Don't forget to check out http://auda.org.au/domain-news/ for a more recent 
edition of the complete domain news, including an RSS feed - already online!

And see my website - http://technewsreview.com.au/ - for regular updates.

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Sponsored by the Singapore Internet Research Centre
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
http://www.ntu.edu.sg/sci/sirc/

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Internet censorship, at home or state-run, is a political hot potato by Seth 
Finkelstein
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2044595,00.html

South Korea blocks foreign porn sites
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article1570670.ece

us: Supreme Court to Hear Online Pandering Case
http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/3668146

Bloggers are not journalists, Lithuanian parliament
http://www.ioltechnology.co.za/article_page.php?iSectionId=2891&iArticleId=3754044

au: Gaming, porn rife at work
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/03/26/1174761375431.html

The impact of the Grokster decision on file sharing
http://www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_portal_view.aspx?s=latestnews&id=1715

nz: Editorial: It's payback time for Telecom
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10431380

nz: Telecom urged to reinvest in broadband
http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/488120/1037735

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RESEARCH PAPERS
***************
A Brave New Geography of the Internet Age? The Determinants of 
Telecommunications Growth in Historical Perspective by Richard Perkins & Eric 
Neumayer (London School of Economics - Department of Geography and Environment)
Abstract: The Internet is often portrayed as a novel, uniquely disembedded 
technology, floating free of territory and traditional place-based constraints. 
In this paper, we contribute to a growing body of literature which challenges 
such imagery. To do so, we use quantitative techniques to examine the 
determinants of spatio-temporal variations in the Internet and older 
communication technologies, namely, mail, the electric telegraph and 
telephones. Our results reveal striking similarities in the country-bound 
factors - income, education and trade openness - influencing rates of uptake. 
We conclude that, contrary to claims of novelty, the Internet is unfolding 
unevenly across geographic space according to conventional territorial and 
relational attributes.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=968668

Swapping Print: The Impact of Immigration and the Internet on International 
Newspaper Trade by Hisham S. Foad (San Diego State University, Department of 
Economics)
Abstract: Why is there international trade in newspapers? Why do even very 
small countries both import from and export to large nations? New trade models 
founded on transport costs and increasing returns fail to explain the high 
degree of bilateral trade in cultural goods like newspapers and periodicals. I 
argue that immigration is complementary to newspaper trade, with small 
cosmopolitan countries having the largest trade as a percentage of GDP. These 
predictions are empirically confirmed, with a 10% increase in bilateral 
immigration inducing a 4.4% increase in newspaper trade between nations. While 
increased immigration has lead to greater trade, this effect is decreasing in 
internet usage. The trade-immigration elasticity is 8.5% smaller for 
high-internet usage countries, reflecting the fact that immigrants increasingly 
get their foreign news fix online. These results suggest that cultural goods 
need not be protected from trade as a country's economic presence on the
 global stage creates a market for its products.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=971131

The Myth of the Superuser: Fear, Risk, and Harm Online by Paul Ohm (University 
of Colorado Law School)
The experts in computer security and Internet law have failed to deliver us 
from fear, resulting in overbroad prohibitions, harms to civil liberties, 
wasted law enforcement resources, and misallocated economic investment. This 
Article urges policymakers and partisans to stop using tropes of fear; calls 
for better empirical work on the probability of online harm; and proposes an 
anti-Precautionary Principle, a presumption against new laws designed to stop 
the Superuser.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=967372

Network Neutrality by Alfred E. Kahn (AEI-Brookings Joint Center Working Paper)
Abstract: Much of the advocacy of legislatively-mandated network neutrality is 
based on a simple fallacy - namely, that differing charges to suppliers of 
content to the Internet for correspondingly differing speeds of delivery are 
inherently discriminatory. They are not; and an attempt to prohibit them would 
prevent the Internet's offering a full range of services, with widely diverging 
tolerances for latency. Preservation of the open end-to-end character of the 
Internet may well, however, require vigilant prohibition of vertical squeezes 
and other unfair methods of competition and authority of an antitrust agency to 
compel interconnections.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=973513

Economists' Statement on Network Neutrality Policy
Abstract: Network neutrality is a policy proposal that would regulate how 
network providers manage and price the use of their networks. Congress has 
introduced several bills on network neutrality. Proposed legislation generally 
would mandate that Internet service providers exercise no control over the 
content that flows over their lines and would bar providers from charging 
particular services more than others for preferentially faster access to the 
Internet. These proposals must be considered carefully in light of the 
underlying economics. Our basic concern is that most proposals aimed at 
implementing net neutrality are likely to do more harm than good.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=976889

Regulating for Local Content in the Digital Audiovisual Environment - A View 
from Australia by Jason John Bosland (University of Melbourne - Centre for 
Media and Communications Law)
Abstract: This paper explores the future of Australian content quotas in light 
of digital television and emergent, internet-based television services. Part II 
describes the current system of broadcasting regulation in Australia, focusing 
in particular on the interaction between economic and cultural goals. Part III 
considers the challenges to existing regulation presented by digital television 
and the distribution of programming via broadband internet. Finally, Part IV 
examines some of the solutions that have been proposed to achieve adequate 
levels of local Australian content in the digital media age, including a 
consideration of a possible solution not yet fully explored in the Australian 
context: the introduction of a public service publisher, or a PSP. Also 
considered is how this and other policy responses might be limited by 
Australia's recent entry into a free-trade agreement with the United States.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=969254

The Cybercrime Phenomenon and Latvian Cybercrime Law by Dr. Edward Lestrade 
(European Newsletter, Doing Business in Europe)
Abstract: The term 'Cybercrime' is now widely used to describe the phenomenon 
of the wide variety of criminal, or unauthorised acts which may be committed 
remotely from the target area, or country, as a result of internet 
technologies. With regard to the foregoing, this article will present and 
examine a dominant European international measure for combating Cybercrime - 
the European Convention on Cybercrime ('ECC') - and some EU complementary 
measures. Having done that, issues concerning the implementation of these 
international measures will be examined from the perspective of one of the new 
member states of the European Union - the Republic of Latvia - so as to comment 
on the relative effectiveness of the adopted measures in that country to limit, 
deter and punish Cybercrime following the lead of the ECC and the EU measures.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=971182

The Race By Robert Kuttner
By the usual indicators, daily newspapers are in a deepening downward spiral. 
... A far more hopeful picture is emerging for newspapers. In this scenario the 
mainstream press, though late to the party, figures out how to make serious 
money from the Internet, uses the Web to enrich traditional journalistic forms, 
and retains its professionalism—along with a readership that is part print, 
part Web. Newspapers stay alive as hybrids. The culture and civic mission of 
daily print journalism endure. Can that happen? Given the financial squeeze and 
the shortsightedness of many publishers and investors, will dailies be able to 
navigate such a transition without sacrificing standards of journalism? Or will 
cost-cutting owners so thoroughly gut the nation’s newsrooms that they collapse 
the distinction between the rest of the Internet and everything that makes 
newspapers uniquely valuable? Which newspapers are most likely to survive? And, 
while we are at it, why does the survival of
 newspapers matter? In an era when the Web explodes the monopoly of the print 
newspaper as authoritative assembler of the day’s news and invites readers to 
be both aggregators and originators of content, what remains distinctive about 
newspapers?
http://cjr.org/issues/2007/2/Kuttner.asp

Conflict, Terrorism and the Media in Asia by Rebekah L. Bina
The fourth and latest release in a series of publications on the impact of 
media and changes in societal culture in Asia, this book provides a study of 
the subnational conflicts across Asia and the global "War on Terror." The 
authors examine the condition of free press, access to media, and diversity in 
news reporting to explore how media is used as a tool to facilitate ideological 
coalition, shelter populations, and maintain political stability.
http://www.law.indiana.edu/fclj/pubs/v59/no2/13-Bina.pdf

What open access research can do for Wikipedia by John Willinsky
Abstract: This study examines the degree to which Wikipedia entries cite or 
reference research and scholarship, and whether that research and scholarship 
is generally available to readers. Working on the assumption that where 
Wikipedia provides links to research and scholarship that readers can readily 
consult, it increases the authority, reliability, and educational quality of 
this popular encyclopedia, this study examines Wikipedia’s use of open access 
research and scholarship, that is, peer-reviewed journal articles that have 
been made freely available online. This study demonstrates among a sample of 
100 Wikipedia entries, which included 168 sources or references, only two 
percent of the entries provided links to open access research and scholarship. 
However, it proved possible to locate, using Google Scholar and other search 
engines, relevant examples of open access work for 60 percent of a sub-set of 
20 Wikipedia entries. The results suggest that much more can be done
 to enrich and enhance this encyclopedia’s representation of the current state 
of knowledge. To assist in this process, the study provides a guide to help 
Wikipedia contributors locate and utilize open access research and scholarship 
in creating and editing encyclopedia entries.
http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue12_3/willinsky/index.html

The potential disruptive impact of Internet 2 based technologies by C. Pascu, 
D. Osimo, M. Ulbrich, G. Turlea and J.C. Burgelman
Abstract: This paper assesses the development of emerging computing 
applications that fall under the family of digital applications and 
technologies. These applications and technologies — Internet 2 based 
technologies for short — enable new ways of connectivity for networking, 
interfacing and producing content. They have the capacity and the force to 
disrupt existing social and economic relations and thus have major impacts on 
society. Hence, the term ‘e-ruptions’: emerging e-trends with potential 
disruptive power. This paper investigates the socio-economic impact of emerging 
e-ruptions, in an attempt to try and contextualise their implications and 
relevance for policy formulation.
http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue12_3/pascu/index.html

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CENSORSHIP
***********
Internet censorship, at home or state-run, is a political hot potato by Seth 
Finkelstein
Would you be surprised to hear US civil liberties groups arguing that internet 
censorship is cheap, easy, relatively effective and difficult to circumvent? 
While in reaction, the US government claimed that such efforts had an 
unacceptable amount of collateral damage? Yet that's what has been happening 
for more than a decade in litigation involving censoring the internet. While 
these arguments sometimes descend into a fog of statistics, the overall 
implications are important for public policy. In the UK, a different set of 
censorship issues has arisen with BT's Cleanfeed project, intended to block 
content that is illegal, as gathered by the Internet Watch Foundation.
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2044595,00.html

South Korea blocks foreign porn sites
South Korea said today that it will block foreign porn sites as it steps up its 
campaign against adult content on the internet.
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article1570670.ece
http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/biz/200703/kt2007032620151011900.htm
http://www.asiamedia.ucla.edu/article-eastasia.asp?parentid=66565

South Korea's Net Porn Problem
Instances of obscene material being posted to major Web sites has the 
government and Internet companies joining hands to fight back: Earlier this 
month, a porn video clip was posted and left for six hours on Yahoo Korea's Web 
site. Major portals Naver and Daum have also experienced similar problems in 
the past.
http://businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/mar2007/gb20070328_879359.htm

Beijing threatens jail for mobile porn (AP)
Beijing police are threatening jail and fines for people who transmit 
pornography via cellphones after merchants were caught selling such movies on 
phone memory chips, a report said Wednesday.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/techpolicy/2007-03-28-beijing-porn-ban_N.htm

Belarusian authorities restrict internet access
On March, 25 a number of Belarusian web-sites ucpb.org, svaboda.org, 
charter97.org, belhelcom.org, belaruspartisan.org, gazetaby.com and 
livejournal.com providing independent news and information were unavailable 
from 9.00 till 16.00 within the country borders.
http://e-belarus.org/news/200703261.html

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CHILD PROTECTION, FILTERING & CONTENT REGULATION
************************************************
Children’s Internet Protection Act: a good Combination of Internet Access and 
Protection for Children
In 2000, the United States Congress passed the Children"s Internet Protection 
Act (“CIPA”) with the following objective: to 'assist most schools and 
libraries in the US to obtain affordable telecommunications and Internet 
accesses provided that certain online protection measures are followed. The 
combination cannot not be wiser, discount internet access and 
telecommunications to schools and libraries, specially those serving 
underpriviledged areas, in exchange of online protective measures for children. 
This program is commonly known as ‘E-rate’ program and is found in CIPA, 
section 1711.
http://www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_portal_view.aspx?s=latestnews&id=1719

uk: Schools 'punish' bullying victims
Children should not be expelled from school for fighting back against bullies, 
MPs said yesterday. The Commons Education Select Committee expressed concern 
that some victims of bullying were being thrown out for retaliating. They said 
pupils should help decide how to punish playground bullies and called on 
ministers to tell schools not to exclude children who have been victims.
http://education.independent.co.uk/news/article2396013.ece

uk: School bullies targeting special needs children
MPs will tomorrow (27/3) demand more government action to combat bullying in 
schools in the wake of new evidence highlighting attacks on special needs 
children and minority groups. ... There were also claims of an increase in 
cyber-bullying, with pupils (including an increasing number of girls) 
text-messaging threats and abuse. A survey by psychologists has revealed 28 per 
cent of girls and 10 per cent of boys had been victims of cyber-bullying.
http://education.independent.co.uk/news/article2393314.ece

uk: Bullying: calls for national inquiry
A national inquiry into the scale of bullying should be undertaken by ministers 
because of fears that the problem is being downplayed by schools seeking to 
protect their reputations, a report demands today. New guidance is also needed 
to ensure that victims who dare to fight back are not suspended or expelled.
http://education.guardian.co.uk/pupilbehaviour/story/0,,2043694,00.html

uk: Pupils 'should penalise bullies'
Pupils should be able to suggest suitable punishments for bullies in their 
school, according to an MPs' report into bullying.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/education/6496725.stm

ca: Cyberbullying on the Rise: Kids Share Fears
Children who bully appear to have found a new platform to intimidate and taunt 
their peers and preliminary research from the University of Toronto indicates 
that cyber bullying is becoming more prevalent.
http://newswise.com/articles/view/528453/

ca: Schoolgirls bullied into stripping online (Reuters)
Bullies are no longer content to taunt their victims in the playground but are 
turning to cyberspace, according to Canadian researchers.
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/news/newswire.php/news/reuters/2007/03/28/technology/schoolgirls-bullied-into-stripping-online.html
http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,21467319%5e15306%5e%5enbv%5e15306,00.html
http://uk.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUKL2841434120070328

us: Chat rooms and Web sites are an open door for online predators
This is the third of a five-part series looking at the dangers that lurk on the 
Internet, and how parents, school officials, employers and others deal with the 
Web's various hazards:
http://newportdailynews.com/articles/2007/03/28/news/news1.txt

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CYBERCRIME, CYBERSECURITY AND PRIVACY
***************************************
E-mail users want more control of inboxes (Reuters)
Bombarded by spam, e-mail users are eager for tools like a "report fraud" 
button that would help weed out unwanted messages that litter inboxes, 
according to a survey by the Email Sender and Provider Coalition released on 
Tuesday.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKN2635299820070328

Call for blogging code of conduct
The support for a blogger hounded by death threats has intensified with some 
high profile web experts calling for a code of conduct in the blogosphere.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6502643.stm

Blog death threats spark debate
Prominent blogger Kathy Sierra has called on the blogosphere to combat the 
culture of abuse online. It follows a series of death threats which have forced 
her to cancel a public appearance and suspend her blog.\
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6499095.stm

uk: Many net users 'not safety-aware'
Fewer than half of the UK's 29m adult internet users believe they are 
responsible for protecting personal information online, a survey suggests.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6472723.stm

Survey says one in 10 is victim of online fraud (Reuters)
One in 10 Internet users fell victim to online fraud last year, losing an 
average of 875 pounds each, according to a survey on Monday.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKL2625108320070327

uk: SOCA: We are tackling e-crime
The Serious Organised Crime Agency has hit back at claims that it does not have 
the necessary remit or resources to tackle e-crime.
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/security/0,1000000189,39286506,00.htm

us: Supreme Court to Hear Online Pandering Case
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Monday to hear a case involving the overturned 
conviction of a Florida man for soliciting or offering online child 
pornography. The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the law includes protected 
free speech and is unconstitutional.
http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/3668146
http://news.bostonherald.com/national/view.bg?articleid=190956

us: Justices Agree to Revisit Child Pornography Laws
The Supreme Court agreed Monday to undertake its latest effort to define the 
permissible boundary between free speech and the government’s prohibition of 
child pornography.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/27/washington/27scotus.html
http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-na-porn27mar27,1,7983878.story
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003636699_webscotusporn26.html

us: MySpace files phishing and spam suit against Sanford Wallace
News Corporation's interactive media company MySpace said it has filed a 
lawsuit against spammer Sanford Wallace in the US District Court in Los Angeles.
http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2007/03/27/afx3554633.html
http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-fi-briefs27.6mar27,1,3560821.story
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/03/28/myspace_sues_spamford/

gh: Police Advocate for Laws to Combat Cyber Fraud
The absence of a cyber law in Ghana is frustrating the efforts of the Vetting 
Crime Intelligence Analysis, (VCIA) unit of the Ghana Police Service to 
fighting computer fraud and also to prosecute perpetrators of internet fraud.
http://allafrica.com/stories/200703260806.html

Saudi Arabia sets jail penalties for cybercrimes (Reuters)
Saudi Arabia said on Monday it will impose 1-year prison sentences and fines of 
500,000 riyals (68,000 pounds) for Internet hacking and misuse of mobile 
telephone cameras, such as taking unauthorised pictures.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKL2669502020070327

Webcam lets your face be your password
A Canadian company on Wednesday in the US announced a new camera that doubles 
as a security system that scans a face in three dimensions and a Webcam for 
online video.
http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/hardware/soa/Webcam_lets_your_face_be_your_password/0,130061702,339274571,00.htm

us: MySpace sues the ‘Spam King’ for $100m
Alleges violations of state, federal laws
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/3af660de-dcb2-11db-a21d-000b5df10621.html

How to crack the problem of internet password security
It's a good bet that if you have 20 online accounts, you don't have 20 
different passwords. In fact, according to a survey by Kaspersky Lab, most 
people (51% of us) only have between one and four passwords for 20 accounts. We 
are insecure. But recent developments mean we could be more secure in the near 
future.
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,2044606,00.html

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GOVERNMENT & PUBLIC POLICY
**************************
uk: Extreme Pornography - BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour discussion
The Government will introduce new measures to deal with extreme pornography 
this spring. It is currently illegal to produce or to distribute images of 
extreme sexual violence – but it is not against the law to possess them. The 
new Criminal Justice Bill will settle this anomaly and criminalise the 
possession of these images. How easy is it to define what constitutes extreme 
pornography? What do we actually know about the connections between looking at 
images of sexual violence and committing violent sexual offences? And, how easy 
will it be to police the downloading of images that are frequently accessed via 
the internet on sites owned abroad? Jenni talks to Clare McGlynn, Professor of 
Law at the University of Durham and Jim Gamble, Chief Executive of the Child 
Exploitation and Online Protection Centre about the proposed changes to the law.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/womanshour/03/2007_13_tue.shtml

Bloggers are not journalists, Lithuanian parliament
Bloggers are not journalists, and therefore do not have the rights and 
protections accorded to them, says the Lithuanian parliament.
http://www.ioltechnology.co.za/article_page.php?iSectionId=2891&iArticleId=3754044

*****
SPAM
*****
Spamming under the law of Poland
In Poland, some of the main legal aspects of e-commerce are regulated under the 
Act of July 18, 2002 on Providing Services by Electronic Means (the “E-Commerce 
Act.”) This Act also contains several provisions addressing the issue of 
unsolicited commercial communications, often referred to as spamming. Spamming 
under the law of Poland is regarded as an unfair competition practice.
http://www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_portal_view.aspx?s=articles&id=D62C5C4A-854C-49AB-80C0-F6C11BB9E441

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INTERNET & NEW TECHNOLOGY USE
*****************************
Poll contradicts concern over future of newspapers
Newspaper editors are overwhelmingly optimistic about their businesses, despite 
uncertainty about future business models, according to a new global poll of 
newsroom.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/3e18ed06-dcc9-11db-a21d-000b5df10621.html

au: Gaming, porn rife at work
One in seven Australian office workers has looked at online porn at work, and 
even more use office hours for online gambling, according to security company 
Websense. Since the start of last year, Websense has collected data from 52,000 
people in Australian organisations using its security risk-assessment service.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/03/26/1174761375431.html

Get real. The internet is not fantasy
Our columnist on cruelty, fraud, snooping and rudeness - online: Kevin Whitrick 
is dead. He killed himself. That is real. His last companions were the “insult” 
chat room frequenters on Paltalk, some of whom goaded him on, apparently 
shouting abuse over microphones or the screen, saying “F****** do it, get it 
round your neck, for f***’s sake do it properly”. In a similar case in Arizona, 
Brandon Vedas took poison to jeers of “Eat more!”.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/columnists/libby_purves/article1572434.ece

Active Home Internet Users by Country, February 2007
The number of active Internet home users dipped by 0.13 percent in February in 
the 10 countries tracked by Nielsen//NetRatings. Spain (-3.31 percent); the 
U.S. (-1.50 percent); and Germany (-0.96 percent) accounted for the dip in the 
number of active home users. The number of users was down 426,498 compared to 
January data.
http://clickz.com/showPage.html?page=3625342

***************
DIGITAL DIVIDE
***************
us: Latinos hurt by digital divide, report says
Twice a week after school, Juan Manuel Reyes-Hernandez spends time doing his 
homework and accessing games on a computer in the library at Parrish Middle 
School.
http://www.statesmanjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070328/NEWS/703280341

************
FILE SHARING
************
Napster lawsuits near resolution
Bertelsmann said Monday that it had settled the last lawsuit filed by a record 
company over the German media conglomerate's role in funding the original 
Napster electronic file-swapping service that was once the scourge of the music 
industry.
http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-fi-napster27mar27,1,3736811.story

The impact of the Grokster decision on file sharing
How will providers of file-sharing software operate after the United States 
Supreme Court decision in Grokster? What is the precedent set in the decision 
and has the file-sharing technology been rendered illegal? And what about 
Israel?
http://www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_portal_view.aspx?s=latestnews&id=1715

MySpace, Eisner in online video deal
MySpace, the social networking site owned by News Corp, has made its biggest 
push yet into providing its millions of members with original video content.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2153e480-dd8e-11db-8d42-000b5df10621.html

*********************************
COMMENT, MICROSOFT & DEVELOPMENTS
*********************************
Wikipedia braces itself for April Fools' Day
Jenny Kleeman: The online encyclopaedia anyone can edit has been the target of 
joke contributions since its launch in 2001, but April Fools' Day has proved an 
irresistible opportunity for internet pranksters, as well as normally 
trustworthy contributors inspired to let their hair down.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/g2/story/0,,2044243,00.html

Wikipedia rival takes to the web
Citizendium, a self-proclaimed "citizens' compendium" of general knowledge, 
works much like Wikipedia in that anyone can submit information. This community 
encyclopedia, however, requires users to register with their real names, and 
its articles are governed by an editorial board.
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/internet/0,1000000097,39286499,00.htm

Vista shifts 20 million copies
Microsoft claims Windows Vista is off to a fast start, having sold more than 20 
million copies since its 30 January consumer release. By comparison, in its 
first two months, Windows XP sold 17 million copies, Microsoft said.
http://news.zdnet.co.uk/software/0,1000000121,39286485,00.htm
http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,21454079%5E16123%5E%5Enbv%5E,00.html
http://www.channelregister.co.uk/2007/03/28/ms_vista_shipments_claims/

EU Gives Microsoft More Time to Correct 'Abuses'
European Union antitrust regulators have given Microsoft more time to prove it 
is complying with a requirement to fairly license its server software 
communications protocols. Microsoft now has until April 23 to respond to 
charges from the European Commission, which has said that Microsoft has yet to 
fully comply with a condition of its 2004 antitrust ruling.
http://ecommercetimes.com/story/56518.html

Yahoo Mail to offer unlimited storage
Yahoo will begin offering unlimited storage for its free Web-based e-mail in 
May, the company announced late Tuesday. The move makes Yahoo the first of the 
major free e-mail providers to offer unlimited storage, but it likely will not 
be the last.
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1040_22-6171111.html
http://news.com.com/2100-1038_3-6171111.html
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/03/29/1174761604346.html

Yahoo opens up e-mail APIs to outsiders
Yahoo is expected to release software that will allow third-party developers to 
write applications using Yahoo Mail.
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-6171378.html

Project Failure? Blame Poor Governance
Poor IT governance is one of the key causes of failure in big business 
transformation projects, according to the latest research. A report from 
analyst house the Butler Group found IT governance initiatives were usually 
deployed only within the IT department, leading to a lack of co-ordination 
between the IT-led elements of projects and the wider management of business 
transformation initiatives.
http://businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/mar2007/gb20070328_519010.htm

Putting The World's Books On The Web
Two years ago Google, the Internet search firm, began scanning hundreds of 
thousands of books and making their contents available on the Web. Could this 
signal the end of libraries as we know them?
http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,473529,00.html

uk: Google extends UK online ad lead
Google has increased its grip on the UK online ad market, claiming 43% of the 
record £2bn spent last year, according to figures from the Internet Advertising 
Bureau.
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,,2044577,00.html

*******************
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
*******************
nz: Editorial: It's payback time for Telecom
Over the years, Telecom's shareholders were well rewarded as the company took 
full advantage of its position as de facto regulator of the telecommunications 
industry. They prospered as Telecom employed formidable lobbying and legal 
haggling to preserve its status far beyond any reasonable expectation. The same 
could not be said for Telecom's customers. They fumed as the company's ageing 
equipment creaked. Telecom's approach, rational enough in the circumstances, 
was to minimise capital expenditure while maximising its returns to 
shareholders.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10431380

nz: Telecom urged to reinvest in broadband
Telecom is being urged to upgrade its network with the more than $2 billion it 
will get from the sale of its Yellow Pages Group.
http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/488120/1037735

Nokia: "Convergence" on the Future of Mobility (news release)
"Convergence" isn't just about technologies coming together. It's about a 
rapidly-consolidating playing field where companies "converge" to lead the 
future of business mobility.
http://www.nokia.com/A4136001?newsid=1114793
http://www.finanznachrichten.de/nachrichten-2007-03/artikel-7972130.asp

*****
VoIP
*****
Small biz loves VoIP
Right now 25 per cent of small businesses are using Voice over Internet 
Protocol to make calls. This is expected to almost double to 48 per cent by 
this time next year.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/03/28/smallbiz_voip/

**********************************
ARRESTS/COURT CASES FOR CHILD PORN
**********************************
au: Top school rocked by child porn allegations
One of the oldest private schools in rural Australia, The Armidale School, has 
been left reeling by allegations that one of its senior teachers has been 
engaged in internet child pornography.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/03/27/1174761471710.html

au: Man charged with grooming US boy
A 51-year-old man has been charged with grooming a teenage boy in the US for 
sex after allegedly sending him explicit photographs and messages over the 
internet. Child pornography was found among computers, DVDs, movie reels and 
documents siezed from the man's home in Orange, in central-west NSW, yesterday, 
police say.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/03/28/1174761511633.html

nz: Father jailed for posessing child porn
A 49-year-old Rotorua father has been jailed for four months for possessing and 
distributing child pornography.
http://home.nzcity.co.nz/news/default.aspx?id=71652

Polish police bust child porn ring (Reuters)
Polish police have detained 33 people in a sting operation against suspected 
users and dealers of Internet child pornography, officials say.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/03/27/poland.pornography.reut/
http://ecanadanow.com/world/2007/03/27/massive-online-child-pornography-ring-uncovered-in-poland/
http://www.ioltechnology.co.za/article_page.php?iSectionId=2885&iArticleId=3754064

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

(c) David Goldstein 2007

 
---------

David Goldstein
 address: 4/3 Abbott Street
           COOGEE NSW 2034
           AUSTRALIA
 email: Goldstein_David @yahoo.com.au
 phone: +61 418 228 605 (mobile); +61 2 9665 5773 (home)

"Every time you use fossil fuels, you're adding to the problem. Every time you 
forgo fossil fuels, you're being part of the solution" - Dr Tim Flannery



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