Don't forget to check out my website - http://technewsreview.com.au/ - for 
daily updates in between postings.


**********************************************************



Sponsored by the Singapore Internet Research Centre

Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

http://www.ntu.edu.sg/sci/sirc/



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US Congress To Google: Don't Sell Out To Censors
http://www.forbes.com/technology/2007/10/23/china-google-censorship-technology-security_cx_ag_1023chinahouse.html

U.S. panel endorses bill to stop online repression [Reuters]
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKN2335804120071023

Brutality on show as Burma lifts ban
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22624191-25837,00.html

Kazakhstan shuts down opposition Web sites [Reuters]
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKL2470624120071024

uk: How you can help to halt online child abuse
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article2726517.ece

Web giants aid child porn hotline
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7059290.stm

Making the internet safer [news release]
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/about-us/news/iwf-awareness

Industry giants join forces to back IWF Awareness Day [news release]
http://iwf.org.uk/media/news.212.htm

uk: Anti-cyberbullying programme launches
http://society.guardian.co.uk/children/story/0,,2197487,00.html

nz: Parents Face Real Bills for Virtual Real Estate
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/59973.html
http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/59973.html

Study: US Parents More Ambivalent About Net [AP]
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/25/1192941185885.html

us: NSA cooperation: OK for e-mail, IM companies?
http://www.news.com/2100-7348_3-6214609.html

uk: Government to police virtual worlds
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/gadgets_and_gaming/virtual_worlds/article2731497.ece

Mobile advertising: The next big thing
http://economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9912455

Newspapers down but definitely not out [Fortune]
http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/22/magazines/fortune/siklos_newspapers.fortune/index.htm

Australian whiz speeds up broadband by 200 times
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22639169-421,00.html

Comcast Traffic Jamming Heats Net Neutrality Debate [AP]
http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/ebiz/59914.html

Police shut down website after two-year music piracy inquiry
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/oct/24/piracy.crime

In Foray Into TV, Google Is to Track Ad Audiences
http://nytimes.com/2007/10/24/business/media/24adco.html

Microsoft Buys Stake in Facebook
http://nytimes.com/2007/10/25/technology/25facebook.html

China telecom sector eyes 4G technology
http://chinaknowledge.com/news/news-detail.aspx?id=11126


**********************
RESEARCH PAPERS
**********************
Parent and Teen Internet Use
Parents today are less likely to say that the internet has been a good thing 
for their children than they were in 2004. However, this does not mean there 
was a corresponding increase in the amount of parents who think the internet 
has been harmful to their children. Instead, the biggest increase has been in 
the amount of parents who do not think the internet has had an effect on their 
children one way or the other. Fully, 87% of parents of teenagers are online -- 
at least 17% more than average adults.
http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/225/report_display.asp

Broadband: What's All the Fuss About?
Today, with nearly half of all Americans having high-speed internet connections 
at home, online interactivity means something different for a lot of Americans 
than it did when it was mainly about email. Many-to-many communication is now 
buttressed by many-to-many participation in the online world through 
user-created media. Still, questions remain about the use of advanced 
communications networks. Among them: Why does access to a high-speed connection 
at home matter? The fuss about broadband extends beyond access to information 
to active participation in the online commons as people with shared interests 
or problems gather at various online forums to chat or collaborate.
http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/224/report_display.asp

Teens and Online Stranger Contact
Fully 32% of online teens have been contacted by someone with no connection to 
them or any of their friends, and 7% of online teens say they have felt scared 
or uncomfortable as a result of contact by an online stranger. Several 
behaviors are associated with high levels of online stranger contact, including 
social networking profile ownership, posting photos online and using social 
networking sites to flirt. Although several factors are linked with increased 
levels of stranger contact in general, gender is the only variable with a 
consistent association with contact that is scary or uncomfortable--girls are 
much more likely to report scary or uncomfortable contact than boys.
http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/223/report_display.asp

What Google Knows: Privacy and Internet Search Engines by Omer Tene [College of 
Management - School of Law]
Abstract: Search engines are the most important phenomenon on the Internet 
today and Google is the gold standard of search. Google evokes ambivalent 
feelings. It is adored for its ingenuity, simple, modest-looking interface and 
superb services offered at no (evident) cost. Yet increasingly, it is feared by 
privacy advocates who view it as a private sector big brother posing perhaps 
the biggest privacy problem of all times. Google is an informational gatekeeper 
harboring previously unimaginable riches of personal data. Billions of search 
queries stream across Google's servers each month, the aggregate thoughtstream 
of humankind, online. Google compiles individual search logs, containing 
information about users' fears and expectations, interests and passions, and 
ripe with information that is financial, medical, sexual, political, in short – 
personal in nature. How did Google evolve from being a benevolent giant seeking 
to do no evil into a privacy
 menace reviled by human rights advocates worldwide? Are the fears of Google's 
omniscient presence justified or overstated? What personal data should Google 
be allowed to retain and for how long? What rules should govern access to 
Google's database? What are the legal protections currently in place and are 
they sufficient to quell the emerging privacy crisis? These are the main issues 
addressed in this article.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=1021490

Google's Law by Greg Lastowka [Rutgers School of Law]
Abstract: Google has become, for the majority of Americans, the index of choice 
for online information. Through dynamically generated results pages keyed to a 
near-infinite variety of search terms, Google steers our thoughts and our 
learning online. It tells us what words mean, what things look like, where to 
buy things, and who and what is most important to us. Google's control over 
"results" constitutes an awesome ability to set the course of human knowledge. 
As this paper will explain, fortunes are won and lost based on Google's results 
pages, including the fortunes of Google itself. Because Google's results are so 
significant to e-commerce activities today, they have already been the subject 
of substantial litigation.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=1017536

Net Neutrality on the Internet: A Two-Sided Market Analysis by Nicholas 
Economides & Joacim Tåg [NYU Law and Economics Research Paper]
Abstract: We discuss the benefits of net neutrality regulation in the context 
of a two-sided market model in which platforms sell Internet access services to 
consumers and may set fees to content and applications providers "on the other 
side" of the Internet. When access is monopolized, we find that generally net 
neutrality regulation (that imposes zero fees "on the other side" of the 
market) increases total industry surplus compared to the fully private optimum 
at which the monopoly platform imposes positive fees on content and 
applications providers. Similarly, we find that imposing net neutrality in 
duopoly increases total surplus compared to duopoly competition between 
platforms that charge positive fees on content providers. We also discuss the 
incentives of duopolists to collude in setting the fees "on the other side" of 
the Internet while competing for Internet access customers. Additionally, we 
discuss how price and non-price discrimination
 strategies may be used once net neutrality is abolished. Finally, we discuss 
how the results generalize to other two-sided markets.
http://ssrn.com/abstract=1019121
net neutrality, two-sided markets, Internet, monopoly, duopoly, regulation, 
discrimination

**********************
CENSORSHIP
**********************
US Congress To Google: Don't Sell Out To Censors
For global tech companies like Google and Yahoo!, cooperating with repressive 
states like China has been a public relations nightmare. Now that ethical 
dilemma may be slowly widening into a legal morass. The House of 
Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs voted Tuesday to pass the Global 
Online Freedom Act, a bill designed to penalize U.S. companies up to $2 million 
if they cooperate with the technological surveillance of political dissidents 
or share technology and information used for "Internet-restricting" purposes.
http://www.forbes.com/technology/2007/10/23/china-google-censorship-technology-security_cx_ag_1023chinahouse.html

U.S. panel endorses bill to stop online repression [Reuters]
A key congressional panel endorsed legislation on Tuesday that would bar U.S. 
Internet companies from cooperating with authorities in China and other 
repressive regimes.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKN2335804120071023

Brutality on show as Burma lifts ban
Graphic digital photos of the Burmese regime's brutal crackdown on monks and 
democracy activists have started to appear in the West, after the junta 
restored access to the internet last week.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22624191-25837,00.html

Kazakhstan shuts down opposition Web sites [Reuters]
Kazakhstan has blocked access to a number of opposition Web sites in a move 
Internet users condemned on Wednesday as a crackdown on freedom of speech.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUKL2470624120071024
http://abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/10/24/2069572.htm
http://www.boston.com/news/world/asia/articles/2007/10/24/kazakhstan_shuts_down_opposition_web_sites/

Kazakhstan blocks opposition websites
Kazakhstan yesterday blocked access to several websites critical of the 
government, including the "main opposition outlets", kub.kz and geo.kz, Reuters 
reports.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/10/24/kazakh_websites_blocked/

How to Do It: Circumventing the Censors
Most Internet censorship regimes—including those in Burma, China, and North 
Korea—rely on list-based software that flags and then blocks access to certain 
keywords, domain names, and URL addresses. Such technology can be highly 
effective. But it is also possible for ordinary citizens to get around it using 
some simple techniques. Here’s how to do it.
http://foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4022

Daily reality of net censorship
Bill Thompson asks how far repressive regimes will go to control what their 
citizens do online. "The military regime in Burma has controlled access to the 
internet for many years, but when information about the recent protests 
appeared all over the web, from YouTube videos to personal testimony on blogs, 
the generals showed that there were other options available to them and 
effectively cut the country off from the worldwide network."
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7047592.stm

************************************************
CHILD PROTECTION, FILTERING & CONTENT REGULATION
************************************************
uk: How you can help to halt online child abuse
As many as one in twenty people stumble across child sexual abuse images while 
surfing the internet, with more than a third of all sites showing the most 
extreme images, according to a report published today. Three in ten of the 
victims appear to be aged under 6 – with 5 per cent apparently younger than 2, 
according to the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), which shuts down illegal 
internet content. More than three quarters of the children are girls.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article2726517.ece

Web giants aid child porn hotline
Top internet companies have joined forces to publicise a hotline to report 
online child pornography.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7059290.stm

Making the internet safer [news release]
The Internet Watch Foundation has made Wednesday 24 October IWF Awareness Day, 
to focus attention on issues of child safety on the internet. The Home Office 
supports the foundation's work to make the internet safer.
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/about-us/news/iwf-awareness

Industry giants join forces to back IWF Awareness Day [news release]
The UK’s major online brands are joining forces today to publicise the 
existence of the ‘Hotline’ operated by the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) so 
all UK internet users know what to do if they accidentally stumble across 
online images of children being sexually abused. The first national IWF 
Awareness Day, supported by the IWF’s members companies, is reaching out to the 
UK’s vast online population to make them aware that the IWF is dedicated to 
getting this abusive content removed.
http://iwf.org.uk/media/news.212.htm

uk: Anti-cyberbullying programme launches
A nationwide initiative teaching eight- to 11-year-olds about the dangers of 
cyberbullying on social networking websites launched today. The digital 
initiative, launched by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre, 
the national body given the task of tackling child sex abuse online, features a 
cybercafe that aims to teach children about internet safety.
http://society.guardian.co.uk/children/story/0,,2197487,00.html

nz: Parents Face Real Bills for Virtual Real Estate
Teenagers are using their parents' credit cards to buy thousands of dollars' 
worth of virtual property, including real estate, on Web sites such as Second 
Life. NetSafe chief executive Martin Cocker says parents are shocked because 
they don't realize it's possible to buy something that doesn't exist in the 
real world -- and they don't know how fast it's possible to spend. Members of 
sites such as Second Life create an animated persona called an "avatar," which 
can run, jump, fly, dance and express emotions. They can also build fantasy 
locations for socializing.
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/59973.html
http://www.linuxinsider.com/story/59973.html

au: Bullies who leave no bruises
The real dangers of the internet lie in what our children are doing to each 
other. "Imagine Chloe, 14, coming home from school ... Her bedroom door shuts 
and her parents don't see her until she is called downstairs for her evening 
meal. Like hundreds of thousands of parents across Australia, Chloe's parents 
are blissfully unaware of what is transpiring behind her door. They may assume 
that she is deeply absorbed in reading this year's set text for English or 
labouring over a hot computer in preparation for tomorrow's French test.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/10/25/1192941199459.html
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/25/1192941199459.html

Study: US Parents More Ambivalent About Net [AP]
Parents have become more ambivalent about the Internet, with a new study 
finding fewer of them considering it good for their children. The Pew Internet 
and American Life Project said Wednesday that about 59 percent of Americans 
with children ages 12-17 consider the Internet a positive influence on their 
kids. That is based on a 2006 survey, the latest available on the topic, and 
represents a drop from 67 percent in 2004.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/25/1192941185885.html
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/10/25/1192941185885.html
http://www.thestate.com/technology-wire/story/210015.html

**************************
ONLINE CRIME, SECURITY & LEGAL
**************************
au: Website pitch too good to be true
Local jobseekers are being targeted with seemingly genuine online job offers, 
backed by professional-looking corporate websites aimed at trapping 
unsuspecting mules, who then conduct illegal money transfers on behalf of 
criminals.
http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,22629039-24169,00.html

Russian Company Outed as Mother of all Cybercrime
A Russian company named the Russian Business Network, or RBN has been 
identified as a "Conduit for Cybercrime" by the Washington Post and blasted by 
the anti-spam organization Spamhaus for being " ...among the world's worst 
spammer, child-pornography, malware, phishing and cybercrime-hosting networks." 
The security vendor iDefense advises clients to block all traffic from RBN. 
Recently, the Bank of India was cyber-attacked, with much of the activity 
emanating from RBN servers. Yet, the company founder claims it is all just a 
case of mistaken identity.  Russian officials have shown no interest in 
shuttering this leviathan of Internet cyber-crime.
http://www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_portal_view.aspx?s=latestnews&id=1887

us: You and YouPorn are now free to make porn
In a major First Amendment victory, a federal court strikes down regulations 
covering anyone who produces adult images.
http://www.salon.com/tech/machinist/blog/2007/10/24/porn_law/

Russians behind attack PDFs, security researcher says
A notorious Russian hacker gang is responsible for ongoing attacks using 
malicious PDF documents, a researcher said Wednesday. Users can thank the 
Russian Business Network, a well-known collective of cybercriminals, for the 
malware-armed PDF attachments that began appearing in in-boxes Tuesday, said 
Ken Dunham, director of response for iSight Partners. If the rigged PDFs 
succeed in infecting the target Windows system, the attack code installs a pair 
of rootkit files that "sniff and steal financial and other valuable data," said 
Dunham via e-mail.
http://pcworld.idg.com.au/index.php/id;1535329574;fp;2;fpid;1

uk: Why was someone arrested over the TV Links website?
As reported in the Guardian, last Thursday a 26-year-old Cheltenham man was 
arrested and the site, tv-links.co.uk, was closed . According to the Gloucester 
police, the arrest was carried out for alleged violations of Section 92 of the 
Trade Marks Act.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/oct/25/piracy.intellectualproperty

uk: Student jailed for promoting terrorism
A British-born Muslim student was jailed for eight years today for distributing 
material that glorified terrorism and suicide bombing. Mohammed Atif Siddique, 
21, was found guilty last month of providing training material on bomb-making 
and of threatening to become a suicide bomber. Siddique was also convicted of 
distributing a range of terrorist material via the internet.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/terrorism/story/0,,2197529,00.html

How Big is the Storm Botnet? by John Levine
The Storm worm has gotten a lot of press this year, with a lot of the coverage 
tending toward the apocalyptic. There’s no question that it’s one of the most 
successful pieces of malware to date, but just how successful is it?
http://www.circleid.com/posts/7102410_how_big_is_storm_botnet/

**************************
GOVERNMENT & PUBLIC POLICY
**************************
au: Secrecy impedes informed discourse by Ken McKinnon, chairman of the 
Australian Press Council
The Prime Minister and the Opposition Leader need to do much more to remove 
impediments to the free flow of information to the public. It is not the media 
that John Howard's proposals and those of Kevin Rudd will have to satisfy. 
Citizens are entitled to know details of what the federal government claims to 
be doing in their name.
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22642863-7583,00.html

us: NSA cooperation: OK for e-mail, IM companies?
A new Senate bill would protect not only telephone companies from lawsuits 
claiming illegal cooperation with the National Security Agency. It would 
retroactively immunize e-mail providers, search engines, Internet service 
providers and instant-messaging services too.
http://www.news.com/2100-7348_3-6214609.html

uk: Government to police virtual worlds
The Government is to take a firmer hand in policing activities within virtual 
worlds such as Second Life, in an acknowledgement of their increasing 
popularity.
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/gadgets_and_gaming/virtual_worlds/article2731497.ece

UK anti file-sharing laws considered
The UK government could legislate to crack down on illegal file-sharers, a 
senior official has told the BBC's iPM programme. Lord Triesman, the 
parliamentary Under Secretary for Innovation, Universities and Skills, said 
intellectual property theft would not be tolerated.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7059881.stm

Italy proposes 'anti-blogger' law
Italian bloggers are protesting at a proposed law that would force them to 
register with the government in order to write a blog, even a personal one with 
no commercial purpose.
http://out-law.com/page-8570

U.S. government considers mandating Internet service providers to forward 
customers' e-mails [AP]
... There is no mandate in the U.S. governing e-mail forwarding, and industry 
officials say imposing one would be costly and unnecessary. But federal 
regulators are looking at the issue more closely following a complaint from a 
former America Online customer who claims an abrupt termination of service 
devastated her business.
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/10/24/1192941105018.html
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/24/1192941105018.html

Microsoft gives up three-year battle to keep Windows closed to rivals
Microsoft yesterday caved in to the European commission and agreed to comply 
with a landmark anti-trust ruling more than three years after it began a 
rearguard action against the decision and a record €497m (£347m) fine.
http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,2197106,00.html

Microsoft Is Yielding in European Antitrust Fight
The European competition commissioner, Neelie Kroes, negotiated the terms for 
Microsoft to share information with rivals.
http://nytimes.com/2007/10/23/technology/23soft.html

Why a Net Neutrality Law is Not Enough by David Isenberg
Once we decide that Network Neutrality is a good thing to (re)enshrine in law, 
then we need to ask how to do that effectively. One way would be to pass a law 
saying, “Thou shalt not discriminate.” That’s the current approach. But network 
operators will say that they must manage their network, and if, in the course 
of network management, they were to disadvantage some source, destination, 
application, service or content, they might be accused of violating the law.
http://www.circleid.com/posts/net_neutrality_law_not_enough/

Austria OKs terror snooping Trojan plan
Austria has become one of the first countries to officially sanction the use of 
Trojan Horse malware as a tactic for monitoring the PCs of suspected terrorists 
and criminals.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/10/23/teutonic_trojan/

**********************
INTERNET USE
**********************
Mobile advertising: The next big thing
Advertising on mobile phones is a tiny business. Last year spending on mobile 
ads was US$871m worldwide according to Informa Telecoms & Media, a research 
firm, compared with $24 billion spent on internet advertising and $450 billion 
spent on all advertising. But marketing wizards are beginning to talk about it 
with the sort of hyperbole they normally reserve for products they are paid to 
sell. It is destined, some say, to supplant not only internet advertising, the 
latest fad, but also television, radio, print and billboards, the four 
traditional pillars of the business.
http://economist.com/business/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9912455

uk: Shoppers predicted to spend £500 each online this Christmas
Shoppers are expected to spend more than £500 each online this Christmas as 
Britons turn from the cold and bustling high street to buy presents on the 
internet, leaving e-tailers celebrating a record year.
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article3090327.ece

Newspapers down but definitely not out [Fortune]
Last week could hardly have been grimmer for the newspaper industry. First off, 
Gannett and McClatchy - the two biggest newspapers publishers in the U.S., 
respectively - reported diminished revenues and profits. Meanwhile, following 
the lead of Belo, publisher of the Dallas Morning News, Scripps announced it 
was splitting its growing television and interactive businesses off from the 
company's newspaper business so that investors could get excited about the 
company's slumping stock price.
http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/22/magazines/fortune/siklos_newspapers.fortune/index.htm

Why I miss the dead-tree newspaper
I can skim the print version of the the New York Times in a half-hour. You 
can't do that online!
http://machinist.salon.com/feature/2007/10/24/newspapers/index.html

**********************
NEW TECHNOLOGIES
**********************
Australian whiz speeds up broadband by 200 times
A Melbourne PhD student has developed technology to make broadband internet up 
to 200 times faster without having to install expensive fibre optic cables. 
Harnessing the potential power of telephone lines and DSL broadband, the 
technology will deliver internet speeds up to 250 megabits per second, compared 
with current typical speeds of between one and 20 megabits per second.
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22639169-421,00.html

**********************
FILE SHARING
**********************
Comcast Traffic Jamming Heats Net Neutrality Debate [AP]
Comcast Corp. actively interferes with attempts by some of its high-speed 
Internet subscribers to share files online, a move that runs counter to the 
tradition of treating all types of Net traffic equally. The interference, which 
the Associated Press confirmed through nationwide tests, is the most drastic 
example yet of data discrimination by a U.S. Internet service provider. It 
involves company computers masquerading as those of its users.
http://www.ecommercetimes.com/story/ebiz/59914.html
http://www.thestate.com/technology-wire/story/205323.html
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2007/10/19/financial/f061526D54.DTL

Police shut down website after two-year music piracy inquiry
British police have closed down what they claim is one of the world's largest 
music piracy websites after a two-year pan-European operation. A series of 
raids in Middlesbrough and Amsterdam resulted in the arrest of a 24-year-old 
man and the closure of Oink, a private website that allowed users to locate and 
download music, movies and other files.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/oct/24/piracy.crime
http://www.ibls.com/internet_law_news_portal_view.aspx?s=latestnews&id=1891

Huge pirate music site shut down
British and Dutch police have shut down a "widely-used" source of 
illegally-downloaded music. A flat on Teesside and several properties in 
Amsterdam were raided as part of an Interpol investigation into the 
members-only website OiNK.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/tees/7057812.stm

British, Dutch Police Close Pirate Site [AP]
British and Dutch police shut down what they say is one the world's biggest 
online sources of pirated music Tuesday and arrested the website's 24-year-old 
suspected operator. The invitation-only OiNK website specialized in 
distributing albums leaked before their official release by record companies, 
the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry said.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/24/1192941088233.html
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/10/24/1192941088233.html

*********************************
COMMENT, MICROSOFT & DEVELOPMENTS
*********************************
How Apple Can Keep Its Value
With a market value of $162 billion, Apple is now the most valuable computer 
maker in the world, and it is the fourth most valuable technology company, 
after Microsoft, Google and Cisco. It will have to battle all of them to stay 
on top of the tech world.
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/10/23/how-apple-can-keep-its-value/

How the world learned to love Apple and its Macs
Apple produced a stunning set of financial results on Monday, with one big 
surprise. In a quarter that has been dominated by talk of the iPhone and new 
iPods, the Macintosh computers were the stars of the show. Apple sold 2.16m 
units, which is more than in any other quarter in its history.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2007/oct/25/it.apple

In Foray Into TV, Google Is to Track Ad Audiences
Google, which dominates the market for advertising on the Internet, seems to be 
hoping to do the same thing on television. The company is set to announce a 
partnership with the Nielsen Company, the voice of authority in measuring 
television audiences, that will give advertisers a more vivid and accurate 
snapshot than ever before of how many people are viewing commercials on a 
second-by-second basis, and who those people are.
http://nytimes.com/2007/10/24/business/media/24adco.html
http://iht.com/articles/2007/10/24/business/google.php

Microsoft Buys Stake in Facebook
Microsoft has won a high-profile technology industry battle with Google and 
Yahoo to invest in the social networking upstart Facebook. The two companies 
said on Wednesday that Microsoft would pay $240 million for a 1.6 percent stake 
in Facebook. The investment values Facebook, which is three and a half years 
old and will bring in about $150 million in revenue this year, at $15 billion. 
http://nytimes.com/2007/10/25/technology/25facebook.html

Microsoft Buys Facebook Stake for $240M [AP]
Rapidly rising Internet star Facebook Inc. has sold a 1.6 percent stake to 
Microsoft Corp. for $240 million, spurning a competing offer from online search 
leader Google Inc.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/24/AR2007102401910.html

Facebook picks Microsoft over Google for minority stake [IDG]
Facebook Inc. will sell a $240 million minority stake to Microsoft Corp., which 
as part of the deal will also expand the advertising services it provides to 
the social networking Web site, the companies said today.
http://computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9044001

**********************
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
**********************
au: How to cut the cord with the phone company
When an animal gnawed through the phone line under Di Keller's house, Optus 
fixed it but warned that any future repairs would cost her $100. "Basically the 
line wasn't installed to my satisfaction so I just got rid it," she says. 
Although Ms Keller represents only a small percentage of people who have chosen 
to dump their landline, she is far from being alone in her wish to cut the cord 
with her telephone operator.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/23/1192941047563.html
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2007/10/23/1192941047563.html

au: UN backs Govt's broadband plan
A United Nations telecommunications body has endorsed the broadband technology 
being offered as part of the federal Coalition's election campaign.
http://abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/10/25/2070306.htm

China telecom sector eyes 4G technology
China's telecom sector may adopt more advanced wireless technologies by 
restraining investments in third-generation (3G) services for mobile phones, 
and channel efforts into fourth generation (4G) services instead, according to 
ABN Amro Holdings NV.
http://chinaknowledge.com/news/news-detail.aspx?id=11126

ng: NCC holds workshop on numbering and convergence
THE Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) in collaboration with the 
International Telecommunications Union (ITU) is organizing a four-day workshop 
on Numbering and Convergence from 22nd to 25th October 2007 at the Sheraton 
Hotel Ikeja, Lagos . Registration is between 7a.m – 8.45am daily, while the 
Workshop starts 9a.m. prompt.
http://tribune.com.ng/24102007/infosys2.html

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

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Sources include Quicklinks <http://qlinks.net/> and BNA Internet Law News 
<http://www.bna.com/ilaw/>.

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

(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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