The Daily Loper - February 13, 2007
It Looks Like Ted Stevens Was Right After All Edition
Todays links of interest:
- Jobs’ comments not good enough for Norwegian group
Because talk is one thing, but actions are something else entirely. - Yahoo Pipes: A User’s Guide
Kirk swears that this is the coolest thing to happen to RSS since…well, RSS. - YouTube inks for Digital Music content
Licensed, full-length televisions shows and motion pictures coming to YouTube. - Pirates Flagged
Will YouTube feel the heat from the MySpace piracy filters? Depends on how well they work. Note: article from a NewsCorp publication. Full disclosure and all that. - ‘Battlestar’ will be back for four
It goes without saying that we approve, as long as they keep the eps like the one that aired on Sunday to a minimum. All we really want is four or five really great seasons, and a graceful and satisfying ending. - Veoh to target YouTube viewers
Veoh launches. Finally. - Death by 1,000 cuts
File Under: Music industry death watch. - Restricted rating urged for films that show smoking
Canada again. This one, we can get behind. - IRS Ruling Stings Film Production
In an effort to curb "runaway" productions, participations and residuals must be included when determining production costs in order to claim a tax credit. Ouch. - No sleep means no new brain cells
Explains so much, resolves so little. We need longer days if only for the longer nights. - Artists, entertainment companies battle over copyright law
In Canada. Considering the age and importance of copyright, you’d think this would have been resolved decades ago. - E-Book Author Complains About Unauthorized Physical Copies
Except the physical copy was authorized by the fact that author Seth Godin apparently didn’t understand the Creative Commons license he applied to his work. Next time try one of the non-commercial licenses Seth. - Zunewatch 2007
OK, here’s an interesting challenge. Find someone who is actually using a Zune out in the wild. It’s been almost three months since Zune was released and still no sightings. That’s sort of strange when you consider that Steve Ballmer claims Zune already has a 20% market share. But then Ballmer’s the guy who uses Excel to manage his calendar. His math might be a little fuzzy.





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