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10:15 PM ET, March 22, 2010

Techmeme

 Top Items: 
David Drummond / The Official Google Blog:
A new approach to China: an update  —  On January 12, we announced on this blog that Google and more than twenty other U.S. companies had been the victims of a sophisticated cyber attack originating from China, and that during our investigation into these attacks we had uncovered evidence …
RELATED:
Steve Lohr / Bits:
Interview: Sergey Brin on Google's China Gambit  —  China's censorship of the Internet may be blunt, but Google has found negotiations with the Chinese government in recent weeks to be subtle and uncertain.  —  That was the message from a brief interview in New York on Monday with Sergey Brin …
New York Times:
Google Will Redirect China Users to Uncensored Site  —  SAN FRANCISCO — Just over two months after threatening to leave China because of censorship and intrusions by Chinese hackers, Google said Monday that it was closing its China-based Internet search service and instead directing Chinese users …
Dan Frommer / Silicon Alley Insider:
Google's ‘Evil Meter’ Tells You What Sites China Is Blocking And What It Isn't (GOOG)  —  Google is no longer censoring its search engine in China — now hosted in Hong Kong — and now it seems likely that the Chinese government will start blocking more Google sites.
John Paczkowski / Digital Daily:
China: Google Broke Promise, Wrong to Stop Censoring  —  Looks like the Chinese government has settled on a theme for its response to Google's decision to stop censoring search results in China: Red-in-the-face indignation.  In a bulletin issued by state-run news agency Xinhua entitled …
Jim Granelli / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
Chinese get Google search results, but can't click through
Discussion: Bloomberg and Computerworld
/ Andrew Lih:
In Brief: Google's China Move
Discussion: CircleID
Joshua Topolsky / Engadget:
Official: Apple now offering iPhones contract free (updated: not unlocked)  —  We heard from 9 to 5 Mac that Apple was due to begin selling a contract-free variant of the iPhone in the near future “at list price.”  And guess what happened when we inquired to an Apple store?
New York Times:
The iPad App Derby Gets Under Way  —  It can be difficult to write software for a gadget without being able to touch it.  But that has not stopped developers from rushing to create applications for the Apple iPad.  —  For small start-ups and big Internet and media companies alike, the iPad …
RELATED:
Rana June Sobhany / The iPhone Era:
Apple Closing Gap on App Store Inadequacies  —  Today, one of the biggest irritations and shortcomings on the App Store has been remedied.  Apple has now integrated gifting into the App Store, a move which will likely bring significant additional revenue to developers around key holidays.
RELATED:
Dan Moren / Macworld:
Apple adds ‘Gift This App’ option to App Store
Discussion: App Advice
Jon Ying / The Dropbox Blog:
The Dropbox Android App!  —  In Dropbox's two year history, we've had some ardent fans salivating over the next killer Dropbox feature.  We love these people!  —  Our first huge feature following (and birthplace of our Dropbox poetry tradition) was our Linux version, which was soon followed by the highly anticipated iPhone app.
Discussion: TechCrunch and Download Squad
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Welcome To Evelyn Rusli, Whom We Stole From Forbes  —  Everyone please say hello to Evelyn Rusli.  It's her first day here at TechCrunch as part of our core writing team.  —  Evelyn joins us from Forbes where she was an anchor reporter for the Forbes Video Network.
Discussion: Silicon Alley Insider
Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry / Silicon Alley Insider:
The Startup Visa Act Must Be Stopped  —  Bad news: the widely-beloved Startup Visa project is a terrible idea — and this is coming from a guy who desperately wants to see it work.  —  About a year ago, Paul Graham of Y Combinator put out an idea for a Startup Visa that would allow foreign entrepreneurs …
Media Decoder:
Perseus Signs an EBooks Deal for the iPad  —  Apple's iBookstore on the forthcoming iPad is set to get larger.  The company has just signed a deal with the largest distributor of independent publishers to sell electronic versions of it books on the new device.
Philip Elmer-DeWitt / Brainstorm Tech:
For sale: A million-dollar iPad address  —  Behind those iPad domain names on eBay with asking prices in the stratosphere  —  About a year ago, when Apple's (AAPL) latest creation was, as far as anyone outside Cupertino knew, still but a twinkle in Steve Jobs' eye, Nik Tyler made an inspired guess.
Nielsen Wire:
Americans Using TV and Internet Together 35% More Than A Year Ago  —  Americans increased their overall media usage and media multitasking according to The Nielsen Company's latest Three Screen Report, which tracks consumption across TV, Internet and mobile phones.
John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
GIF, H.264, and Patents  —  Arthur Wyatt, in a post on MetaFilter regarding the battle over HTML5 video codecs: … A few readers have emailed me expressing a similar sentiment — more or less that GIF serves as an example showing why Mozilla should continue to refuse to support H.264.
Discussion: Brian Crescimanno
Andrew Silverman / Google LatLong:
Experiment to show hotel prices on Google Maps  —  Google Maps is often one of the first stops travelers make to find and compare hotels.  Today we started experimenting with a new feature, visible to a small portion of users, to help make that process even easier by showing specific prices for selected hotel listings.
Discussion: TechCrunch, Mashable! and Google Maps Mania, Thanks:atul
Paola Antonelli / Inside/Out:
@ at MoMA  —  Ray Tomlinson.  @. 1971. Here displayed in ITC American Typewriter Medium, the closest approximation to the character used by a Model 33 Teletype in the early 1970s  —  MoMA's Department of Architecture and Design has acquired the @ symbol into its collection.
James Surowiecki / New Yorker:
SOFT IN THE MIDDLE  —  Apple's launch of the iPad next week is a gamble in more ways than one.  To start with, it's obviously a bet that there are millions of people looking for a new way to surf the Web, watch movies, and read magazines.  But it's also a more fundamental gamble; namely, that people will pay for quality.
Cecilia Kang / Post Tech:
My chat with Google News founder, Krishna Bharat, with video  —  Krishna Bharat, the creator of Google News, has never been a journalist.  Though he's often asked what is more important for the search giant's news site: editorial judgment or Google's famous attention to its algorithms.
Kim Zetter / Threat Level:
Secret Service Paid TJX Hacker $75,000 a Year  —  Convicted TJX hacker Albert Gonzalez earned $75,000 a year working undercover for the U.S. Secret Service, informing on bank card thieves before he was arrested in 2008 for running his own multimillion-dollar card-hacking operation.
Geoffrey A. Fowler / Digits:
Let the E-Reader Price War Begin?  Sony Drops to $169  —  Sony says it is cutting the price on its entry-level e-book reader, dubbed the Pocket Reader, to $169 — perhaps the first in a coming price war for the devices. … Sony's $30 discount only lasts through April 4 …
Nick O'Neill / SocialTimes.com:
The Economics Of Facebook Games  —  Last week at SXSW, John Pleasants, CEO of Playdom, spoke about “The Future Of Social Gaming”, but the greatest takeaway was the current economics of Facebook Games.  If you are looking to get into the business or are already a player in the space …
Discussion: Inside Social Games
Karl Bode / DSLreports:
AT&T Adds Wireless To U-Verse Triple Play - Users can now swap out home phone for wireless  —  According to a new AT&T press release, the telco is shaking up the traditional triple play for the company's U-Verse customers.  For the first time, AT&T is allowing users to swap …
Discussion: AT&T, Telecompetitor and GigaOM
 
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 More Items: 
Dan Goodin / The Register:
Botnet pierces Microsoft Live through audio captchas
Discussion: Webroot Threat Blog
Erick Schonfeld / TechCrunch:
Social Recruiting: Localbacon Relaunches As Jibe, Raises $875K Seed Round
Discussion: PR Newswire and ERE.net
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
News Corp. Throwing Away The Crown Jewel: Fox Audience Network
Discussion: paidContent
Rafat Ali / paidContent:
Local Blog Network Gothamist Being Bought by Cablevision's Rainbow Media
Discussion: Silicon Alley Insider
Rafe Needleman / CNET News:
PayPal wants your startup
Discussion: VentureBeat
Jonathan Stempel / Reuters:
A judge may google to confirm intuition: court
Discussion: MediaPost
 Earlier Items: 
Christina Warren / Mashable!:
Zosh Lets You Replace Your Fax Machine with Your iPhone
Robert Andrews / mocoNews:
Research: Top iPhone Apps' Average Price Is Falling
Gregory White / The Business Insider:
Google Is Hiring Bond Traders
Discussion: Silicon Alley Insider and DealBook
Ryan Lawler / NewTeeVee:
Kylo Blocked By Hulu Already — UPDATED
Paul Krill / InfoWorld:
Adobe debuts Flash Platform tools, including renamed Flex Builder
Discussion: Ars Technica and eWeek
Alex Wilhelm / The Next Web:
Why Is Every App A Game? The Badgeification Of The Internet
Discussion: Shooting at Bubbles, Thanks:atul
Monica Chen / DigiTimes:
Intel and AMD update desktop CPU lineups
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Alex Sherman / CNBC:
Analyzing Comcast's spinoff of cable networks, purposefully structured with low debt: the move might be a signal to the industry that it's time to consolidate

Daniel Thomas / Financial Times:
James Harding says the Tortoise-Observer deal could create a profitable media group and there isn't a guaranteed future for the Observer with the Guardian

John Gruber / Daring Fireball:
Substack, very deliberately, tries to have it both ways by saying publications on their platform are independent while presenting them all as parts of Substack

 
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