Top Items:
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Cookie Madness! — I just don't understand Julia Angwin's scare story about cookies and ad targeting in the Wall Street Journal. That is, I don't understand how the Journal could be so breathlessly naive, unsophisticated, and anachronistic about the basics of the modern media business.
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, Doc Searls Weblog, Beyond Search and broadstuff, more at Mediagazer », Thanks:arjo
RELATED:
Elinor Mills / CNET News:
Researcher detained at U.S. border, questioned about Wikileaks — LAS VEGAS—A security researcher involved with the Wikileaks Web site was detained by U.S. agents at the border for three hours and questioned about the controversial whistleblower project as he entered the country on Thursday …
Peter Bright / Ars Technica:
Ballmer (and Microsoft) still doesn't get the iPad — “The operating system is called Windows,” claimed Steve Ballmer when asked about Microsoft's plans for the tablet/slate/pad form factor at the company's annual Financial Analyst Meeting on Thursday. He expressed dismay …
Clive Thompson / Wired:
Clive Thompson on the Death of the Phone Call — My phone bills are shrinking. Not, unfortunately, in cost. I mean they're getting shorter. I recently found an old bill from a decade ago; it was fully 15 pages long, because back then I was making a ton of calls—about 20 long-distance ones a day.
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
Hacker shows how he can intercept cell phone calls with $1,500 device (video) — A security researcher showed in a live demo today how he can intercept cell phone calls on 80 percent of the world's phones with just about $1,500 worth of equipment. — Chris Paget, who also showed yesterday …
Discussion:
Threat Level, The Firewall, PC World, Agence France Presse, Engadget and Associated Press
Steve Cheney / TechCrunch:
Why Apple Should Buy Infineon: To Own Mobile And Screw Intel — Apple's earnings and revenue growth in mobile have been awe-inspiring to witness. From zero presence three years ago, Apple is now the most profitable cell phone maker in the world. — Apple's success in this compressed period …
Discussion:
9 to 5 Mac
Ashlee Vance / New York Times:
In School Systems, Slow Progress for Open-Source Textbooks — INFURIATING Scott G. McNealy has never been easier. Just bring up math textbooks. — Mr. McNealy, the fiery co-founder and former chief executive of Sun Microsystems, shuns basic math textbooks as bloated monstrosities …
Fred / A VC:
Dave McClure's Investment Thesis — I've been a fan of Dave McClure since I met him some time ago. He has strong opinions, he shares them liberally, spices them up with foul language, and finds himself involved with a lot of interesting entrepreneurs and companies. In a nutshell, he's my kind of investor.
Paul Carr / TechCrunch:
Blind Item: Which Editor of Valleywag Needs to Resign? Right Now. — Criticising Valleywag in 2010 is something of a pointless exercise, like offering diplomatic counsel to the Ottoman Empire ten years after the Treaty of Lausanne. More pointless still, attacking the site's titular editor Ryan Tate …
Liz Gannes / GigaOM:
A Peek Inside the M&A Playbooks of Technology's Top Acquirers — Last night a group of M&A gurus from the corporate development teams at top tech acquirers Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, Cisco, Facebook and Twitter gathered to share insights into their business with a group of startups at a fancy-pants Los Altos Hills, Calif. mansion.
Discussion:
Inside Facebook
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
Rival Smartphone Attenuation Videos Vanish From Apple's Website — Well this is interesting. One of the key points at Apple's recent press conference to discuss the iPhone 4′s antenna, was that the problem (called “attenuation") is not unique to the iPhone 4.
Discussion:
App Advice, The Next Web, SlashGear, everythingiCafe, TiPb, Electronista, Neowin.net and 9 to 5 Mac
Dean Takahashi / VentureBeat:
How North Korea could build a cyber army to defeat the U.S. — It wouldn't be that hard for North Korea to build a cyber army to take on the U.S. in a war fought only in cyberspace. North Korea has an estimated cyber war budget of $56 million, and the cheap way it could attack the U.S …