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American Airlines is sueing Google. They don’t want other companies buying “American Airlines” in paid search campaigns. Eric Goldman provides some analysis. It will be a battle for AA, but they have the $$$ and the lawyers to make a run at winning.
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More thought provoking discussion from Jeff Jarvis on the death (or life) of newspapers. He thinks Blodget’s latest analysis of the industry “is screwed.”
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A study by Bivings Group found that 92% of America’s top 100 papers now offer video on their sites. That number is up from 61% in 2006. More than 95% have RSS feeds and reporter blogs, too.
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Brad Fitzpatrick works at Google. In this post he’s talking about an approach for social network portability - or a way for you to stay connected to all your “friends” no matter where they are online, myspace, linkedin, facebook, etc. Very cool idea.
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Here are Brad Fitzgerald’s slides on Social Network Portability.
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Here’s an LA Times editorial on Google News’ plans to let people comment on stories written about them. The writer says: “The feature implies that the stories aggregated by Google News are incomplete…” Should we believe everything we read in newspapers?
18 August 2007
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