we broke the news that the big music labels have secretly been shareholders in the company since 2008, and that they paid roughly the same price for their preferred stock …
Discussion:
Softpedia News, metro.se, Royal Pingdom, Silicon Valley Watcher and Mobile Industry Review
Ed Bott / Ed Bott's Microsoft Report:
Microsoft blunders with a confusing Windows 7 upgrade chart — Someone at Microsoft is secretly working for Apple. — That's the only possible explanation I can come up with for why they sent this “Official Windows 7 Upgrade chart” to Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal …
Discussion:
Download Squad, Engadget, BetaNews, Softpedia News, ChannelWeb, Guardian, gdgt, Gizmodo, Lifehacker and All about Microsoft
Google LatLong:
New data in Google Earth show wider swath of destruction in Darfur — On the side of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum west wall is a quote etched into the rock from General Dwight D Eisenhower, who witnessed firsthand the conditions in the concentration camps in 1945, after they were liberated:
Clint Boulton / eWeek:
Does Google Want On2 for a Gaming Console? — Table of Contents: — Google's acquisition of On2 Technologies prompts punditry and blog posts from all over the Web. Some say buying the video compression specialist was a YouTube play. Others believe Google will leverage the On2 codecs …
Chris Saad / Got Kit?:
JS-Kit Echo - Now Public Beta — We are proud to announce that Echo is now available to the general public as a Public Beta. — After launching our private beta sites TechcrunchIT, Building43, Guy Kawasaki, Inquistr, BrianSolis, LearnToDuck and LaLaWag we feel ready to make Echo available to the rest of the world.
Robert D. Hof / Business Week:
Betting on the Real-Time Web — No one knows how the microblogging site and similar online social networks will make money, but investors see a new Web revolution — John Borthwick speaks softly, but he can't hide his excitement. Co-founder and chief executive of the New York Internet …
Thanks:atul
Owen Fletcher / Computerworld:
Chinese Microsoft Office rival launching on Web soon — IDG News Service - A Chinese company that offers a rival suite to Microsoft Office is following industry trends by turning its software into a Web-based service. — Evermore Software, based in the eastern Chinese city of Wuxi …
Nilay Patel / Engadget:
Pressure-sensitive keyboard lets you express fury, tenderness — Microsoft's hardware division has always pushed the envelope, and its latest prototype is no exception: this pressure-sensitive keyboard looks exactly like a normal 'board, but each key can register up to eight levels of pressure …
John Cook / TechFlash:
Urbanspoon looks to take a bite out of OpenTable's reservations — Urbanspoon — the wildly popular online restaurant directory — is hosting a big bash tonight in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood. No specific reason was given for the party in the invite, but the company certainly …
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
Microsoft releases Open XML fix for Mac Office 2008 SP2 — Microsoft's Mac Business Unit has released a minor update to Office 2008 for Mac that fixes a bug when opening Open XML files. The update, version 12.2.1, has just been posted to the Office for Mac downloads site.