Feuding over Doodle-4-Google Video
Feuding over Doodle-4-Google Video Transcript
IT'S WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23. I'M WILSON TANG, AND IT'S TIME TO GET LOADED. [*] DOODLE-4-GOOGLE IS A CONTEST WHERE CHILDREN CAN UNLEASH THEIR CREATIVITY AND MAYBE WIN A LITTLE CASH AT THE SAME TIME. BUT GOOGLE YET AGAIN HAS FOUND ITSELF IN MORE PRIVACY TROUBLES. THE INITIAL PARENTAL CONSENT FORM ASKS FOR THE LAST FOUR DIGITS OF A STUDENT'S SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER AND THEIR CITY OF BIRTH. WITH THAT INFORMATION, IT WOULD BE RELATIVELY EASY TO FIGURE OUT A YOUNGSTER'S COMPLETE SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBER. A GOOGLE SPOKEPERSON, HOWEVER SAYS, IT USES THE INFORMATION TO STOP DUPLICATE ENTRIES AND TO ASSURE THAT ALL APPLICANTS ARE LEGAL U.S.-RESIDENTS. GOOGLE ASSURES THAT IT IS NOT STORING SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS. [*] OKAY YESTERDAY WE REPORTED THAT IPAD 2 COULD BE DELAYED UNTIL JUNE. BUT NOW THE WORD IS THAT IT COULD BE AS EARLY AS NEXT WEEK. MEDIA INVITATIONS FOR BIG LAUNCHES LIKE THESE TEND TO GO OUT ON SHORT NOTICE. ONCE THE CNET INVITES COME IN, WE'LL LET YOU KNOW. [*] AMAZON ANNOUNCED THAT AMAZON PRIME MEMBERS CAN NOW STREAM MORE THAN 5,000 MOVIES AND TV SHOWS FOR FREE. AGAIN, THIS IS ONLY FOR AMAZON PRIME MEMBERS THAT PAY AN ANNUAL $79 FEE FOR AMAZON PERKS LIKE FREE SHIPPING. AND NOW FREE MOVIES. CUSTOMERS WILL BE ABLE TO WATCH THEIR FREE STREAMS ON MACS, WINDOWS MACHINES, ROKU BOXES, AND OTHER INTERNET-CONNECTED DEVICES. [*] CHINA NOW HAS AN OFFICIAL GOVERNMENT SEARCH ENGINE. IT IS CALLED PANGUSO AND IT WILL COMPETE WITH BAIDU FOR THE NUMBER ONE SEARCH ENGINE SPOT IN THE COUNTRY. REMEMBER HOW CHINA AND GOOGLE HAD IT OUT LAST YEAR OVER FILTERED SEARCH RESULTS? WELL I GUESS IF YOU CAN'T BEAT 'EM, JOIN 'EM. THE SEARCH ENGINE WILL PROVIDE GOVERNMENT APPROVED SEARCH RESULTS SO DON'T BOTHER SEARCHING FOR FALUN DAFA. [*] MINT HAS ADDED A FEW NEW TOOLS THAT WILL HELP ITS USERS GET OUT OF DEBT. THEY ARE CALLED "GET OUT OF DEBT TOOLS." THEY WILL HELP YOU SET AND MANAGE A PAYMENT SCHEDULE FOR ANY MONEYS OWED. IT TAKES INTO ACCOUNT YOUR SALARY AND CURRENT SPENDING HABITS TO HELP YOU GET A SENSE OF WHEN AND HOW YOU CAN PAY OFF ANY DEBT. MINT SAYS THAT THIS WAS ONE OF THE MOST REQUESTED FEATURES. [*] IF YOU HAVE ANY MEDIA UPLOADED TO YAHOO VIDEO, YOU SHOULD DOWNLOAD IT NOW IF YOU WANT TO KEEP IT. THE SITE, YAHOO VIDEO, DISCONTINUED VIDEO UPLOADS IN DECEMBER, AND NOW ANY VIDEOS THAT WERE UPLOADED BEFORE THEN WILL BE PULLED AFTER MARCH 14TH. YAHOO ENABLED DOWNLOADING UNDER THE "MY VIDEO" TAB, SO USERS CAN RETRIEVE THEIR CONTENT BEFORE THEN. YAHOO VIDEO ISN'T SHUTTING DOWN, IT JUST WON'T ALLOW USER GENERATED CONTENT ANY MORE. [*] THAT IS YOUR NEWS FOR THE DAY. WE'LL HAVE MORE FOR YOU TOMORROW. AND REMEMBER VISIT CNET-DOT-COM-SLASH-LOADED FOR LINKS TO OUR STORIES. I'M WILSON TANG FOR CNET AND YOU'VE JUST BEEN LOADED.
Related Videos
Ep. 1331: Of privacy and Blook Doodles
On today's show, it's a total Monday, so we devolve into nonsense words a little bit. It's mostly to stave off our justified rage over Cablevision and News Corp.'s money-motivated, consumer-unfriendly standoff. In other news, Google offers personalized Doodles on your birthday, and Borders offers yet another manifesto outlet. --Molly
Google releases a drawing tool for Google Docs, Twitter hints at how it will make money, and T-Mobile launches a mobile 3G USB device to help keep you online anywhere.
Ep. 1397: Amazon is ready for Prime time
On today's show, Android is taking over the world (seriously), Internet-starved users turn to ham radio and dial-up to get the word out of Egypt, and Intel's Sandy Bridge chipsets are delayed (uh oh). Also, details about a possible Netflix-like streaming service that would be free for Amazon Prime users. As if Amazon Prime could get any more awesome. All the right moves, Amazon. All the right moves. Plus, some problems with quashing subpoenas. --Molly
To commemorate the 30th anniversary of Pac-Man's 1980 release, Google has put out its first truly interactive special logo, or "doodle": a fully playable version of Pac-Man.
Best Buy scraps its restocking fee, Google TV may not be ready for prime time by the start of the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show, and tonight is the night for a rare lunar eclipse.
Amazon announcement on Wednesday
Google News adds tags for exclusive or investigative content, Amazon and Netflix add more streaming video content from Fox and DreamWorks, respectively, and Amazon is set to make a big product announcement in two days.
Rep. Christopher Smith, R.-N.J., demonstrates how the results of a Google search are censored in China. Then he lays out a series of questions on how U.S.companies cooperate with the Chinese government.
Netflix lets you stream movies to your TV set. Find out what you need to treat your TV like your PC. Napster releases over 6 million DRM-free tunes. Find out how the music retailer stacks up to iTunes and Amazon. And we test out the Wii Fit. Come with us to Central Park to try out Nintendo's new fitness program.
Sophos announces a free antivirus program for Mac, Microsoft lets you sign into Hotmail with other e-mail accounts, and Google unveils search tools that will make you be a more informed voter today.
HP confirms that a WebOS-based tablet will come out early next year, Google fires an engineer over alleged privacy breaches of children's accounts, "The Social Network" movie reviews are in, and Twitter redesigns its site for more streamlined access.