Top Items:
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
Employees Challenged To Crack Facebook Security, Succeed — Apparently Facebook noticed the slap down that the FTC gave Twitter in June because it “failed to prevent unauthorized administrative control of its system.” Shortly afterwards one of the senior engineers at Facebook responsible for SRE …
Wall Street Journal:
MySpace Ads Up for Grabs — News Corp. is in discussions with Google Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc. about replacing MySpace's crucial search-advertising partnership with Google, which expires next month, according to people familiar with the matter. — Under the existing deal …
Discussion:
paidContent, TechCrunch, Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim, Reuters, Softpedia News and Pulse2, more at Mediagazer »
BBC:
Government spends thousands on iPhone apps — BBC News has learnt that the Government has spent tens of thousands of pounds developing iPhone applications. — A Freedom of Information (FOI) request revealed that development costs ranged from £10,000 - £40,000.
Discussion:
Telegraph, 9 to 5 Mac, Tech Eye, The Register, T3.com News, Mobility Site, Fudzilla, Phones Review and gHacks Technology News
Sharon Waxman / The Wrap:
Exclusive: Relativity + Netflix Stream Pact Pushes Pay TV — In a deal that may change the landscape of pay television deals, Relativity Media and Netflix are gearing up to announce an alliance in which the online streaming service will exclusively release Relativity movies in what would otherwise …
Discussion:
paidContent, NewTeeVee, Boy Genius Report, MediaMemo, FierceIPTV and Go Rumors, more at Mediagazer »
Philipp Lenssen / Google Blogoscoped:
What's It Like to Work at Google? — Over at Reddit, people who work at Google are invited to tell what it's really like there. Knowing that some replies posted in such threads may be fake, here are three comments, from the negative to the positive. CinoBoo writes: I've been there for about 5 years.
Discussion:
Mashable!
Rich Miller / Data Center Knowledge:
IBM's Hot-Water Supercomputer Goes Live — A close-up of the IBM Aquasar server blade shows the piping and processor enclosures supporting the water-cooling system. — IBM has delivered a supercomputer cooled by hot water to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) …
Tyler Cowen / Marginal Revolution:
The Andy Grove essay — Many of you have sent me this, and requested comment, thanks for the pointer. Read the essay, here are a few remarks for perspective: — 1. The current results on trade, wages, and jobs do not support his basic claims. Those results are not definitive …
Discussion:
madisonian.net
Rob Arcamona / MediaShift:
What the Viacom vs. YouTube Verdict Means for Copyright Law — Some have called it a license to steal. To others, the recent Viacom v. YouTube court decision was no less than a trumpet heralding the protection of free speech on the Internet. And yet to a third contingency …
Discussion:
IP Osgoode
Jason Mick / DailyTech:
Pending EU Law Could Force Apple to Allow Flash, Rivals to Sync With iTunes — Change in antitrust laws could have serious implications for many other companies as well — The European Union's European Commission, under the guidance of commissioner Neelie Kroes, has had no qualms with slamming U.S firms with massive antitrust fines.
Discussion:
ReadWriteWeb, Go Rumors, Rethink Wireless, GeekSugar, Gizmodo, Maximum PC, SYS-CON MEDIA, All About Symbian, everythingiCafe and Electronista
Ernesto / TorrentFreak:
Hurt Locker Lawsuit Doesn't Affect BitTorrent Downloads — In recent years copyright holders have been trying to find creative ways to turn piracy into profit, with some success. One way to make money from file-sharers is to collect the IP-addresses of the people sharing a particular file …
Government Technology News:
California Launches News Aggregator Website — California has launched a news hub that, in real time, compiles and updates its many agencies' Twitter, RSS and YouTube news feeds. — The news aggregator site, unveiled Friday, July 2, collects in one place content from more than 200 department and agency sources.
Discussion:
The Next Web
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Um, Why Exactly Is The NBA Paying Twitter To Promote LeBron James? — It's already fairly impossible to escape hearing about basketball star LeBron James these days. It seems that no matter what TV channel you put on, what website you read, or what social media site you're on …