Wednesday, September 21, 2005

Chinese Search Engine Baidu to Appeal (Web promotion) (AP)AP - Chinese search


Chinese Search Engine Baidu to Appeal (AP)
AP - Chinese search engine Baidu.com plans to appeal a court verdict ruling it violated copyrights held by a local affiliate of global music giant EMI, Baidu's lawyer said Tuesday.

Google Poised To Offer Wi-Fi Services (NewsFactor)
NewsFactor - Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is poised to roll out its own version of Wi-Fi service and move even further beyond the search capabilities that have made the company a household name.

Hacker Spams Huge Quantities Of Trojans, Again (TechWeb)
TechWeb - For the second day in a row, an unknown attacker spammed major quantities of a new Bagle-esque Trojan horse that turns off virtually every known security program and blocks access to security sites on the Internet.

Microsoft, Qwest Team Up on VoIP (PC World)
PC World - Companies prepare to offer Internet phone service to small and medium-size businesses.

Jobs Bemoans'Greedy'Music Providers Seeking iTunes Price Hike (TechWeb)
TechWeb - The Apple CEO explains that record companies already earn more money per song via download than they do from those sold on CDs.

Apple CEO Against ITunes Price Hike (AP)

"AppleAP - Apple boss Steve Jobs vowed Tuesday to repel "greedy" record companies' demands for higher music download prices, warning that any such move would encourage piracy.




Apple CEO Steve Jobs Calls Music Industry Greedy (NewsFactor)
NewsFactor - Apple chief executive Steve Jobs has accused the music industry of being greedy. His comments were geared toward the possibility that record companies might try to change pricing for songs when their contracts come up for renewal with Apple's iTunes music service.

Google begins limited test of Wi-Fi service (Reuters)

"GoogleReuters - Google, the online search leader,confirmed on Tuesday it has begun a limited test of a freewireless Internet service, called Google WiFi.




Baidu to appeal Chinese court ruling of copyright infringement (AFP)

"China'sAFP - China's biggest Internet search engine Baidu said that it would appeal a recent court ruling ordering it to pay fines for violating copyrights by providing MP3 search technology.



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