Archive for April 4th, 2008

You don’t mess with Craigslist, apparently.

A fan-run blog called Craigslist Blog has been served a takedown notice from the massive classifieds site, according to a post from blogger Tim White on Thursday.

Jim Buckmaster, Craigslist CEO

(Credit: Craigslist)

White posted the e-mail he’d received from Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster, which claimed that White’s URL “craigslistblog.org” was “infringing” and that its name was “needlessly confusing to members of the media and the general public, and must be changed.” Buckmaster didn’t demand that White stop blogging, but he did request that he stop using the domain, turn it over to Craigslist, and additionally stop posting excerpts from Craigslist on the unofficial blog.

In response, White concurred to stop excerpting Craigslist content, and the unofficial Craigslist Blog now prominently displays the phrase “(the unofficial one)” in its masthead. But White wouldn’t back down on the domain.

“I think you have received bad legal counsel and that this is potentially a really bad PR move for (Craigslist),” his e-mail response to Buckmaster stated, an allusion to the company’s friendly, hippie image.

Buckmaster seemed none too pleased with White’s response, and in a second e-mail that White posted to his blog, he reminded the blogger that Craigslist’s law firm of choice, Perkins Cole, “also does intellectual property work for Google, and for a lot of other prominent companies.”

When White launched the Craigslist Blog last month, Craigslist didn’t have its own blog. That’s changed recently, as Buckmaster now authors an official Craigslist blog. A report earlier this week estimated that Craigslist’s annual revenue is likely around $80 million and could be significantly higher, except that the company is “not about the money.”

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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3DConnexion's SpaceNavigator mouse.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

It might not be a Wiimote, but it’s still got that whole “immersive” thing going on.

Linden Lab, publisher of virtual world Second Life, announced Thursday that its members can use some officially-sanctioned new toys to navigate the metaverse. Logitech’s …

Source [The social]

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U.S. stock futures cling to tight range before jobs By Steve Goldstein, MarketWatch Last Update: 6:02 AM ET Apr 4, 2008 LONDON (MarketWatch) - U.S. stock futures clung to a tight range on Friday, with traders not willing to venture far before the release of data that could show the third straight monthly drop in U.S. employment outside the farm […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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At CTIA 2008 in Las Vegas, I took a look at LiveContacts BuddyFinder, Web app that launches on April 15.

BuddyFinder

I tried it out with a non-GPS phone, and in the process moved to Germany.

To clear a tiny confusion, BuddyFinder and LiveContacts are two sort-of related names for the app, which is itself the free branch of the better-known FindWhere, a Dutch company with a much more useful, robust service–tracking people down (kids, an elderly parent, a wayward spouse) through their devices. FindWhere includes lost phone recovery, emergency alerts, and notification services if the device goes outside your specified bounds.

Of course, the free BuddyFinder doesn’t do all that. Instead, it installs an app to the phone (with yet another name) that utilizes either GPS or cell phone triangulation on choose smartphones, and broadcasts the location to FindWhere’s servers. The app’s only role is to play transmitter. Buddies then see your location mapped on the internet after every five minutes or location change. That’s wonderful for plotting a route somewhere for demonstration purposes, or to prove that you actually did go to the library to study, but it’s less useful if you’re interested in finding a pal while you’re out and about.

From the looks of it, BuddyFinder is a rather late, rather feature-slim arrival to location-based friend tracking that’s similar to a lot of other services out there, including Loopt, Whereboutz, Rummble, and Whrrl, and even FindMe, which didn’t impress me on all accounts, but works nonetheless.

To differentiate BuddyFinder from the competition, the press materials call the Web and cell phone app combo “the only truly free buddy finder service on the Web.” I see what they’re getting at, since some of the other services rely on data transfers to update your location on your phone, where BuddyFinder tracks you from your PC for free. As I mentioned, it’s hard to see how being limited to the Computer is a perk, even if there’s no data charge. Besides, much of the audience for location-based services already subscribes to an unlimited data plan, so it’s difficult to see a real detraction there.

Still, if you’re seeking a geo-tracking service, there’s no harm in looking at BuddyFinder. You can sign up for the beta now, or wait until April 15th for the full release.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Last.fm, the social music site that CBS Interactive purchased last year, will be seeing closer integration into one of the media conglomerate’s other properties very soon. According to a joint announcement Tuesday, Last.fm and CBS Radio will be sharing audio content on the Web to provide on the internet …

Source [The social]

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Commentary: There’s growing confidence in a Wall Street revival By David Weidner, MarketWatch Last Update: 12:01 AM ET Apr 3, 2008 NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Ben Bernanke emerged Wednesday from a long winter holed up in the Federal Reserve. Reports recommend he saw his shadow by offering an assessment that the economy will shrink. The Fed chairman cast doubt on what […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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This post was updated at 9:45am EDT with comment from Google.

Will eBay sell Skype to Google?

It’s no secret that many in Silicon Valley regard eBay’s 2005 acquisition of the telephony service as a $2.6 billion misstep. But new rumors, reported late Tuesday night on TechCrunch, …

Source [The social]

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