Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Head Of Communications Sean Garrett Leaves Twitter

Twitter Head of Communications Sean Garrett (@SG) has just announced that he’s leaving Twitter in a series of tweets — of course. When asked to confirm his departure, Twitter Communications representative Carolyn Penner said, “I think his tweets speak for themselves…”

Garrett also cryptically posted the Pavement song ‘Our Singer’ to his personal blog in conjunction with the “I’m leaving” tweets.

Before leaving to join Twitter in February of 2010, Garrett was a partner at tech PR agency 463 Communications, an agency he cofounded. Before 463 Communications, Garrett spent time in PR roles at Applied Communications and Bite Communications, agencies owned by comm-focused holding company Next Fifteen.

Garrett built up the Twitter PR team to a whopping eight people during his two-year stint (you can follow them all in this list curated by Marshall Kirkpatrick). While Twitter recently hired GooglerKaren Wickre for a media/communications role (her bio reads “Word wrangler.”) it’s still unclear who will be replacing Garrett.

Twitter Follows Tweets To TV

Real-time content isn't dead. It's just thriving in platforms other than search engines. Mass Relevance and Crimson Hexagon introduced separate partnerships to help marketers curate and publish Twitter content on television, along with Web sites, mobile and large-screen displays.


The partnership between Twitter and Mass Relevance lets the companies license and display any of the more than 250 million tweets sent daily from about 100 million users.

Mass Relevance's integrates Twitter tweets into its platform and filters the content. The company also supports an API that allows agencies to build a front-end user to display the content.

Mass Relevance CEO Sam Decker said the deal permits media publishers to monetize Twitter content around their own. The company became the first of several partners officially licensed to re-syndicate Twitter content for display on television and other mediums, including billboards.

Mass Relevance powered the Twitter integration of NBC's "The Voice," and is working closely on joint projects, such as the White House's recent Twitter Town Hall. Tweets would show up as a lower third on "The Voice," for example.

Firefox 8 gets official, adds handy Twitter search function

Mozilla has released the newest version of its popular Firefox browser today, Firefox 8, adding in a useful Twitter-search ability and disabling add-ons by default to boost performance.

Firefox users have seen quick updates of their browsers ever since Mozilla decided to mimic Google Chrome’s rapid release schedule. Six weeks agoFirefox 7 debuted with performance gains, and six weeks before that Firefox 6 hit with extra tools for developers. Mozilla has been a little spooked ever since it started to look like Google Chrome could overtake Firefox as the number 2 browser.

Two big changes are in store for those updating to Firefox 8. First, there is the addition of a Twitter search tool that can be selected from the top right corner, like searching Google, Bing or Wikipedia. Second, Firefox 8 disables add-ons by default and forces users to re-reselect add-ons if they truly want to use them.

“Add-ons installed by third parties present a number of problems: they can slow down Firefox start-up and page loading time, they clutter the interface with toolbars that often go unused, they lag behind on compatibility and security updates, and most importantly, they take the user out of control of their add-ons,” said Mozilla programmer Justin Scott in an August blog post about the decision.

Firefox 8 also adds support for “Cross-Origin Resource Sharing,” which lets developers load WebGL graphics and textures from other domains securely. Additionally, the updated browser offers a faster way to restore windows with many tabs that can be turned on from the Firefox Menu under Options/Preferences.

Verizon Doubles Data For 4G LTE Smartphone Customers

Starting November 8, Verizon is doubling its allowed data caps for all new and existing 4G LTE smartphone customers. Now, for the same price that they were already paying, Verizon subscribers with 2GB will get 4GB (for $30), those with 5GB will get 10GB (for $50), and those with 10GB will get 20GB (for $80).

Verizon is calling this a "limited time offer" and,according to MSNBC's Gadgetbox, it will probably only run through the holiday season. However,VzBuzz obtained what it says is an internal Verizon document stating, rather vaguely, that customers will enjoy double the data at half the price “as long as they remain on those features.”

Note, however, that this double-data deal does not apply to iPhones, USB modems or mobile hotspot devices.

PC Magazine writes that Verizon's doubling its data cap may not be as impressive as it sounds. The blog played around with a Droid Bionic and went through 600MB of data after "half an hour of Netflix, three hours of streaming radio, two e-mail accounts attached and some app downloads." At this rate they would have exhausted a 2GB monthly data plan in just two weeks. (To find out how much data you might need, check out Verizon's Data Usage Calculator.)

Verizon's promotion comes just days before they are set to begin selling the Motorola Droid RAZR, which will launch at 11:11 a.m. on Friday, or 11/11/11. The RAZR, Verizon's second dual-core 4G LTE phone, was announced in October, and is being marketed as the "world's thinnest smartphone."

Critics were initially skeptical about the resurrection of the RAZR name, but reviews have been mainly positive. Engadget called it, "physically stunning." PC Mag reports that the RAZR is, "Motorola’s best Android phone to date," although they found major issue with the short battery life. On the other hand CNET called the battery life "decent," and referred to the RAZR as "one of the year's top Android smartphones."

TracFone's Straight Talk adds second Android smartphone, LG Optimus Q Read more: TracFone's Straight Talk adds second Android smartphone, LG Optimus Q

TracFone's Straight Talk service added its second smartphone running Google's (NASDAQ:GOOG) Android platform, the LG Optimus Q, potentially putting more pressure on flat-rate wireless players MetroPCS (NASDAQ:PCS) and Leap Wireless (NASDAQ:LEAP).

TracFone, which is owned by América Móvil, said it will sell the Optimus Q for $179.99 paired with the company's $45 monthly unlimited plan. The device is the second Android smartphone for Straight Talk; the company launched the Samsung Galaxy Precedent in August for $150.


While Straight Talk operates as an MVNO using Verizon Wireless (NYSE:VZ), AT&T Mobility (NYSE:T), T-Mobile USA and Sprint Nextel's (NYSE:S) networks, Straight Talk's Android service runs on Sprint's network via a special wholesale deal the companies struck. The LG Optimus Q has slightly better specifications than the Galaxy Precedent, but is also a mid-range Android device. It runs on Android 2.3, or Gingerbread, and has a 3.2-inch screen, 3-megapixel camera and slide-out Qwerty keyboard.

TracFone added 515,000 net subscribers in the third quarter, an increase of 15.7 percent over the year-ago period, bringing the company's total subscribers to 19.3 million. Interestingly, according to MetroPCS CFO Braxton Carter, Straight Talk's Android service is not putting that much pressure on MetroPCS thus far. Speaking at an investor conference Tuesday morning, Carter said that because Straight Talk is primarily sold via big-box retail distribution, namely Walmart, and because MetroPCS has a more varied distribution, the Straight Talk Android offering isn't affecting its core customer base.

Read more: TracFone's Straight Talk adds second Android smartphone, LG Optimus Q - FierceWireless http://www.fiercewireless.com/story/tracfones-straight-talk-adds-second-android-smartphone-lg-optimus-q/2011-11-08#ixzz1d7ScvQxI
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Smartphone buyers guide for the enterprise: Platform guide

Before developing a purchasing strategy, organisations first need to understand the market including the major players and their operating system (OS) roadmaps. For example, Google’s Android platform and Apple’s iOS combined currently command 60 per cent market share.

The following guide outlines the top platforms and the roadmap issues that need to be considered prior to any significant investment.

Google

Android continues to be the platform of choice gaining 40 per cent of the smartphone market in 2011. Moreover, the platform will continue to mature driving developer interest in its ecosystem.

“The release of the Ice Cream Sandwich version will make the platform more appealing to developers, as the OS will unify user interfaces (UIs) across smartphones and tablet form factors,” according to Gartner analyst, Roberta Cozza.

Android’s position at the high end of the market will remain strong, but its greatest volume opportunity in the longer term will be in mid-to-low smartphones. Gartner expects Android to hold 50 per cent market share by 2015.

Nokia

Symbian’s appeal over the next two years will be limited to emerging markets and more price-sensitive consumers in mature markets. Following its alliance with Microsoft, Nokia is expected to retire Symbian during 2012 and to migrate to Windows Phone as its main smartphone OS.

This will impact Symbian’s market share, which is expected to drop globally to 21 per cent in 2011 and 6.6 per cent in 2012, Gartner said.

Nokia will push Windows Phone well into the mid-tier range of its portfolio by the end of 2012, driving the platform to be the third largest in worldwide rankings, ahead of RIM, by 2013.

Apple

Apple’s iOS will remain the second-biggest platform worldwide until 2014, according to Gartner. However, falling prices and increasing volumes of lower cost devices will impact Apple’s market share.

“Our assumption is that Apple will be interested in maintaining margins and profit, rather than pursuing market share by changing its pricing strategy, this will limit adoption in emerging markets,” Cozza said.

Gift Guide: 5 Smartphones You Should Have on Your Holiday Wishlist

Gifting someone a smartphone is a little weird given that the best prices come with a contact attached. What happens? Do you say: “Here’s your new phone… and a 2-year contract plus a $30/month data plan. Merry Christmas!”

That wouldn’t go over well.

It’s more likely that a new phone won’t be a surprise and you’ll be shopping with the giver when the time comes. If you’re lucky enough to get a new device this year, we have some suggestions for smartphones to add to your wish list.

There’s something for everyone here, from Apple fans to Android fans. Even the BlackBerry faithful and Microsoftistas each have a phone to consider.

Read more 
http://www.gottabemobile.com/2011/11/08/gift-guide-smartphones-holiday-wishlist/

Mindbloom releases new iPhone app for 'digital inspiration'

Mindbloom has released its Bloom app for iPhone, allowing users to use photos, music, quotes and more to create goals for self-improvement.

In September, the Seattle companyreleased the Mindbloom Life Game, which lets users create a “life tree” to set goals, create life changes and track progress.

Bloom builds upon this by using notifications to remind users to complete a task like working out or calling a family member. The app also allows for photos to be uploaded directly from the iPhone Camera Roll. “Blooms” are created using objects like photos or quotes to create “digital inspiration.”

”Photos and music are a powerful way to express ourselves and to share experiences, but we believe there’s an untapped opportunity to use photos, music and inspiring words to remind ourselves and express to others what matters most to us and what we’re doing about it,” Mindbloom founder Chris Hewett said in a press release.

Mindbloom recently hired Anne Krook as vice president of operations. Krook spent 13 years at Amazon.

AT&T launches iPhone app for VoIP international calls

AT&T has launched its own "Voice over IP" app to enable its smartphone customers to place cheap international phone calls, two years after voicing support for Skype and others to similarly use its 3G network to originate internet calls.

The new AT&T Call International app piggybacks on the VoIP network of 8x8, but is novel in that it is branded by the carrier itself. The new service allows users in the US to call international phone numbers through the new app over 3G for far less than placing international calls over AT&T's own network. Internationally, users can access the app to place calls whenever WiFi is available.

AT&T's new VoIP app charges 4 cents per minute to wireline numbers in China, France, Germany and the UK, 8 cents to Mexico and 9 cents to India. When calling wireless numbers, the app bills 21 to 27 cents a minute to call European numbers, while wireless numbers in China and India are priced the same.

In addition to working on all iPhones, AT&T's VoIP app also works on select Android and BlackBerry models (although only iPhones and some Android models can place WiFi calls internationally). The service bills users directly (and separately from their AT&T account), with no contract or minimum calling required.

'Android started before iPhone': Google hits back at Jobs barbs

Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt has defended his company as a great innovator, contradicting an unflattering portrait drawn by Apple co-founder Steve Jobs before he died last month.

Contrary to Jobs's claims that Android is a ripoff of iPhone/iOS, Schmidt said Android was in development long before Apple's iPhone was unveiled. "Most people would agree that Google is a great innovator, and I would also point out that the Android efforts started before the iPhone efforts. And that's all I have to say," Schmidt said.

Steve Jobs ... regretted not having surgery earlier.
The late Steve Jobs. Photo: Paul Sakuma


In his biography released October 24, Jobs contends internet search leader Google stole from Apple's iPhone to build many of the features in Google's Android software for rival phones. Jobs also belittled the quality of Android and Google's other non-search products, which he described in vulgar terms.

"I will spend my last dying breath if I need to ... to right this wrong," Jobs said in his biography. "I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go to thermonuclear war on this."

Schmidt told reporters that he is still "very sad and recovering from the sense of loss" from Jobs's October 5 death. He declined to specifically address irate criticism of Google in Jobs's biography that drew upon dozens of interviews with the book's author, Walter Isaacson.

"I decided not to comment on comments that are written in the book after his death. I don't think it's right," Schmidt said, describing Jobs as a "fantastic human being" who he "dearly" misses.

Jobs died at 56 after a battle with cancer. Schmidt served on Apple's board from 2006 to 2009 but quit as Google and Apple clashed in the mobile market with their competing Android and iPhone products.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/digital-life/mobiles/android-started-before-iphone-google-hits-back-at-jobs-barbs-20111109-1n65m.html#ixzz1d7R2hvhp

iPhone Security Flaw Shows Potential for App Store Malware

The iPhone App Store has a reputation for rock-solid security, but that rep took a hit this week when an app that could run unauthorized code and control phones remotely was released to the public.

Luckily, this bad app was released for research purposes--not malicious ones.

Security researcher and famous Mac hacker Charlie Millerdemonstrated an iPhone security flaw using a dummy stock ticker app that Apple unwittingly accepted into the App Store. The app was able to call a remote computer, which could then download unsigned code to the iPhone, harvest sensitive data, and trigger actions such as vibrations and ringtones.


Apple has already removed the program from the App Store, and has terminated Miller's developer license, Forbes reports.

Miller plans to describe the flaw in detail at the SysCan conference in Taiwan next week, but the gist is that mobile Safari's "Nitro" JavaScript engine, released with iOS 4.3, requires the privilege of running unapproved code in a region of the iPhone's memory. Miller's exploit extends this privilege to other apps, which are usually barred from running unapproved code in the same way as Safari for security reasons.

Read more http://www.pcworld.com/article/243407/iphone_security_flaw_shows_potential_for_app_store_malware.html

Samsung Electronics Honored with 30 CES 2012 Innovation Awards

RIDGEFIELD PARK, N.J., Nov 08, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., a market leader and award-winning innovator in consumer electronics, semiconductors and telecommunications, today announced that it won 30 prestigious International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2012 Innovation Awards. CES, the world's largest consumer technology tradeshow held by the Consumer Electronics Association(R) (CEA) every year, has honored Samsung with 90 awards in the past three years -- 37 in 2011 and 23 in 2010.

Among the 30 CES awards for 2012, Samsung was recognized with two Best of Innovation awards and four Eco-Design honors. Products entered in the CES Innovations program are judged by a preeminent panel of independent industrial designers, engineers and members of the media to honor outstanding design and engineering in cutting-edge consumer electronics products across 36 categories.

"Technology and design innovation are the cornerstones of Samsung products," said Y.K. Kim, president and CEO, Samsung Electronics America, Inc. "We're honored that CEA recognizes Samsung's continued commitment to research and development across product categories. We look forward to offering the best user experiences through our latest product innovations in 2012."

Products entered in the CES Innovations program are judged by a preeminent panel of independent industrial designers, engineers and members of the media to honor outstanding design and engineering in cutting-edge consumer electronics products across 36 categories.

Samsung Electronics' award-winners include products in the TV, home theater system, mobile phone, tablet, mobile PC, monitor, home appliance, SSD, LCD panel, and computer component categories. All of Samsung's award-winning products will be on display during the 2012 International CES, which runs January 10-13, 2012, in Samsung booth #12004 in the Central Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Many of the winning products will be first unveiled at Samsung's CES press conference, scheduled for 2 p.m. on Monday January 9, 2012. The following are additional details for some of the award recipients:

-- The Samsung 830 Series solid-state drives (SSDs) set a new standard for performance and reliability. Their SATA 6Gb/s data interface allows these internal storage drives to handle data up to twice as fast as previous-generation SSDs, with sequential read speeds up to 520 MB/sec and random read speeds up to 80,000 IOPS. Maximum storage capacity has also doubled, with the addition of a new 512 GB version (64GB, 128GB and 256GB SSDs are also available).*

Samsung Galaxy Nexus Release Date Delayed? Price Revealed & Prime Details Reviewed

The Samsung Galaxy Nexus with its spanking brand new Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich OS may be delayed until after the Thanksgiving leftovers are all eaten, according some reports and speculation.

There was a Costco screenshot that showed up, that showed a price of $289.99 leading many to believe that the Samsung Galaxy Nexus would be priced around $299 like its Android cousins on the Verizon network. There was also a screenshot that showed the the Samsung Galaxy Nexus (w/0 11/21) W/0 means web only, which could mean preorders on the web starting November 21. Previously a leak suggested a November 17 release date and another showed Cyber Monday.

There is trouble brewing in Samsung Galaxy Nexus land though, because in the U.K., Amazon.uk shows the release date for the Samsung Galaxy Nexus that was previously announced for November 17, 2011 will be delayed until December 2, 2011 which reportedly could be a mistake or could be an indication of a delay. The webpage has this message "This item is due to be released on December 2, 2011. Please note that release dates are subject to change. Dispatched from and sold byAmazon.co.uk. Gift-wrap available. "

A global delay could be related to supplies or software updates.

The Google website dedicated to the Samsung Galaxy Nexus shows no new release date information, The previous drop down menu of carriers has been removed. This is the first time Google has had a release date before the holiday rush.

Amazon is not always the first to offer a product for sale while it does indicate trends.

So far there has been one delay in the Samsung Galaxy Nexus/Droid Prime process. There was supposed to be an announcement at CTIA which was delayed a few weeks until October 19 at theAllThingdsDigitial Asia D Conference in Hong Kong.

All we know for sure is the Samsung Galaxy Nexus will be released by Verizon Wireless. Keep your fingers crossed that it will be before the holidays are over because Verizon Wireless doubled the amount of 4G LTE data for the price.

LG Signs Deal With Intellectual Ventures

LG has joined companies including Samsung, HTC and Research In Motion in deciding to sign a deal with patent licensing company Intellectual Ventures.

Among mobile phone manufacturers, Pantech, the Korean phone maker, has also agreed to license the patents, but Motorola is instead fighting Intellectual Ventures in court.

As part of the agreement, LG has access to Intellectual Venture's portfolio of 35,000 patents. Intellectual Ventures argues that such deals help the licensee defend itself from litigation.

Most handset makers, when approached by a company like Intellectual Ventures about such a licensing deal, weigh the costs of litigation against the cost of the license and consider what they might gain in either scenario, said Jack Gold, an analyst with Jack Gold Associates. A CEO of a handset maker is thinking, "If I fight it and spend $20 million and 30 years, what do I gain?" he said. "If I'm diverting resources to it, shouldn't I instead go out and do what I'm good at, which is building phones?"

When the licensing cost is reasonable, the answer is often clear. "Sometimes it's easier to pay them to go away than to fight it," Gold said.

Motorola is so far the biggest name in mobile phones to publicly fight Intellectual Ventures rather than sign a licensing agreement.

In October, Intellectual Ventures charged Motorola with infringing six patents. It said it approached Motorola in January about taking licenses but the phone maker refused. That dispute is notable because Google, which is planning to acquire Motorola, is an investor in an arm of Intellectual Ventures.

Companies that have been around for years may be able to leverage their own large patent portfolios in their attempts to resist signing up for a licensing agreement.

Samsung and HTC announced that they'd signed with Intellectual Ventures last year and RIM followed in March.

Schmidt: Motorola Mobility Won’t Get Preferential Treatment (Not That It Needs It)

Eric Schmidt is continuing his Asian tour, speaking today in South Korea. Two sensitive topics came up: first, the question of whether Motorola Mobility would be getting special treatment if and when the deal closes. His response,as reported by Reuters: “we will run it sufficiently and independently, that it will not violate the openness of Android…we’re not going to change in any material way the way we operate.”

I believe him. Because really, they don’t have to.

Who is it that needs to be whipped into line when it comes to Android handsets? Not HTC and Samsung. The handset makers are all happy as clams, selling lots of units and competing on easily-inflatable numbers like screen size, resolution, and CPU clock speed. They’re making lots of money and lots of handsets. Google wouldn’t want to spook their cash cow by making Motorola the Android poster boy.

No, it’s the carriers who are the bane of Google’s existence. Android’s biggest problem is arguably fragmentation. Carriers are the largest holdup in producing the updates that unify the Android ecosystem, and they hold too many cards. Apple foresaw and preemptively solved this problem by tying the phones’ updates exclusively to iTunes, and now it may be time for Google to make its displeasure felt.

I sense a development in the Android world, an acknowledgment of the fragmentation problem and a solution along the lines of asking manufacturers to test a safe vanilla install for all handsets, up to date with the latest version of Android the phone will run. Users should be able to update to this at any time. It shakes things up, sure, but I’m afraid Google and the others can only weather this bad publicity for so long before it starts degrading the platform among people who normally don’t care about version numbers.

The other thing Schmidt was asked about in South Korea was the bit from Steve Jobs’ biography calling Android a “stolen product.” Schmidt demurred on the topic, calling Steve a “fantastic human being” but couldn’t resist addressing the topic: “I would also point out that the Android effort started before the iPhone effort.” Sure it did, Eric, but it looked like this:

Amazon Slashes Motorola Droid Bionic to $120

When Verizon released the Motorola Droid Bionic on Sept. 8, it cost a princely $299. But the price tag seemed justified by the mere fact that the Droid Bionic was the only 4G LTE smartphone powered by a dual-core processor.

That didn't last long. Exactly one month and one week later, Verizon announced the Motorola Droid RAZR, essentially a thinner version of the Droid Bionic. And today, days before the Droid RAZR hits Verizon stores, you can get a Droid Bionic for only $119.99 throughAmazon's wireless store.

The Droid Bionic features a 4.3-inch Super AMOLED advanced qHD display, dual-core 1-GHz TI OMAP4430 processor, 8-megapixel rear-facing camera with 1080p video recording, and an HD front-facing camera.

For a few blissful weeks it was the fastest, most powerful smartphone on Verizon. It was also novel in its ability to transform into a quasi laptop or desktop by attaching some accessories. PCMag's lead mobile analyst, Sascha Segan, was disappointed by the Droid Bionic's 8-megapixel still camera, which had a very slow autofocus that took up to two seconds. See PCMag's review and slideshow below for more.

In comparison, the $299 Droid RAZR is 0.28 inches thin and packs a a dual-core 1.2-GHz processor, 4.3-inch Super AMOLED advanced qHD display, 8-megapixel rear camera with 1080p video recording, HD front-facing camera, and mobile hotspot support for up to eight Wi-Fi devices. In our review of the Motorola Droid RAZR, Segan gave it an Editor's Choice award and said it "very, very quickly replaces the Droid Bionic."

Whether you purchase the Droid Bionic now or Droid RAZR later, Verizon will double your monthly data allowance at no extra cost, for a limited time only.

Demand Media CEO On The Google Effect and Parrot-Washing

Demand Media CEO Richard Rosenblatt acknowledges that some of the content on eHow.com isn’t the best, but he insists it’s all important to someone.

“If you have an article entitled, ‘How To Wash a Parrot,’ that doesn’t sound like high-quality content, and it’s probably not,” he said at the Dow Jones VentureWire FASTech conference in Redwood City, Calif., on Tuesday. “But to someone who wants to wash their parrot, it’s important.”

Rosenblatt, whose eHow.com site features practical articles written by freelancers and designed to show up high in search results, has spent a lot of time lately talking about the quality of the stories that appear on the site, which critics derisively dub a content farm.

The publicly traded company sustained a blow to its reputation and to its shares price when Google — which accounts for one-third of Demand Media’s revenue — adjusted its algorithms and pushed down search rankings for eHow.com, in a move that was seen as an implicit smackdown of Demand Media’s business model and content quality.

Rosenblatt says eHow now employs better writers and editors and more fact-checkers, and he points to solid third-quarter revenue growth as a sign the company is weathering the Google storm. He resists the implication that Demand Media’s business model is so tied up with Google that public investors have reason to be wary, even though Demand Media’s shares have fallen more than 70% in recent months.

Google “Sources”: The Future of Search?

Google is testing out a new search product called "Sources," which fills Google search results with background information and relevant content based on the query.

The new search feature was reportedly discovered by Cyrus Shepard, a SEO consultant and blogger who stumbled upon Google's new look and took a few screenshots.

"It looks like an attempt at filling in the empty space on the right hand side of the screen when no ads appear," he noted.

Shepard tested several different search queries and found the new feature to be "hit-or-miss." Google Sources was a hit when Shepard searched for Rihanna, and the Sources page filled up with biographical information from Wikipedia, including her birthdate, family information, current boyfriend, and a list of popular singles and albums by the artist. The bottom of the module even included similar music artists, including Beyonce and Nicki Minaj.

The Sources feature did have a few notable misses. When searching for "Twitter," Shepard found a brief description of the company, where it was founded, as well as its current headquarters and CEO. When Shepard clicked on the link, however, he was rerouted to a blog post about Twitter on a site called "Frisky Mongoose." Not quite what he was looking for.

Google did not verify the existence of the new Sources feature, besides offering its vanilla explanation of "Google is constantly experimenting new features."

Google may not admit Sources exists, but the company has dropped several hints that Sources is on the way. On Nov. 3, Google announced it would begin serving its AdWords at the bottom of the result pages for Google.com, which opens up more space on the right sidebar for Sources content.

Google also announced it waschanging its search algorithm to provide more real-time search results and return more relevant results.

"Depending on the search terms, the algorithm needs to be able to figure out if a result from a week ago about a TV show is recent, or if a result from a week ago about breaking news is too old," said Amit Singhal, a Google fellow.

Google altered its search algorithms to improve Google News, but in all likelihood, the company was probably trying to beef up the algorithm so Google Sources would return more relevant information about the query, including recent news stories.

Google Ready to Battle Comcast with Own Cable TV Service?

Google just released a software update to improve user experience for Google TV users, amid speculation they are planning to take on cable giants such as Comcast by offering paid cable TV services. This latest update features a simplified interface, improved search, better YouTube/Google TV integration, and a limited number of apps for TV.

Google TV software can be installed on cable TV boxes or directly on the television to bring online shows and channels from the Web to the living room. This poses an obvious threat to traditional cable companies; if Google can bring the same high quality programming to consumers, possibly for a lower price, competition will increase exponentially.

Of course, entertainment companies could refuse them a license. This doesn’t seem likely, as channel owners stand to benefit from multiple licensees in the market, especially if they’re willing to pay more.

The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Google plans to pilot a video and phone service offering in Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri. The pilot, slated to launch in early 2012, would pit them directly against current cable, satellite, and telecom giants Time Warner Cable Inc. and DirecTV, among others. They are rumored to have brought former cable TV executive Jeremy Stern onboard to facilitate negotiations with media companies.

Back in September, speculation over a possible Hulu acquisition by Google ran rampant. Business Insider reported that Google CEO Larry Page had some “big ass ideas” for Hulu, though they didn’t elaborate.

This would be a particularly painful move for Comcast, part-owners of Netflix-rival Hulu. It appears now that they needn’t worry about Google scooping up the online video service; Hulu partnersreleased a statement in October declaring they’ve opted to build out the service and won’t be selling anytime soon, despite a Google bid "in the range of" $4 billion. Don’t expect being shot down to deter Google.

Page doesn't take kindly to those who spurn his advances. Consider Groupon’s refusal to sell to Google and their launch of rival service Google Offers just a few short months later. Google Offers continues today to make life difficult for the company that wouldn’t sell to them for $6 billion. Facebook and Twitter both refused to play ball and share data with Google - cue Google+ launch. They have a long and storied history of buying what they can, and reinventing what they cannot.

As Google continues to move into new areas, they may even be gaining an edge on Facebook when it comes to social integration. Google’s +1 buttons and sharing to Google+ are already widely integrated on websites and even into Google’s PPC ads. They just might be successfully moving into Facebook’s “seamless sharing” territory, without the pesky third-party privacy concerns inherent to the Open Graph system. If they own the properties consumers use to listen to music, read the news, and watch TV, sharing becomes simplified and could make user-approved apps seem cumbersome.

White House, Google Develop Job Search Tool For Vets

The White House has launched a new online search tool that aggregates job listings for veterans from various Web sites and other online resources as part of an ongoing effort to help out-of-work veterans find employment.

The Veterans Job Bank provides a widget with a search window veterans can use to browse job postings from a host of sources around the Web, including online job boards, social-media sites, and corporate employment sites, according to a White House blog post by U.S. CTO Aneesh Chopra.

The tool combines Google Custom Search with custom code--namely, Schema.org'sJobPosting Markup--that is posted on sites that list job openings, particularly those prioritized for veterans. Google's custom search team worked with the Department of Veterans Affairs to develop the search tool. Schema.org is a collaboration between Microsoft Bing, Google, and Yahoo search engines aimed at making structured data on the Web easier to find.

The Job Bank widget went live Monday on federal Web sites with more than 500,000 open job listings courtesy of Simply Hired, the first job search engine to use the JobPosting Markup to contribute listings to the tool, according to Chopra. The widget also can be added to other websites merely by cutting and pasting custom tags into the site's source code.

Monster.com's Military.com site, Indeed, and Taleo--a system that tracks applications for half of the Fortune 100 companies--also are sending listings to the job bank, according to Chopra. His post also included a link to instructions on how to tag job listings on other sites using the schema.

The Veterans Job Bank also aggregates listings from social media sites, including a special veterans-focused page on Twitter's TweetMyJobs and Facebook's BranchOut.

Other employment-associated websites also are joining in the fray to help veterans find jobs in honor of Veterans Day on Friday, Chopra said. Business social-networking site LinkedIn is hosting a "Hackday" on Friday to challenge developers to create applications and technology from a portfolio of open APIs and data sets that can help improve the lives of veterans.

Indeed, the Obama administration is making a concerted effort to help unemployed veterans find jobs, and the Veterans Job Bank is not the first time the feds have partnered with the private sector on this endeavor.

In August, Hewlett-Packard, Microsoft, and other technology companies pledged to help unemployed veterans find work as part of an administration-backed initiative.

Read more http://www.informationweek.com/news/government/leadership/231902525

Google's Director of Public Policy Quits at Critical Time

Google has lost the man who has led its government relations efforts in the Americas for more than six years, at a time when the company's operations face intense scrutiny from legislators and regulators.

Alan Davidson, who opened Google's Washington, D.C., office in 2005 and has since then grown and steered the company's public policy team, has resigned.

"Alan has done an extraordinary job building the team in D.C., and working on the important policy issues facing the Internet and Google. We're grateful for everything he's done and wish him the best," Google's Chief Legal Officer David Drummond said in a statement.

As Google has become one of the world's most influential companies, with a dominant position in the Internet search and advertising market and a mighty financial position, it has drawn increasing attention from governments, particularly in the U.S.

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission, the U.S. Department of Justice and Congress, as well as state attorneys general and state legislatures, have all stepped up their oversight of Google business practices, including its acquisitions, in recent years.

Common concerns regarding Google include potential antitrust, copyright and online privacy violations, issues that Davidson's team is in charge of addressing, so that the company's positions are understood and -- ideally for Google -- supported by government officials.

It remains to be seen how much of an impact Google will feel from the loss of such a key figure in its public policy strategy and execution.

In a memo Davidson sent to the staff, he acknowledged that the public policy issues Google faces are quite complex. "When I started at Google none of us really knew how the Internet, and this company, would grow and change. The mobile, cloud, and social technologies just taking hold then are now full-on revolutions today," reads the memo, which Google emailed to IDG News Service.

Later this month, Davidson will take a "sabbatical" to ponder what he might do next. "I am intensely proud of the team we have built throughout the Americas, and the work we have done," he wrote.

How Google walks the fine line between a Motorola acquisition & antitrust accusations

Earlier this morning, we published statements from Google chairman Eric Schmidt in which the executive said an acquisition of Motorola Mobility would not constitute an unfair advantage for that OEM.

Being journalists and generally rational people, we were skeptical, to say the least.

After all, Google had given Motorola time-to-market advantage and early access to the Android codebase in the past. If an acquisition were to go through, how in the world would Google not be able to give Motorola Mobility an unfair advantage?

Does it make sense that one company would not give another part of itself every opportunity to profit?

We turned to Google for more explanation of Schmidt’s words, in particular, the part where he said, “The Motorola deal will close and we will run it sufficiently and independently, that it will not violate the openness of Android.”

This iPhone case has a built-in projector

Want to use your iPhone for presentations, but don't want to worry about figuring out how to hook it up to whatever screen is available when it's go time? The Pocket Projector iPhone Case will let you display whatever's on your phone on any available flat surface.

This $230 case from Brookstone features an LED DLP pico projector inside, shooting out 15 lumens of brightness and a 640x360 resolution. It can produce an image up to 50 inches in size, but will probably look much better at smaller sizes.

it also has a built-in rechargeable battery that'll power the projector and also give your phone some extra juice, which is a nice touch. The only downside is how bulky it is; you probably won't want to keep this thing on all time time, instead only pulling it out when you need to use the projector.

Brookstone via Gizmodo

Relive the 80s With This iPhone Boombox

At this point, iPhone and iPod stereo docks are a dime a dozen, and are basically all the same. But then iHome came along with the iP4 speaker dock inspired by the classic boombox.

While it exudes 80s nostalgia, the iP4 boombox also looks modern with a minimalist, square design coupled with fat plastic panels that make it look Tron-ish. It should also sound pretty good, too, thanks to a pair of 4-inch carbon-composite woofers, and two 1-inch ferro-fluid cooled tweeters.

It’s also has a LCD screen that displays a equalizer, oversized backlit buttons, FM radio, Aux line-in jack for things other than an Apple device, and a handy remote that magnetically attaches. The whole thing can either be plugged in to the wall, or you can throw in six D-size batteries and lug around this 7.5-pound sound blaster down the street on your shoulder, just like the way it was meant to be.

The iP4 boombox comes in matte gray or pink to keep things funky, and can be bought now for $200 directly from iHome.

[iHome Audio via Macgasm]

Researcher: iPhone bug could let hackers steal photos, contacts and send texts

(CNN) -- A bug in Apple's mobile operating system allows hackers to take control of iPhone and iPad apps, using them to steal people's photos, contacts and even send text messages without the device's user knowing about it, according to a notable computer security researcher.

Charlie Miller, a researcher at Accuvant and one of the world's best-known Apple hackers, said Tuesday that the bug proves the Apple App Store isn't as safe as advertised.

"Until now, you could just blindly trust and download as many apps as you wanted and not worry about it," Miller said in an interview with CNN. "But until they fix this, you really should think twice about any apps you're downloading, because they could be malicious."

Miller said he alerted Apple to the bug three weeks ago and the company told him a fix was in the works. Apple did not respond to CNN's request for comment on the apparent security flaw, which Miller explains in detail on YouTube.

He plans to show people how the bug works at an upcoming computer security conference in Taiwan, called SyScan. To date, he has not released details that would allow hackers to take advantage of the apparent security flaw, and he said he has no evidence that hackers have used the hole to manipulate iPhones and iPads.

Miller says he has exposed the bug to prevent a hacker with bad intentions from taking advantage of iPhone and iPad owners.

As thanks for that work, he said, Apple banned him from the iOS developer program for a year.

"I think it's pretty rude," he said. "If you think about what I'm doing -- I'm pointing out a flaw that would affect everybody and that the bad guys could use to install malware (malicious software). And they're not paying me, I'm just doing it to be nice."

He did upload an app, called Instastock, which was armed with this capability, he said. That app only was capable of hurting his own devices, he said, and was uploaded to the App Store to test the bug. "It's not evil or bad or anything," he said. "It never even downloads code and runs it unless I run it." It since has been removed from the App Store.

If hackers found the security flaw, he said, any iOS app could be compromised in a way that malicious code could be installed through the app and onto the device.

"It could grab your address book and ship it off to the bad guy," he said. "It could grab all your photos and ship them off to a bad guy."

That's a big deal for Apple's App Store, he said, since until now, that online marketplace for iPhone and iPad programs had been free of malicious software. Apple checks each app before it's approved for sale at the App Store, which allows the company to keep bugs out.

This hack could take advantage of a flaw in that checking system to compromise any app, Miller said. He said that essentially reduces the App Store's security to that of the Google Android Market, since Google doesn't screen apps in the way Apple does.

Antenna is better on iPhone 4S, Consumer Reports says

After blasting Apple's iPhone 4 for its antenna problems last year, Consumer Reports magazine is giving the new iPhone 4S a little less static.

The new model "doesn’t suffer the reception problem we found in its predecessor in special tests in our labs," said a report released Tuesday by the independent consumer ratings publication. The 4S "did not display the same reception flaw, which involves a loss of signal strength when you touch a spot on the phone’s lower left side while you’re in an area with a weak signal."

The iPhone 4 -- still available to consumers at a discounted price -- still exhibits the problem, the report noted.

Last year, Consumer Reports' indictment of the iPhone 4 set off a wave of consumer (and media) unrest about the apparent flaw in the iPhone 4, which eventually led to a news conference held by Steve Jobs, in which he grudgingly offered a free rubber case to anyone who complained about reception issues.

Though Consumer Reports says the new phone fixes the issue, the group still doesn't give the 4S its top marks. Instead, the leading phones had features that the new iPhone doesn't: a larger display and fast 4G (fourth generation) cellular capability.

The new iPhone runs on so-called HSPA+ networks -- a faster technology than the previous phone, but what Consumer Reports called "the bottom rung of what is considered to be 4G network speed."

Phones that beat the iPhone 4S in the ratings included Samsung's Galaxy S II phones, the Motorola Droid Bionic and the LG Thrill.

The report noted that it was not able to reduce battery issues that some iPhone 4S owners have been reporting, and which Apple has said will be fixed in an upcoming software update.

Motorola accused of trying to 'destroy' Lemko through 'Chinese spy ring' insinuations

The 4G cellular technology manufacturer Lemko Corp. yesterday sued Motorola Solutions and its lawyers, saying Motorola's claims that Lemko is allegedly part of a Chinese spy ring tied to the Chinese government and Chinese companies have unfairly damaged its business.

The Schaumberg, Ill.-based privately held company, with Nicholas Labun its CEO and Shaowei Pan as chief technology officer, charge that Motorola and its lawyers have falsely claimed that Lemko employees are part of "a Chinese spy ring," and that the intent in saying this is to "drive Lemko out of business by harassing its customers and suppliers" in order to end by "coercing the transfer of Lemko's patents and future technology to Motorola."

The Lemko lawsuit, which also accuses Motorola of racial profiling of people of Chinese descent, is the latest in an ongoing three-year legal battle between the two companies that has as its starting point the former Motorola software engineer Hanjuan Jin, who in 2007 was arrested at Chicago O'Hare Airport by U.S. Customs as she sought to board a plane to China.

Drake Isn't A Big Fan Of Twitter And Tumblr

Although much of Drake’s initial buzz was built via the Internet, the Take Care rapper is not a huge fan of social media networks such as Tumblr and Twitter. In his cover story for this month’s issue of The Source, Drake opens up about his disdain for some aspects of social media, explaining that fans--or, more accurately, detractors--often use the anonymity to be venomous.

“I’m really scared for my generation, you know. The thing that scares me most is Tumblr,” Drake began. “I hate what Tumblr has become. It reminds me of those clique-y girls in high school that used to make fun of everyone else and define what was cool, but in five years, when you all graduate, that sh-- doesn’t matter.”

“No one gives a f---about that sh—,” he continued. “Instead of kids going out and making their own moments, they’re just taking these images and living vicariously through other people’s moments. It just kills me. Then you’ll meet them and they’re just the biggest turkey in the world. They don’t actually embody any of those things. They just emulate. It’s scary man, simulation life that we’re living. It scares me.”

Drake’s experience on Twitter hasn’t been all roses either. “I remember the day my mom was getting surgery and someone came on Twitter and they were like, ‘Yo, Drake, I hope your mom dies.’ You don’t really mean that,” Drake shared. “Like, you know you’re going to see something bad. Out of 1000 compliments, it’s so crazy. It’s basically, like, when you used to sit there as a kid, and want to know what everyone is thinking. That’s your superpower. [Twitter is] knowing what everyone is thinking.”

Drake’s sophomore album Take Care will be released on November 15.

'Skyfall' Recruits 'Harry Potter' Actor, Ralph Fiennes Talks Bond

It didn't take long after last week's big press conference announcing the title and start of production of "Skyfall," the new James Bond film starring Daniel Craig, for even more news to start trickling in. Yesterday, the official Twitter feed for the superspy (@007) released the first official picture from the set: a non-earth-shattering snap of a clapperboard.

Now, the production adds two more actresses to the already star-studded cast. Helen McCrory, perhaps better known as the villainous mother Narcissa Malfoy from the "Harry Potter" films, and Ola Repace, a Swedish actress, have joined the cast that includes Craig,Dame Judi Dench, Javier Bardem and Naomie Harris.

It had been rumored for a few weeks that McCrory had been cast in the upcoming Sam Mendes-directed Bond film, but not until yesterday's Twitter announcement was she confirmed.

One actor who was not present at the first press conference was Ralph Fiennes, who's character is one of several that we know the least about. Fiennes spoke with Matt Singer over at IFC about his upcoming directorial debut in "Coriolanus" and shared some small details about his mysterious role in "Skyfall."

A self-professed Bond fan, Fiennes said that if you are anything like him, you won't be disappointed with "Skyfall." "If you're a Bond fan then you'll be happy," he said. "I can tell you that John Logan has written a fantastic screenplay and Sam Mendes is a class act. They're doing something quite special I think. I think they're going to be great for Bond." He also commented that the film would be filled with action, contradicting reports that Mendes planned to remove much of the usual Bond shenanigans.

Twitter-obsessed Gabriel Zakuani named his son ‘Trendy’

Twitter has long inspired its millions of users to braindump their banal thoughts into the digital ether, but now it has inspired something with a little more permanence.

Joining Harper Seven Beckham in The League Of Extraordinarily Named Footballer Offspring is Trendy Zakuani, named by Peterborough defender Gabriel Zakuani for his love of the popular social networking site.The Sun reports:

"People have asked if his name is because of 'trending topics' on Twitter. Maybe it was in the back of my mind."

Gabriel said the name also refers to the baby's mum Shanice Petrie's job in fashion. He said: "The official reason was she wanted something to reflect that. But it was me who came up with Trendy."

Tweeting from his @Gabs50Zakuani account, Zakuani has spent Tuesday bantering with his followers about his newborn, perhaps in an effort to get Trendy trending. Unfortunately, Trendy is not trending. In fact, despite being named for a function that displays mass popularity, it's believed that Trendy is currently the only person in the world with the name.

While Trendy may be destined to a life of spelling out his name to disbelieving call center operators, things could be worse: Dad might have chosen to call him Hashtag or Twitpic.

Firefox Update Includes Twitter Search

Move over Google, Firefox is now leveraging all of that Twitter content you’ve beenso eager to recapture. Sure, you can get real time Twitter search results on Bing, but then again, Bing’s user base isn’t anywhere near Google’s.

Considering the new Firefox update, and its market share for browser users, compared to Bing’s market share in regards to search users, it’s hard not to wonder if there are more people using Firefox than there are Bing searchers. Whatever the case, Firefox users no longer have to navigate to a search engine to query Twitter’s never-ending amount of content.

With a quick drop-down menu selection, those who update to Firefox 8, according to the Firefox blog, will have the capability to:

Twitter search in Firefox makes it easier to discover new topics, #hashtags and @usernames. Twitter search is currently available in English, Portuguese, Slovenian and Japanese versions of Firefox, with more languages to come in future releases.
The latest Firefox update is not just for Windows users either. The browser update has been made available to Mac users, Linux users and to Android owners. Unfortunately, however, it doesn’t appear as if the Twitter search feature is available for Android owners, as, “Twitter is now included as a search option in Firefox for Windows, Mac and Linux.”
Twitter Search

Other features include improved WebGL support, something Mozilla is awfully proud of:
Mozilla pioneered WebGL and introduced it in Firefox earlier this year. WebGL is a new Web standard that allows websites and Web apps to display hardware-accelerated 3D graphics without third-party software. Firefox adds support for Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS), which lets developers load WebGL textures from other domains in a secure way.

As well as better third-party app control. No longer will these apps be able to install themselves without the user’s permission. While more security is always a good thing, the main feature of Firefox 8 is the inclusion of a functional Twitter search.

When a query is entered, in this case, “Joe Paterno,” users are taken to the Twitter search results page of the query that was entered. While this may not be exactly groundbreaking in terms of execution, the fact that this search feature is part of the new Firefox can only be considered a good thing.

What Twitter’s Latest Move Means For Other Social TV Players

As social TV emerges as something beyond an experiment for advertisers and TV networks, Twitter is eager to take a bigger role in connecting brands and viewers. That could present a challenge to early social entertainment services likeGetGlue and IntoNow, especially as other startups emerge, such as today’s launch of social TV app Umami and established apps like Shazam bring more e-commerce to TV promotions.

In a post on Twitter’s official blog, the company details new relationship with Mass Relevance, which singles out the most relevant tweets for its brand clients, and buzz measurement provider Crimson Hexagon.

Both Mass Relevance and Crimson Hexagon can bring existing partnerships with media companies to the table. Mass Relevance, for example, recently agreed to power the Twitter integration in NBC’s The Voice, while Crimson Hexagon provided “Twitter analysis” in CNN’s 2010 election coverage and Barack Obama’s first State of the Union address.

Earlier today, it was announced that Shazam for TV will be featured during the second season of the USA Network’s spy drama series Covert Affairs. By “Shazaming” at any point during the show, USA fans will unlock video and photos from Globe Tracker, a multi-media gallery of on-location content shot by the show’s main actor, Christopher Gorham.

With the launch of the new series, Shazam is also introducing a new feature in its app, which allows fans to buy merchandise from a show. As part of a new partnership with Delivery Agent, which manages e-commerce functions for NBC (NSDQ: CMCSA) programming and 40 other entertainment companies, Shazam can provide viewers with a single-button purchase experience to buy fashion brands seen in the show or fan gear from the show.

In the meantime, GetGlue, one of the earliest services to bring the Foursquare-like experience of checking into a shop or restaurant to TV, has been aggressively courtingmarketers and networks with the beta launch of GetGlue Business, a self-serve marketing dashboard that allows TV, movie and music companies to create more enticements for consumers—such as deals on merchandise. (GetGlue is more than just TV, as it also provides check-ins for movies, music listening and events.)

In addition, Yahoo’s IntoNow has been also striking deals with shows like Project Runway for its check-in service.

The latest entrant into the social TV space is an iPad app, available starting today in the iTunes Store, called Umami, which uses audio fingerprinting technology to automatically and continuously sync to live and time-shifted programming from 40 major broadcast and cable networks. But instead of just checking in, the app offers an array of info related to the show being viewed, including bios, photos, news and conversation.

There is a tremendous amount of research available now about the amount of “multitasking” going on by TV watchers, especially younger ones. But how engaged are they? And do viewers who are hooked on a particular show want to pay more attention to their iPad or their smartphone instead of the actual program?

Twitter Rolling Out Activity Streams That Make The Home Page A Dashboard

Twitter has begun the rollout, or at least a significant spot test, of the Activity and @USERNAME streams it announced in mid-August. The @USERNAME stream replaces the @Mentions and Retweets streams, combining those with stories about new followers, people favoriting your tweets, and more. The Activity stream shows the follows, favorites, and retweets of the people you follow.

The rollout will convert information previously delivered through email notifications or only visible by expanding tweets into streams that can be viewed from the home page. It will also help Twitter increase the interconnections in its social graph by highlighting who the people you follow are following and giving you the chance to do the same.

Some users including Sean Parker have seen the features roll back and forth, indicating that Twitter may still be tweaking a few things. There’s a chance it’s a spot test, but there have been tweets about it spread over the last day and we’ve received multiple tips, so we though you should know.

As MG Siegler noted in his breakdown of the feature announcement, some users might not want their mention and retweet streams combined and mixed with other content. Those who receive lots of retweets and new followers may have a harder time picking out @replies they want to respond to.

For most users, though, the Twitter home page will now serve as a more comprehensive dashboard. They’ll no longer have to check tweet by tweet to find people favoriting their content, and can spare their inboxes the follower alerts while still being able to find out if someone special starts following them.

I’m most excited about the Activity stream turning the new connections of the people I following into real-time, implicit social recommendations of who I should follow next. These suggestions seem urgent compared to the Who To Follow sidebar section which doesn’t indicate when the people I follow started following that account. The Activity Stream could keep users from getting stuck with the set of people they followed when they first joined.

New Facebook Rule: Only for the 1 Percent?

It's being called "The Facebook Rule," and it's designed to shut you and me out of at least one social network.

Wildly hyped private firms like Facebook want to raise more private money without going public -- or divulging all their secrets and potentially giving some control to outside shareholders. These days there's a lot of money chasing a few private high-tech companies, but who's in on the deal before they go public a la Groupon?

Many tech companies today are running up against "the 500 rule," a regulation that says a private company like Facebook, Twitter, or Foursquare that has issued private stock to 500 or more investors must either make their financial records public or go public. Companies typically issue stock privately to compensate early investors and employees who later may reap the rewards in an IPO.

But late last month, the House Financial Services Committee approved "The Facebook Rule," which would allow up to 1,000 investors (rather than the current 500) to hold shares in a private company before the business is required to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission and go public.

So what, you ask?

So such a rule change could create an even bigger Internet bubble than the one we experienced a decade ago.

It could make private investments even riskier. Worse, it would perpetuate a largely secret market in stocks that is subject to little regulation and is closed to 99 percent of investors -- like you and me.

Stock in Facebook and many other hot private tech companies is already aggressively traded in something called the secondary market, which pairs those who own private stock with those who would like to have an inside, pre-public piece of a company.

Say you're an early employee or private investor who doesn't want to wait for an IPO (or thinks the IPO might tank). You can sell your stock now through companies such as SecondMarket, SharesPost, or Gate Technologies. Those firms match sellers with buyers in a closed, private -- some would even say clandestine -- exchange. Venture capitalists admit it lacks "transparency."

These exchanges are secretive because no one knows what the companies' financials really look like, so they can't really tell what the shares are worth. Some companies have said they were making money, for example, but when the firms went public it was discovered they were actually losing money.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/11/08/new-facebook-rule-ipos-only-for-1-percent/#ixzz1d74jEcqS

Facebook hires mobile tech developer team

(Reuters) - Facebook has picked up a team of mobile technology developers from a small San Francisco startup company, bolstering the social networking giant's efforts to expand its offerings on smartphones and tablet PCs.

Facebook said on Tuesday that it had completed a "talent acquisition" from Strobe Corp. The deal does not include any of Strobe's technology, according to Facebook spokesman Jonny Thaw.

"Founder and CEO Charles Jolley will join our mobile engineering team, and we're looking forward to the major impact the Strobe team will undoubtedly make at Facebook," the company said in a statement.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, and Facebook declined to comment on how many Strobe employees were joining Facebook. The Strobe website lists 15 staff members, including management.

Facebook, the world's No. 1 social network with more than 800 million members, is increasingly focused on developing mobile versions of its service. It released a long-awaited app to use its service on Apple Inc'siPad last month, and introduced support for social games on mobile versions of its website.

Strobe develops technology to help developers create and distribute applications using HTML5 technology that can run on various devices, such as mobile phones, tablet PCs and desktop PCs.

(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic in San Francisco; editing by John Wallace)

Facebook expects its largest user base to come from India in the near future

NEW DELHI: Social networking giant Facebookexpects its largest user base to come from India, surpassing Indonesia and the US in the near future, a senior executive said.

"India is our third largest market in terms of number of users and what we're excited about and why we're here is because some time in the future, we think that India will pass first Indonesia, which should happen soon, and then US," Facebook's vice president for mobile partnerships and corporate development Vaughan Smith said.

Indonesia has more than 45 million Facebook users while India follows at around 30 million users, Smith added.

More than three-fourth of Facebook's 800 million users are outside the US with users in India growing at phenomenal pace. According to Comscore data released in June, one in three Internet user in India was a Facebook user.

Facebook's user count in India jumped 85% to 34 million as of June this year over the 18 million last year, as per Comscore. Smith expects more number of users to come from India than the US.

Facebook's prospects are also looking up since India is adding more around 5-7 million internet users a month. According to an IMRB and Internet and Mobile Association of India, the country's internet population was 112 million in September, which is likely to go up to 121 million by the year end. At this rate, India will overtake the US, which has 245 million internet users, within two years, the survey adds.

"We expect that majority of people in India who have phones would use Facebook as the most important thing on their phone, because that's what we see in other markets. Which means we will have more Facebook users in India than we do in America," Smith added.

"More than twice as many people login to Facebook from mobiles than desktops, globally. Usage is switching and the same is happening in India," Smith said. Facebook's statistics reveal that 350 million users access the website through mobile phones.

On Tuesday, Facebook and mobile phone chipset maker MediaTek announced a partnership to bring the social networking major to low-cost feature phones or entry-level mobile phones, which may encourage more people to access the website on the go.

"We think that partnership with MediaTek will create a good, fast and engaging experience on devices that cost less than $50 and that's a bonus for us, not just in India but in all of Asia and Africa where affordability is one of the ways for people to get on Facebook," Smith added.