Top Items:
Amazon Web Services:
Summary of the Amazon EC2 and Amazon RDS Service Disruption in the US East Region — Now that we have fully restored functionality to all affected services, we would like to share more details with our customers about the events that occurred with the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud ("EC2") …
Discussion:
MediaFile, ReadWriteWeb, Ars Technica, Data Center Knowledge, Wall Street Journal, Sidecut Reports, Mashable!, Social Markets, SiliconANGLE, Computerworld, The Register, CNET News, Pulse2, CNNMoney.com, @mikerowan, Tech News, GMSV, InfoQ, GigaOM, VentureBeat, msnbc.com, PC Magazine, Yahoo! News, www.thehostingnews.com, Betabeat, ReadWriteCloud, Softpedia News, Neowin.net, TechFlash, WebProNews, GeekWire, Webmonkey, SlashGear, Security Watch, Between the Lines Blog, Sample the Web, Digital Trends, SAI and Slashdot
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Cory Hicks / The Netflix Tech Blog:
Lessons Netflix Learned from the AWS Outage — On Thursday, April 21st, Amazon experienced a large outage in AWS US-East which they describe here. This outage was highly publicized because it took down or severely hampered a number of popular websites that depend on AWS for hosting.
Jon Brodkin / Network World:
Amazon: Bad execution during planned upgrade caused outage
Amazon: Bad execution during planned upgrade caused outage
Discussion:
PC World, msnbc.com and The Next Web
Arik Hesseldahl / All Things Digital:
Amazon Details Last Week's Cloud Failure, and Apologizes
Amazon Details Last Week's Cloud Failure, and Apologizes
Discussion:
Electronista, CNET News and Computerworld
Violet Blue / Pulp Tech Blog:
Why You Should Think Twice About Opting-In to the Delicious-AVOS Transfer — It takes “only 30 seconds” to transfer your Delicious bookmarks to its new owner AVOS, though few are aware that Delicious users are signing up to a vastly different set of terms. — Most people are unaware of what they just agreed to.
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Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Why Every Single Person Should Take 30 Seconds to Opt-in to the Delicious Data Transfer — Earlier this week it was announced that Yahoo is selling social bookmarking service Delicious to the founders of YouTube and their new company called Avos. After the announcement was made …
Discussion:
The Social Media …, MediaPost and Pocket-lint
Mark Milian / CNN:
Delicious founder on site's potential: ‘The time has passed’ — Mountain View, California (CNN) — More than five years after the social bookmarking website was sold to Yahoo for a reported $15 million, Joshua Schachter's Delicious is suddenly in the news again.
Discussion:
Technology Review, www.thehostingnews.com and Social Business Blog
Kasper Jade / AppleInsider:
Sources: Apple utilizing ‘iCloud’ internally, service to be more than music — Apple has begun adopting the “iCloud” name within several products currently under development, suggesting the appropriately labeled moniker is indeed the frontrunner for the company's soon-to-debut Internet cloud service …
Discussion:
The Download Blog, TiPb, IntoMobile, RazorianFly, GottaBeMobile, Pulse2, SlashGear, MacRumors, Gizmodo, Electronista and WebProNews
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Jason Kincaid / TechCrunch:
Jack Dorsey Shares Some Big Square Numbers: 341,688 Readers Shipped, $137M Total Flow — Square founder and CEO Jack Dorsey just tweeted a photo of the company's internal dashboard, and, aside from looking very sexy, it's boasting some impressive numbers. Among them: Square has shipped 341,688 …
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Alex Pham / Pop & Hiss:
Price war! Amazon launches 69-cent MP3 store for top-selling tunes — Amazon.com, which is a distant No. 2 to Apple Inc. as a retailer of downloadable music, has upped the ante or, rather, lowered its prices to compete with iTunes. — The Seattle online company is now pricing select top-selling tunes …
Discussion:
MacRumors, Electronista, Engadget, SlashGear, Techland, TechSpot, RazorianFly, iLounge, Gizmodo, Pulse2, hypebot and iClarified
Kashmir Hill / The Not-So Private Parts:
Verizon Plans To Put Location-Tracking Warning Sticker on Phones — Verizon tells Congress that it plans to put warning labels on phones (illustration from Verizon letter to Markey and Barton) — Though Apple and Google have become the whipping boys for location privacy …
Discussion:
VentureBeat, PC World, Phone Scoop, Electronista, Engadget, ReadWriteWeb, Techdirt, 9 to 5 Mac, Know Your Cell, Techland, BGR, The Politico, MobileBurn.com and GeekWire
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Gregg Keizer / Computerworld:
Apple, Google will testify to Senate on location tracking
Apple, Google will testify to Senate on location tracking
Discussion:
Al Franken, MacRumors, TUAW, App Advice, RazorianFly and InfoWorld
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
When Will Microsoft's Internet Bloodbath End? — “Online Services Division revenue grew 14% year-over-year primarily driven by increases in search revenue.” — That was Microsoft's statement about the Online Services Division in their earnings release yesterday. Growth! Yippee!
Discussion:
SAI
Michael Liedtke / Associated Press:
Yahoo CEO's pay package falls 75 pct to $11.9M — SAN FRANCISCO - Yahoo Inc. cut CEO Carol Bartz's compensation by 75 percent to $11.9 million last year as the Internet company struggled to revive its revenue growth, regulatory documents filed Friday show. — The sharp drop in the value …
MIT:
Amar Bose '51 makes stock donation to MIT — Bose Corporation will remain private and independent; dividends will sustain and advance MIT's mission. — Dr. Amar Bose '51 — Dr. Amar Bose '51, Bose Corporation's Founder, has given to MIT the majority of the stock of Bose Corporation in the form of non-voting shares.
Discussion:
PC Magazine, I4U News and CrunchGear
Jacob Aron / New Scientist:
That's what she said: Software that tells dirty jokes — Double entendres have been making us laugh since the days of Chaucer and Shakespeare, but up until now computers weren't in on the joke. Chloé Kiddon and Yuriy Brun, two computer scientists at the University of Washington …
Discussion:
Popular Science, Techdirt and The Escapist
Nick Bilton / Bits:
Congress Has Questions for Sony About Attack — A House of Representatives subcommittee sent a letter to Sony on Friday asking for information about the attack on the Sony Playstation Network by hackers last week. The gaming network has 77 million registered users.
Discussion:
VentureBeat and PE Hub Blog
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Sequoia-Backed Milanoo Appears To Be Gaming Search Results With Link Spam — As we saw from retailer JC Penney's recent downfall in search rankings, using ‘black hat’ SEO tactics and gaming search is considered deceptive and ‘tantamount to cheating’ by Google.
Discussion:
Search Engine Land, @dannysullivan and SEO Book.com
Bloomberg:
FTC Said to Contact Companies About Google Investigation — The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is alerting high-tech companies to gather information in preparation for a probe of Google Inc. (GOOG)'s dominance of the Internet search industry, three people familiar with the matter said.
Discussion:
Reuters
Tim Cushing / Techdirt:
Leaked Documents Show How The RIAA Plans To Spend The Limewire Settlement — The RIAA believes it is on the cusp of victory in its lawsuit against Limewire, thanks mainly to its large selection of damaging charts. However, it seems to be expecting the worst, if these leaked documents are any indication.
Marshall Kirkpatrick / ReadWriteWeb:
Twitter Confirms It Has Passed 200 Million Accounts, 70% of Traffic Now International — The number of people who have registered accounts on Twitter has now surpassed 200 million, a representative of the company said publicly yesterday. Katie Stanton, Twitter's Vice President of International Strategy …
Discussion:
BGR, The Huffington Post, @jason, @patrickseitz, @fredericl and Guardian
Jacqui Cheng / Ars Technica:
Facebook takedown followup: what happened, and what Facebook needs to fix — Facebook has reinstated a number of sites' Facebook pages that were taken down due to bogus copyright claims this week. The company issued an apology for the inconvenience and says that DMCA notice abuse is an issue …
Discussion:
Technology Liberation Front, PlagiarismToday, paidContent, Tech News and TechEye
Zach Honig / Engadget:
HBO Go hits iOS and Android, free for subscribers — Don't ditch that premium cable subscription just yet. The long-anticipated HBO Go app just hit the iOS App Store and Android Market, bringing original HBO series and a variety of blockbuster films to your mobile device.
Discussion:
Electronista, 9 to 5 Mac, App Advice, GigaOM, GottaBeMobile, SocialTimes.com, RazorianFly, IntoMobile, PC World, WebProNews, PhoneArena, Crave, MobileBurn.com and BGR
David Kravets / Threat Level:
Appeals Court: No Hacking Required to Be Prosecuted as a Hacker — Employees may be prosecuted under a federal antihacking statute for taking computer files that they were authorized to access and using them in a manner prohibited by the company, a federal appeals court has ruled.
Discussion:
epic.org and madisonian.net
Sarah Kessler / Mashable!:
Bank Lets Customers Pay Friends By Bumping iPhones — ING Direct customers can now transfer payments to friends with the bump of a cellphone — no account numbers needed. — The bank released an updated version of its iPhone app [iTunes link] on Wednesday morning that integrates an API …
Discussion:
Gizmodo