Category: News

  • Viewsonic’s new energy efficient, space-saving mini-PC

    ViewSonic's new VOT125 mini-PC is being offered with four Intel ultra-low-voltage processo...

    ViewSonic has announced U.S. availability for its new handy VOT125 mini-PC. Coming with a quartet of ultra-low-voltage processor options from Intel to help cut down on power draw and benefiting from Windows 7 Home Premium, its petite dimensions may well see the unit being squeezed into the tightest nook of limited home and office space…
    Continue Reading Viewsonic’s new energy efficient, space-saving mini-PC

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  • Cleantech Is Where Most of The VC Dollars Are Heading These Days

    PeHUB, today released a Top 10 ranking of this year’s largest venture capital deals, so far. And, not surprisingly, half of the 10 deals listed involved cleantech companies. Better Place, the battery service provider, leads the ranking with $150 million raised. Electric automobile maker Codax Automotive takes third place with $158 million raised in equity funding. Solar developer BrightSource Energy took in $150 million, enough to put the California solar developer in fourth place (we reported on the raise this morning). Number five is PV panel maker Amonix raised $129.4 million in a second round of funding. In eighth position is electric car maker Fisker Automotive with $115.3 million in new VC funding this year — see here for the full ranking.

    Will VC continue to be as generous if Congress passes legislation that would effectively double the taxes on the profits from their investments  — also known as carried interests. In a press statement The National Venture Capital Association said the House legislation could  push VCs to take fewer risks and curtail “incentive for venture investors to work with entrepreneurs.”  Despite hard lobbying by the venture and private equity industry, which obviously wants to be to be excluded from the tax increase, the House could vote on the bill as early as tomorrow, reports DealBreaker.

  • Paul Ryan and free-market populism

    Over at RealClearPolitics, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin further fleshes out the emerging “free-market populism” meme beginning to emerge in the GOP:

    From an ideological perspective, big government can combine with big business to advance a more progressivist society. For self-described “progressives,” the agenda is straightforward: expand government; co-opt big business; direct the capital markets from Washington to pursue “social justice.” Think Fannie and Freddie by much higher orders of magnitude.

    Over the past decade, the thinking has been much less clear for conservatives. Being “pro-market” has been fundamentally confused with “pro-business.” Conservatives who came to Congress to defend and promote free enterprise have often been led to believe that pathway lies in bolstering established firms as they navigate the maze of government regulations and taxes. These instincts are correct, but the implementation is often flawed. All too often, the results of these efforts have been to exacerbate crony capitalism – erecting barriers to entry against potential competitors to firms that are currently on top.

    For their part, companies seeking such protection have a right to pursue their narrow self-interest; but when these actions involve reducing open competition and transparency for short term gain, they do so to the detriment of the very free enterprise system that made their success possible.

    Me: I can see this manifesting in a number of ways, from attacks on corporate welfare to more explicit calls to diffuse financial power. And it would seem to be in the sweet spot of folks like Marco Rubio, Rand Paul and Pat Toomey. This is also a group that would be willing to call for radical change in the U.S. entitlement system.

  • TED Spread Continues To Blow Out

    Not altogether surprising, but the TED spread, a major of bank confidence (technically LIBOR over risk-free) continues to widen.

    It’s up about 4.3% today to 33.

    chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • End of scrapping incentives in Germany hits Opel sales

    2010 Opel CorsaGeneral Motors Co. is feeling the impact of scrapping incentives in Germany, with sales of Opel suffering in its home market while its overall car sales in Europe dwindle as well.

    New-car sales for Opel fell 55% to 17,207 units in April, a 36% drop to 68,301 registrations during the past four months, Germany’s Federal Motor Transport Authority (KBA) reveals. Meanwhile, the overall market fell 32% in April and dropped 26% for the first four months of the year. Another factor that led to the 19% drop in April for European new-car sales at Opel and Vauxhall was the trouble in Germany. From January to April 2010, Opel/Vauxhall’s European sales dropped by 4% to 340,888 registrations, according to industry association ACEA. If the drop in sales of GM unit Chevrolet is included, the total European volume at GM’s three-brand group decreased by 19% to 95,706 registrations last month. And for the first four months of the year, there was a 5% drop to 403,953 units. Opel’s sales in Germany fell due to the uncertainty on whether it will be able to receive German state aid to help fund its recovery.

    [via autonews – sub. required]

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Talkin’ Palm – Edition 41

    This week, with the arrival of the Palm Pre Plus at AT&T, webOS is now an option at all three of the major US mobile carriers (joining Sprint and Verizon Wireless).  Topics of discussion since the last edition include reviews of the AT&T Pre Plus, the mystery outage that hit the Palm App Catalog on Saturday, HP’s earnings, the pending arrival of the Pre Plus/Pixi Plus at O2 in the UK and the Pixi Plus at AT&T. Also, there was a Pre sighting… on Survivor (!?). So let’s talk Palm!

    read more

  • Perez Hilton Offered $20 Million To Sell Website

    Two professional celeb-gawkers and want to make Perez Hilton $20 million richer.

    The acid-tongued celebrity snitch has been offered the astounding eight-figure deal to part ways with the website that made him more famous than some of the Hollywood notables he regularly torments.

    Perez, who also manages a style-centered website and record label, received the offer from Canadian blogger Zack Taylor and TheDirty.com’s head editor Nik Richie earlier this month. The blogging duo has joined forces with Avid Life Media, which owns websites such as HotorNot.com and AshleyMadison.com — the world’s leading cheater’s dating service, in hopes of taking over at PerezHilton.com, Gawker reported Thursday.

    According to the May 14 offer letter, the buyers would keep PerezHilton.com going with Zack and Nik taking over daily operations. He would be paid $18 million up front and another $2 million to be put into escrow.

    Perez — who reportedly charges advertisers $4,000 per week to run ads on his famous blog — has yet to respond to the offer. A year ago, 24/7 Wall Street estimated PerezHilton.com’s value at $32 million.


  • MocoSpace Launches Its Very First Smartphone App


    Mocospace Logo

    MocoSpace has been able to build a mobile social network of more than 11 million registered users without building an application or targeting smartphone users.

    But now it has released an application for the Android platform, and soon iPhone, that is focused on some of the site’s more popular features, including sharing photos and messaging other members in chat rooms.

    The applications represent a shift in strategy for the company that to date has mostly been access by users through browsers on low-end handsets. A recent survey of its own members found that even its users are beginning to purchase smartphones. It said that the number of Android users accessing MocoSpace’s mobile Web site spiked by 40 percent over the past six months and is growing faster than iPhone or Blackberry.

    For now, the application is fairly basic. They’ll enable users to chat, upload photos, find new friends and receive message notifications, but if you want to view a profile, it will direct you to the browser. According to the Android Market, the application has already been downloaded between 10,000 and 50,000 times, and has received 200 ratings. Users have rated it four of five stars.

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  • NEVs: They May be Small, Low-Speed Electric Cars, but They Raise Big Safety Concerns

    Neighborhood Electric Vehicles (NEVs) have been touted as a low-cost way to quickly electrify much of the daily driving that people do. They typically don’t go faster than 35 mph and are increasingly showing up in cities as a way to make short commutes and run errands in a fuel-less and environmentally beneficial way.

    But after a series of crash tests that the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) conducted on a few popular models of them, including Chrysler’s GEM brand, the consumer watchdog group is making stern warnings that NEVs have very few safety features and could easily lead to fatalities in even moderate accidents at medium speeds.

    (more…)

  • Blumenthal and the Harvard swim team

    In addition to serious revelations that Richard Blumenthal misrepresented his military service, there is also the matter of his role on the Harvard University swim team.

    Two profiles of Blumenthal, one that appeared in Slate magazine in 2000 and a second in the Courant’s Northeast magazine in 2004, both state — incorrectly — that Blumenthal was captain of the team. The inaccuracies were mentioned in this week’s New York Times article on Blumenthal’s misleading and false statements about his military service.

    Blumenthal told the Times that he “did not provide the information to reporters, was unsure how it got into circulation and was ‘astonished’ when he saw it in print.”

    The Times story says that “[r]ecords at the college show that he was never on the team.” 

    But Waterbury native Peter Alter, who was the captain of the Harvard swim team in 1968, the year after Blumenthal graduated, told the Courant this morning that Blumenthal was on the team.

    He was a freestyler and “was actually a pretty good one,” said Alter, now a lawyer in Glastonbury who still on occasion talks to Blumenthal.

    The Yankee Institute for Public Policy, a conservative think-tank based in Hartford, unearthed a trove of photographs from Harvard that show Blumenthal was at least associated with the team.

    A photo from the 1964 Harvard College yearbook, posted on the Yankee Institute’s Facebook page, shows Blumenthal participating in a Harvard swim meet his freshman year. “However, if Blumenthal was on the Harvard swim team, he is not included in the team’s group yearbook photo that year,” Yankee’s executive director Fergus Cullen noted in an email.

    Blumenthal campaign manager Mindy Myers said it is her understanding that Blumenthal was a member of the freshman swim team at Harvard.

    The captain of the swim team in 1967, Blumenthal’s senior year, was James Seubold, who is now a doctor in the Chicago area. He could not be reached for comment.

    Alter, who was a diver and only the second diver in school history to be named captain, said it is a “big deal to be named captain” of any Harvard sports team.

    Alter said he talked to Blumenthal a few years ago, when both of them were at a function. The two men joked about the inaccurate references to Blumenthal being the team captain. The attorney general told Alter “he had no idea where it came from.”

    “He said he had tried to figure out where it had started and that he had never claimed to have been the captain,” Alter said.

     

    Blumenthal yearbook

    1967 Harvard yearbook entry, via Yankee Institute for Public Policy        

     

     

     

    One possible source: A March, 1980 profile in the Courant, written when Blumenthal was U.S. Attorney.

    “Blumenthal, a bachelor, now usually does Connecticut work during nights in Washington and on Saturday and Sunday trips to his office in Bridgeport,” the article states. “A one-time marathon runner and former captain of the Harvard swimming team, he still tries to run or swim daily.”

    A July, 1978 article in the Courant describes Blumenthal as “the blond, blue-eyed, sun-tanned 6-footer, a former captain of the Harvard swimming team.”

    And 1969 Life magazine profile of Blumenthal begins like this: “Dick Blumenthal is 23 and at the center of the world. He lives there hungrily, bearing that special guilt of affluent postwar youth, a Harvard magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, 100-yard freestyler in 51.0, square jaw, burning eyes, mannered and muted.”

    From there, the swim team detail found its way into both the Slate piece and the Courant magazine story. David Plotz, the author of the Slate article, told NPR media critic David Folkenflik that he never spoke to Blumenthal.

    “It’s definitely not from him telling me that he was captain of the swim team, nor his people,” Plotz told Folkenflik. Plotz added that he relied on earlier media coverage.

    Former Courant staff writer Beth Hamilton, author of the Courant magazine story, said that, without looking at her notes or the tapes of the extensive interviews she conducted with Blumenthal in 2003, she has no way of knowing for sure whether Blumenthal gave her the information, or whether he confirmed it.

    “I looked in the Courant files and read the Slate article,” Hamilton said. “If it was in our paper, I probably I would have felt comfortable with it.”

     

  • A ‘new’ GOP on its way?

    So says Mr. Lawrence Kudlow:

    A new tea party center is forming in the Republican Senate caucus. It will be the first Reagan nucleus in many years, one that will give the GOP a strong limited-government, cut-spending, low-tax-rate, stop-government-controls, and end-Bailout Nation message that will have clarity and gusto and will reverberate throughout the country.

    Here’s how it’s going to work: Rand Paul will grab the Senate seat in Kentucky. Marco Rubio will take Florida. Mike Lee will win in Utah. Pat Toomey will finally prevail in Pennsylvania. And Carly Fiorina will knock off Barbara Boxer in California.

    Yup. That’s how I see it. And this new tea-party Senate nucleus will join free-market stalwarts like Jim DeMint, Tom Coburn, Jon Kyl, Richard Shelby, Jeff Sessions, and John Thune. I’m probably leaving somebody out in the Senate, and I apologize in advance. But that’s what I’m thinking. It’s a pity Judd Gregg is retiring; he could be part of that group also.

    This will be a reformist nucleus, tackling spending, taxes, and even monetary and currency policy. It will unabashedly propose free-market reforms to replace the Obama welfare state and to finally curb the avalanche of debt creation.

  • Court Says File Extensions Not Eligible For Trademarks… Sorta

    JohnForDummies points us to the news that the latest attempt to stretch trademark law to ridiculous levels has been sorta maybe rejected — though it appears to still be open for abuse. The case involved Autodesk and a competitor, Dassault Systemes Solidworks Corporation, who had released some software that was compatible with Autodesk’s .dwg files used in AutoCAD. Dassault had apparently reverse engineered the file type (which, by itself, is perfectly legal). Some of Dassault’s products (under the Solidworks brand) used “DWG” in the name, and Autodesk, overprotective as always, sued — claiming that the use of DWG in product names infringed. What happened then goes back and forth a bit, but ends up with a court telling Autodesk that file extension names should not be considered trademarkable:


    The court found that ownership of file extension designations cannot be appropriated under the Lanham Act — file extensions are inherently functional, and functional uses cannot be trade-marked. It stated that computer programmers and computer users should be free to designate file extensions as they see fit, without the fear of infringing trade-marks.

    The motions judge further opined that the purpose of the Lanham Act is to target unauthorized use of a trade-mark “in connection with a commercial transaction in which the trade-mark is being used to confuse potential consumers.” In contrast, the purpose of file extensions is to indicate to a computer the type of file that is being handled. The court noted that “a computer is not a consumer,” and its recognition of a file extension is not “in connection with a commercial transaction.” In other words, the computer does not concern itself with the question of who made the file format. Therefore, whether on the grounds that a file extension connotes a “functional use” or a “non-trade-mark use,” the court held that a file extension per se is not protectable under US trade-mark law.

    In its decision, the court did recognize that computer users may associate a particular file extension with a specific vendor or manufacturer. However, the court found this association only incidental to the primary function of file extensions, namely to identify a file or file type.

    Of course, it’s not all good news. The court did suggest that Autodesk could have gotten away with this by disavowing any use of the mark in functional areas, but had limited it to just product names and such. Autodesk pushed back on this a bit, which resulted in the ruling above. And, actually, the transcript from this part of the court discussion is priceless:


    THE COURT: I want — you’re skating by something that’s very important to me. So I want to get a clear answer. All right?
    Will you disavow, from here to eternity and for the rest of the universe, that the world has a right to use .dwg as a file extension, and you’re not going to try to assert, here or anywhere else, that that use as a file extension violates any law?

    MR. SABRI: Your Honor, it may be the case it violates patent law. We’re not addressing that today. I will state —

    THE COURT: You will be in trouble if you don’t give me — listen. If you are trying to monopolize .dwg, you and your company are in big trouble.

    MR. SABRI: We absolutely are not, your Honor.

    THE COURT: Well, then disavow it.

    MR. SABRI: Autodesk cannot —

    THE COURT: You’re not disavowing it?

    MR. SABRI: I am disavowing it, your Honor. Autodesk cannot state claims against functional uses of .dwg, and the distinction between a word mark DWG and the functional uses I believe will be very clear by this presentation.

    THE COURT: I want to hear you say we disavow it.

    MR. SABRI: We disavow any claims against functional uses of the .dwg, your Honor.

    THE COURT: Thank you.

    But, still, all is not well. Before the case actually went to trial, Autodesk and Dassault “settled,” with part of the settlement being that Dassault agreed that Autodesk had a legitimate trademark on DWG (of course, Dassault isn’t the USPTO or a court, so Dassault’s agreement on that point is somewhat meaningless). Also, the article notes that our neighbors up in Canada just allowed Autodesk to register a trademark on DWG. So despite the court’s clear concern about Autodesk trying to monopolize DWG, don’t be surprised if it keeps trying…

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  • Rep. Arthur O’Neill Running For Attorney General; Thursday Announcement Before Saturday is Not Last Minute

    oneil187.jpg

    In another twist on the state’s political rollercoaster ride, state Rep. Arthur O’Neill said Thursday afternoon that he is running for attorney general – slightly more than 24 hours before the state Republican convention opens on Friday night.

    O’Neill is working to gather support from delegates before the convention votes on the attorney general nomination Saturday at the Connecticut Convention Center in Hartford.

    When asked why he waited until Thursday to make the announcement, O’Neill said, “I didn’t want to wait for the last possible minute.”

    That last minute would have been Friday at midnight, he said.

    O’Neill made his decision after the shockingly quick ruling this week by the State Supreme Court that Democratic front runner Susan Bysiewicz is not eligible to run for attorney general because she lacks the necessary 10 years of active practice of the law.

    With Bysiewicz out of the race, Republican attorney Ross Garber – her brother-in-law – jumped in on Wednesday. Now, O’Neill has made the same decision. 

    O’Neill described Bysiewicz as “a Democrat with a huge warchest and very high name recogntion” – two things that he does not have at the moment. He also described her as “essentially unbeatable unless you were an independently wealthy individual who could afford to spend several million dollars of your own money” because she had already raised a large amount of money.

    “This is an opportunity to take a run at this office,” O’Neill said during his announcement at the state Capitol press room on Thursday afternoon.

    O’Neill’s announcement is the latest twist in the most interesting year in Connecticut politics in decades.

    There has never been as many open seats in decades – with contests for U.S. Senator, governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, comptroller, and secretary of the state at the moment.

    Incumbent Denise Nappier of Hartford is running for re-election as the state treasurer. All of the other constitutional offices are open as Comptroller Nancy Wyman is running for lieutenant governor and U.S. Sen. Christopher J. Dodd and Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell are not seeking re-election.

    It is still unclear which position Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz will run for. Some expect her to run for comptroller.

    “This is by far the craziest convention on the Democratic side. The Yankees do less trades than what we’re doing now,” said state Rep. Stephen Dargan, a veteran West Haven Democrat who has served for two decades at the state Capitol. “Lembo was running for lieutenant governor. Now, he’s running for comptroller. Glassman was running for governor and runs now with Lamont. Bysiewicz was running for governor. Jarjura was running for governor. Now he’s running for comptroller. Secretary of the State – everybody pretty much stayed the same way there. The only one who is staying is Denise Nappier, our treasurer. … Saturday should be fun. If you’re a political junkie, you won’t be bored this weekend in Hartford.”

    He added, “It’s easier to handicap the horses than it is to handicap this convention.”

  • Quick Update – SageTV 7 Beta Available for Download

    You saw the preview of SageTV’s new version – SageTV 7 yesterday.  Now you can download SageTV 7 and try it out for yourself.

    From SageTV Forums:

    Version 7 Public Beta Has Begun!


    It’s that time again to start the public beta process for a new version of SageTV.

    We’ve been pretty busy over here for awhile and have a bunch of new things in V7 of SageTV. Let’s start of with the list of the major new features for V7 of SageTV.

    Get the complete changelog and download at SageTV Forums

    Stay tuned for a complete walkthrough of the new UI, features and add-ons here at GeekTonic coming soon.


  • MSI offers BIOS-free Windows core unlocking software

    MSI has announced the development of a Windows-based software tool to unlock processor cor...

    MSI has announced the launch of a Windows-based software tool that puts an end to all that bothersome fiddling around in the BIOS to enable inactive processor cores. The tool lists available cores, and with a few simple clicks on the basic interface and a reboot, a user is able to unleash previously disabled ones…
    Continue Reading MSI offers BIOS-free Windows core unlocking software

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  • Froyo is now officially Android 2.2 (Highlights)

    In a move that shocked not a single person anywhere in the known galaxy; Google has officially announced Froyo at Google I/O.

    No word yet on whose getting it (the Nexus One being the only safe bet) and the when is identified only as “in the coming weeks”, but we do now have the actual features of Froyo and while it may not cover every last bit of everyone’s wish list I think it certainly addresses quite a few of the concerns that were out there.

    Lets take a quick look at some of the highlights:

    Speed/Performance
    This was the first point mentioned during the announcement and it is a big one. You’ll recall that we already caught wind of this last week when a leaked build of 2.2 revealed a 5x performance boost on the Nexus One. Officially Google is citing a 2-5x boost on all devices running 2.2 with the Dalvik just-in-time (JIT) compiler. The other notable speed enhancement was to the browser which got a helping hand from the V8 engine used on Chrome and will reportedly see a 2-3x performance increase making it “the world’s fastest mobile browser.” They demoed the Nexus One browser blowing the doors off the iPad on stage.

    Flash Support
    It’s Flash on your mobile device. Early reports indicate that the experience on interactive elements and video that isn’t optimized for mobile can get a little choppy, but hopefully that will get refined over time and at least you are actually seeing the whole web as opposed to just the parts that someone else wants you to see.

    Exchange Support
    This is definitely a significant step for Android as a platform as lack of Exchange support has been holding Android back from Enterprise adoption. Without delving too deeply into the specifics they added:

    • Improved security through numeric and alpha-numeric password options
    • Remote wipe
    • Exchange Calendar support
    • Easy setup with Exchange 2007 or greater through auto-discovery
    • Global address lists look-up in email provides auto-completion in Email

    Tethering and Portable Hotspot
    This is another feature that was outed last week. For those that don’t know; this allows you to share your 3G or 4G connection with other devices either by USB cable or by turning your phone into a wifi hotspot. Obviously people having been making use of this function either by rooting their phone or just through the use of an application for quite awhile now, but having it built-in can’t hurt. The only device they are citing at the moment is the Nexus One so the mystery of who else is going to see this option and which carriers are going to be charging extra for it (once devices receive 2.2 that is) remains.

    App Storage on SD
    Again this is something the root community has been enjoying for many moons now, but it is finally coming to the OS proper. Much as it sounds this will allow you to install and run applications directly from your SD card, which will free you and developers from the 256/512 mb bonds that were found on most Android phones. You will be able to either choose where you want each app to install yourself or you can let the system decide itself based on the app.

    Update All and Auto-update
    This probably shouldn’t qualify as a major change, but it makes a huge difference as it is simply a pain to go through and click 3 times to update each app. There will now be an “update all” button at the bottom of your “Downloads” screen and if even that sounds like a pain then you can just set it to automatically update any app that says it has an update available.

    Those are the major headlining features; which one are you most looking forward to and is there anything missing that you have liked to see this time around?

  • Delegate math doesn’t add up for Mark Greenberg; plans to petition for a primary instead

    The wealthy Litchfield County businessman and Republican candidate for Congress from the 5th District has decided not to seek the party’s support at tomorrow’s nominating convention.

    Instead, he’ll continue his efforts to petition for an August primary.

    “I have said from the beginning that I would take my message directly to the 92,000 people of the 5th District,” Greenberg said in an email. “The decision to represent  ‘We the People’ in Congress is too important to leave in the hands of 330 delegates to a Convention. We should let 92,000 voters make that decision, not 330 political insiders.”

    Greenberg, who is fighting Republicans Justin Bernier, Sam Caligiuri and Bill Evans for the right to take on incumbent Chris Murphy in November, is staking a position as a political outsider.

    “My Republican opponents are individuals who have made government their careers – one as a career elected politician and the other as a government bureaucratic staffer.  Whichever candidate emerges victorious from the Convention, will be a career politician,” Greenberg said. “I am not a career politician.  My career has been in the business world – not the political world – and that gives me the “real world” perspective that my opponents lack.    I pledge that I will put the people’s interests first and bring real change – and basic, common-sense business practices to Washington.”



     

     

     

     

  • Dear Google: Even If There Is No Harm, You Fouled Up on Privacy

    The controversy over Google’s collection of personal data via its Street View photo-taking program continues to grow, but the company appears reluctant to acknowledge the full importance of the lapse, saying no harm was done. Although co-founder Sergey Brin has admitted Google “screwed up,” CEO Eric Schmidt said at the Zeitgeist conference in the UK that no one was harmed by the incident, and as such, “No harm, no foul.” Others, however, clearly disagree. The company is facing a class-action lawsuit in Washington and Oregon, two legislators in Washington, D.C. in a letter to the Federal Trade Commission have raised the issue of whether Google’s behavior was illegal, a consumer advocacy group has also complained to the FTC and Germany has begun a criminal investigation.

    Google recently admitted that its Street View cars had been collecting data from public Wi-Fi networks — then later admitted that, contrary to its initial statements, such data may have included personal information such as the content of emails and other communications. It also said the data was collected accidentally, and that none of it was ever released or used by anyone. Google has since stopped collecting data from Wi-Fi networks, and says it’s consulting with government and policy groups on the best way to get rid of the information so that users and consumer groups will be satisfied it does so properly.

    That said, however, the company maintains that the issue was a simple oversight, and nothing worth getting concerned about. And this isn’t the first time Google has played down complaints about its behavior on privacy. After Buzz was launched and a number of users criticized the company for connecting them with all their email contacts whether they wanted to be connected or not — subsequently publicizing those connections without making it clear they would be public — Google CEO Eric Schmidt told attendees of one conference that the issue was blown out of proportion, that there was no harm caused and that the situation was primarily a result of users misunderstanding the service.

    Yet the criticisms aimed at Google have continued. Privacy authorities from 10 countries, led by the Canadian Privacy Commissioner, sent a strongly worded letter to the company last month about its privacy practices. The group said that Google too often had “failed to take adequate account of privacy considerations when launching new services,” and that it needed to build privacy safeguards and controls directly into new products as they were being designed, rather than trying to apply them later.

    In addition to the letter from the two U.S. legislators about the Street View data collection, the advocacy group Consumer Watchdog has sent a letter to the FTC asking it to investigate Google’s practices. The group also launched a site called Inside Google to call attention to what it believes are the company’s failings in various areas, including privacy. As the growing furor over Facebook and its approach to privacy has shown, there is mounting concern about social networks and web companies, what kinds of data they’re collecting and how they’re using it. And yet, like a drunk driver who maintains he did no harm because no one was hurt, Google continues to downplay the importance of what was a serious breach of personal privacy.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d): Why New Net Companies Must Shoulder More Responsibility

    Post and thumbnail photos courtesy of Flickr user Blyzz

  • Get Your Money Back!

    You might be one of those who are entitled to some unclaimed money.  The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) may help you to get your unclaimed money in your name. The website was featured on The Early Show last week which showed over $33 million dollars in unclaimed American money. Two websites were given last week to check if you’re one of them. For those who were unable to see the original segment, the two websites are Missingmoney.com and Unclaimed.org. These are very helpful websites that are linked up to the state treasury departments that track unclaimed cash across the country. Examples of unclaimed money may be old bank accounts that you may have forgotten, stock dividends, annuities, customer overpayments, insurance refunds and more.

    The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (pbgc.gov) is a federal corporation which was created under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974. They currently guarantee payment of basic pension benefits earned by 44 million American workers and retirees who are participating in over 29,000 private-sector defined benefit pension plans. There are no funds received by the agency from general tax revenues.

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  • Sony Sets the New Metric For Success [Blockquote]

    Following today’s Google I/O keynote, Sony CEO Howard Stringer mentioned that Sony’s Android device was dominating the iPhone in Japan. When Eric Schmidt reminded him that “Google doesn’t dominate,” Stringer responded with this, some weird opposite of a backhanded compliment. More »