Top Items:
Dan Clancy / Google Public Policy Blog:
Modifications to the Google Books Settlement — Last year, we joined with a broad class of authors and publishers to announce a settlement agreement that would make millions of out-of-print books available to students and readers in every part of the U.S., while forging new opportunities for rightsholders to sell access to their books.
Discussion:
CNET News, Open Book Alliance, Search Engine Land, Between the Lines, ResourceShelf, Softpedia News, Post Tech, paidContent and Zohar Efroni's blog, Thanks:atul
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New York Times:
Terms of Digital Book Deal With Google Revised — SAN FRANCISCO — Google and groups representing book publishers and authors filed a modified version of their controversial books settlement with a federal court on Friday. The changes would pave the way for other companies …
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal
Richard Waters / Financial Times:
Authors win Google digital book concession — Book publishers and authors in most countries outside the US won a significant concession late on Friday as Google and American book industry representatives agreed to make changes to their landmark digital books settlement.
kb.palm.com:
webOS 1.3.1 — Version information — New applications — Feature changes to existing applications — Backup — Backup now includes browser cookies, so that after a restart, for example, if you stored your username and password on a web-based email site, you can continue to access the site without needing to log in.
Chris Nuttall / Globe and Mail:
RIM takes smartphone fight to rivals — Jim Balsillie headed to San Francisco Bay Area conference to try and prove the BlackBerry can keep up with its U.S. competition — Personal Tech - Back to School Laptop Guide - The Download Decade - Browse the Windows 7 section
Adrian Chen / Gawker:
Fox News Declares Cyberwar on Liberal Blogosphere — How do you annoy the maximum number of Liberal blogs with minimal effort? If you're Fox News, all you have to do is shut down the YouTube channel that supplies them with infuriating O'Reilly Factor clips. They did this today!
Chris Crum / WebProNews:
Google: Page Speed May Become a Ranking Factor in 2010 — Algorithm Change Would Make Slow Sites Rank Lower — Over the course of 2009, a consistent theme that Google has been involved with is that of speed. In announcement after announcement, Google has talked about the importance of speed on the web …
Victoria Ho / ZDNet:
Google: Firms can ‘get rid’ of Office in a year — SINGAPORE—In a year, most enterprises will have the choice to “get rid of [Microsoft] Office if they chose to”, suggests Dave Girouard, president of Google's enterprise division. — Girouard, one of the company's four presidents including …
Discussion:
Softpedia News, Technologizer, Mashable!, VentureBeat, Digital Daily, Maximum PC, ReadWriteWeb, CNET News, VatorNews, Ubergizmo, Gadgetopia and Preston Gralla's blog
Mary Jo Foley / All about Microsoft:
Microsoft admits its GPL violation; will reissue Windows 7 tool under open-source license — Microsoft officials confirmed on November 13 — a few days after pulling a Windows 7 download tool that allegedly contained improperly-licensed open-souce code — that the company did …
Discussion:
Lockergnome Blog Network
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Chris Messina / FactoryCity:
Don't make me a target — The augmented reality view in Brightkite's mobile app. — Brightkite, a location-tracking service, recently launched version 2.0 of their service after merging with Limbo and taking $9M in funding this past April. — In recent months I've found myself using Foursquare …
Discussion:
broadstuff
Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Facebook Killed The MTV Star: Shakira To Debut New Music Video On Ustream/Facebook — International music star Shakira is taking a new approach to releasing her latest music video: she's doing it through a live stream on Ustream, which will be emedded on her Facebook Page.
Robin Wauters / TechCrunch:
Tumblr Shares Stats: 20 Million Uniques, 420 Million Impressions Per Month — High-school dropout and Tumblr founder David Karp is doing a presentation today at the Eventoblog conference in sunny Sevilla, Spain. In one of his first slides, Karp shared some statistics about Tumblr …
Joe Hewitt:
On Middle Men — The Internet has been incredibly empowering to creators, and just as destructive to middle men. In the 20th century, every musician needed a record label to get his or her music heard. Every author needed a publishing house to be read. Every journalist needed a newspaper.
Dana Oshiro / ReadWriteWeb:
Second Life Founder Launching Reputation Currency System — Six years after creating Second Life, Philip Rosedale announced that he would be focusing on a new project. Shrouded in mystery, the Linden Chairman and fellow Lindenite Ryan Downe began work in October on Love Machine Inc …
Steve Towns / Government Technology News:
California Plans to Launch Information Security Operations Center — California intends to create a state-of-the-art information security operations center to monitor cyber-threats and protect state and local government networks from attack. — The proposal is part of a sweeping five-year plan …
Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg / Digits:
A Later Ship Date For Nook — If you want to put a Nook electronic-book reader under the tree, you'd better move fast — very fast. … Barnes & Noble's Web site now says that new orders are expected to be shipped on Dec. 18, in time to make Christmas delivery.
Discussion:
Technologizer
Bloomberg:
AdMob Said to Have Been Approached by Apple Before Accepting Google Offer — Nov. 13 (Bloomberg) — AdMob Inc. was approached by Apple Inc. about an acquisition before the company accepted a $750 million bid from Google Inc., according to people familiar with the matter.
Caroline McCarthy / The Social:
Running a contest on Facebook? That'll cost you — For Madison Avenue, Facebook just got a little less free. — Last week, the massive social network announced that brands, advertisers, and marketers that want to run contests or sweepstakes on its platform have to go through an approval process first.
Jared Newman / PC World:
Is Dell's Android Smartphone Doomed? — Dell confirmed it is releasing an Android-based smartphone, called the Mini 3, in China and Brazil, but the company's lack of details about the handset makes it hard to get excited. Dell's unwillingness to share more about the Mini 3 also has me wondering …
Joanna Stern / SlashGear:
Hey, Premium Notebooks or Netbooks, Get the Basics Right! — I wrote this column on the Nokia Booklet 3G which is, in my opinion, the most luxurious looking netbook on the market. And for its $600 ($299 with a pretty expensive 2 year AT&T contract) it sure as heck should be.
Discussion:
SlashPhone