Aug 30

SANTA CLARA, Calif–It’s early morning in California, and so far there are no reports of problems due to the much-anticipated
Conficker worm. In Asia, where it’s already evening, the worm hasn’t done any noticeable damage, according to McAfee’s Hong Kong-based security expert, Vu Nguyen.

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I’m here at the headquarters of security company McAfee, where I spoke by phone with Nguyen and in person with McAfee spokesman (and former CNET News security reporter) Joris Evers.

Aug 24

Yahoo’s Indian team developed the feature and so far there are no plans to bring it to the United States or other areas, said spokeswoman Kathryn Kelly.

(Credit:
Yahoo)

(Credit:
Yahoo)

• Third, Glue Pages will dovetail with the Y!OS, aka Yahoo Open Strategy, attempt to more tightly wire together its Web site while opening it up to outside programmers as a foundation.

• Second is the attempt to be more competitive with Google in its efforts to move to “universal search.” Google today sometimes mixes other information such as photos alongside the traditional list of links in its search results, part of an effort to expand to provide a broader answer to what people are looking for.

(Via Search Engine Land)

• Last is the idea of vertical search, in which search results are tailored for a specific domain such as health. Vertical search sites aren’t as plentiful in India than in the United States, Kelly said, so Glue Pages can provide a more tailored entry point to the Internet.

Yahoo Glue Pages build a mini-portal around search results. It's in testing in India.

Glue Pages, which the company began offering in beta form to Yahoo search users in India, combine traditional search results with a wealth of other related information. Traditional search results appear in a strip on the left side of the page, while other modules appear that spotlight sponsored links, recipes, medical information, Wikipedia entries, stock charts, Flickr images, train schedules, restaurant lists, news, and even Google blog search results.

• First is display ads, the graphics that typically are used to tout brand names and logos. Google’s cash engine is built on text ads today, and Yahoo has relative strength in display ads.

Glue Pages have prominent sponsorship opportunities, though not yet display ad opportunities, Kelly said. Glue pages launched with the ability to sponsor travel pages, but now all modules can be sponsored, she said.

The search is interesting for other reasons besides Yahoo’s portal strengths.

Yahoo pioneered Internet portals, all-purpose sites where people can find everything they need, but Google found a much stronger business model through an effective search engine that presents bare-bones results with text ads alongside. Yahoo, though, hasn’t given up, even though it continues to lose search share; In March the gap widened a bit more, with 59.8 percent of U.S. queries at Google and 21.3 percent at Yahoo, according to ComScore.

“We encourage other regions to develop things that work for their regions,” Kelly said.
“If it does get traction, potentially something like it could launch in the United States.”

Yahoo has begun testing Glue Pages, a major new way to present search results that caters to its strength as an Internet portal.

Yahoo's guide to Glue Pages

The service is definitely in beta, though. I’m not sure why a search for “violin lessons” would produce a blank five-day stock chart from Yahoo Finance, for example.

There’s no date set yet for the feature coming out of beta testing, Kelly said.

“Glue will leverage the Yahoo application platform…in coming months,” Kelly said, though today it doesn’t yet. “We will eventually open it up, so developers could develop customized search results for Glue Pages the way we’re doing it for Search Monkey.”

Update 3:30 p.m. PDT: A correction: Although only travel modules could be sponsored at launch, now all can be. Also, there’s no display ad opportunity at present, though the sponsorship can mean more prominence than text ads. Update 11:45 p.m.: I updated with new detail from Yahoo, further information from the site, and some analysis.

Aug 24

What’s interesting is that the report says demand for the traditional magnetic drives is still strong despite the advancement of flash-based solid-state drives. iSuppli says vendors are on track to ship 573 million drives by the end of this year, which represents 11 percent growth over last year’s final tally.

In the first quarter of 2008, HDD vendors shipped 137 million drives, which is 21 percent higher than the same quarter the year before, according to iSuppli, a market research company which keeps track of the industry. Those drives are primarily being snapped inside notebook PCs, other portable devices, desktops, and external drives.

Despite industry leader Seagate’s poor showing earlier this year, analysts say there’s still plenty of demand for hard disk drives.

“Seagate’s second-quarter net income did come in lower than expected, but this was not because of any decline in demand, but rather due to lower prices for its products,” according to Krishna Chander, iSuppli’s senior analyst for storage systems.

(Credit:
Hitachi)

Vendors like Seagate can charge more for HDDs for notebooks than they can for desktops, and though desktop PCs shipments are down, notebook sales are doing very well. The PC industry got a good report last week when IDC and Gartner revealed data showing the worldwide PC industry growing at a healthy clip, despite economic uncertainty in the U.S.

Lower prices and bigger capacities are keeping HDDs competitive in the face of the increasing popularity of solid-state drives. Though NAND flash memory will also continue to get more affordable, iSuppli says traditional hard drives will stay ahead for now.

Things weren’t looking so good when Seagate reported its earnings in April, and revenue was below what analysts were expecting. But the demand for HDDs wasn’t the issue, according to iSuppli.

Aug 24

Green networking: I find it just a tad ironic that the industry will tout high-density/low-power networking gear in perhaps the least green city in the world. Nevertheless, expect to hear green messages, especially from Cisco Systems.

There are others as well, such as network identity, application acceleration, and software as a service. See you next week. Viva Las Vegas. Viva Interop. Viva TCP/IP. Enough.

802.11n: Since wireless networking vendors like Aruba Networks, Meru Networks, and Trapeze Networks announced their products last fall, this will be the first Interop to trumpet the bandwidth benefits of 802.11n. Look for messages like “enterprise wireless networking” along with hyperbole like, “LAN access switches are dead.” There is actually a nugget of truth in each of these.

10-Gigabit Ethernet. Yes, we’ve been talking about this for years but the discussion will shift this year from the network core to data center switching. Good for vendors like Extreme, Force 10, and Foundry. This also could help Juniper Networks and its new line of Ethernet switches.

Branch office networking. This is really code for multifunction networking equipment that can be centrally managed. Branch office gear consolidates networking, security, and WAN (wide-area network) optimization in a single package. Some vendors are even talking about traditional storage topics like file access and centralized backup. Finally, lots of IT dollars are flowing in this direction.

The RSA security conference is a distant memory and the industry buzz has shifted to all things networking at Interop next week. What can users anticipate in Las Vegas?

Server virtualization. This is a bit of a stretch for the networking crowd but, hey, the IT industry always finds the hot issue du jour. Besides, server virtualization plays into green IT and dense data centers anchored by 10Gb Ethernet switches. That’s three industry buzz messages for the price of one.

Aug 21

Greg Hoglund is no stranger to security. In the last few years, he’s founded Bugscan, Cenzic, and HBGary, where he is currently CEO. He is also the co-author of Exploiting Software, Rootkits: Exploiting the Windows Kernel, and Exploiting Online Games. Hoglund has presented at numerous Black Hat Briefings and taught several training sessions there as well.

This week he stopped by the Security Bites studio for a conversation with CNET’s Robert Vamosi on rookits, software vulnerabilities, and online gaming.

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Aug 21

Now that the FCC has delivered a smackdown to Comcast for its sketchy anti-BitTorrent activities, it’s about time that some other company stepped up to the plate and breathed life into the Net neutrality debate. Surveillance State is happy to report that the Walt Disney-owned ESPN sports network, through its selective blocking of people from particular Internet service providers, may very well wake the sleeping giant that is Net neutrality.

ESPN360.com bills itself as the premier destination for streaming access to live sports events. If the sport or team you love isn’t important enough to be shown on cable TV, no fear, ESPN will stream it to you online for free. Well, that is if you a subscriber to the right Internet service provider.

ESPN's warm welcome to customers of ISPs that have signed deals.

(Credit:
ESPN360)

Customers of AT&T DSL and Verizon’s Fios services, along with approximately 20 more ISPs, can have free, 24-hour per day access to ESPN’s exclusive sports content. Customers of Comcast, Cox, and hundreds of other ISPs, both big and small, are left out in the cold–forbidden to access content that ESPN has, via exclusive contracts, guaranteed that you cannot obtain via any other means in the U.S.

Love Italian soccer and get your Internet access through Comcast? Too bad.

After telling out-of-luck users that their ISPs haven’t coughed up funds for their customers to access ESPN360, the sports network informs them that AT&T customers do have access, and helpfully provides them with a toll-free number that they can call to make the switch to that ISP. How nice of ESPN.

ESPN's message to Comcast's customers

(Credit:
ESPN360.com)

There are many reasons why an ISP would decide against paying ESPN for its premium Web content. A spokesperson for Cox Communications told a journalist back in 2006 that signing on to carry ESPN360 would require Cox to burden all of its customers with additional costs–even those who don’t want the service.

Many customers in the United States still have no real choice for their ISP. For example, if you live out in rural Montana and the one cash-starved regional ISP that offers broadband Internet access hasn’t agreed to ESPN’s shakedown effort, you have no options.

Not surprisingly, this discriminatory policy concerns Ben Scott, policy director at Free Press, the group leading the fight against Comcast’s anti-BitTorrent filtering and other foes of Net neutrality. When asked for his view, he issued the following statement:

ESPN360 raises the unsettling prospect that each ISP will someday have its own distinctive “Internet experience” that includes all kinds of exclusive content in parallel walled-gardens. That is a troubling vision for anyone that values an open media system shared by all Internet users alike.

Most interesting, I suppose, is ESPN’s policy of discriminating against particular ISPs, while at the same time giving free access to any user visiting the site from a U.S. military or university Internet connection; that is, users coming in via a .edu or .mil IP address get to view the sports content without any money changing hands between ESPN and Uncle Sam.

While the decision to support the troops (via free access to European soccer) is a noble one, the decision to give college students a free ride is extremely interesting. After all, the major media companies have shown no real restraint in trying to shake down university users–at times, taking thousands of them to court for their attempts to download content for free.

The cynical among us might perhaps see this as a Joe Camel-esque tactic–offer free access when they’re young, hope that they develop a habit, and once they graduate or leave the military, they’ll look for an ISP that has cut a deal with ESPN.

ESPN spokesman Paul Melvin dismissed my cynicism, explaining the decision to offer free service to these millions of Americans:

These groups are not commercially served by an ISP, and they are not likely to be commercially served in the reasonably foreseeable future. Given this, there is no reasonable chance that we could strike a deal with a retail ISP, nor that the market will continue to grow and offer them greater choice. As a result we adjusted to these specific circumstances.

To try to understand how government regulators would see this issue, I turned to Rep. Rick Boucher (D-Va.), one of the most powerful members of Congress in issues related to telecommunications and Net neutrality.

[This issue has] nothing to do with network neutrality debates, which focus on the practices of the broadband providers. What is in question, is the practice of a content provider, a website owner, in terms of how it chooses to make its content available … I don’t see it as a matter for policy makers to get involved in. I see it as a matter for private contracts, to be determined by content providers.

The congressman is correct in that this is not a traditional Net neutrality conversation per se, since that term usually applies to discrimination by the company owning the “last mile”–the connection to a user’s home. Perhaps a new term will need to be invented by the “Save the Internet” crowd, so as not to further dilute the “Net neutrality” phrase. However, what does concern me is the rather shameless attempt by ESPN to shake down big ISPs, while at the same time giving away its content to millions of college students for free.

Boucher added that:

If ESPN had market power, i would agree that there would be anti-trust issues. Companies that have market power have different market obligations. [However], this is one web site that is putting up sports content, competing with others. Even though ESPN is popular, I don’t think [anti trust] applies. It might in TV broadcast, but certainly not on the Internet.

While I respect the congressman (and am a huge fan of his work in fighting against the dreaded Digital Millennium Copyright Act), I think he is on the wrong side of this issue. Due to the exclusive contracts that ESPN has negotiated with various sports associations, the company does have market power. If you love European soccer or another sport that can’t draw enough viewers to justify TV coverage, there is simply no other (legal) way to view live sports events in the U.S. ESPN is the only game in town.

Libertarians out there will, like the congressman, argue that ESPN is a private company and has a right to decide which customers can access its content. If ESPN offered a generic service (like e-mail, horoscopes, or photo sharing), that would certainly be true. However, because ESPN has exclusive contracts for U.S. distribution of many types of sports content, I don’t think these same rules apply. ESPN shouldn’t be able to get exclusive access to this content, and then deny it to millions of Americans.

Yes, the content is expensive–which is why ESPN could allow the customers of non-kickback-paying ISPs to pull out their credit cards, and sign up for an individual account in order to view these games. Unfortunately, this is not something ESPN is interested in. Explaining this lack of an individual subscriber option, ESPN’s Paul Melvin simply stated that “it is not the business model that we’ve chosen.”

Aug 21

It seems like the Sirius-XM merger been dragging on for years, and both sides are eager to get it done, but what would I get out of it? I’ve been a happy Sirius subscriber for years. I love the commercial-free music channels, and the uninhibited talk channels are hugely entertaining. At least maybe Sirius’ sound quality will get closer to XM’s–it’s always sounded a little better.

They still need approval from the Federal Communications Commission before the deal is done. If you ask me, it seems anticompetitive to let the only two satellite-radio companies in the U.S. merge. Both companies’ subscriber bases are at record highs, but both claim they need the merger to survive. They’ve both far exceeded the numbers they claimed they needed to be profitable when they started.

Sirius must be overpaying Howard Stern–because even with all the new subscribers he brought them, they’re still losing money. He’s sucking the profits out of Sirius–perhaps Stern should consider a pay cut to help them out? He can afford it more than his listeners.

What does the merger mean for satellite radio subscribers? There’s a lot of duplication between Sirius and XM’s programming so we’ll surely lose some of our favorite programs or channels. There will no doubt be winners and losers in the reshuffle.

But without Sirius-XM competition how long will the merged company wait before they stick it to the subscribers and jack up the rates? Yes, some say the merged company will still be competing with broadcast radio, but isn’t that like saying movie theater ticket prices are somehow kept in check by DVD prices? Somebody’s gotta pay for the Sirius-XM merger, and I have a feeling that somebody is us.

Aug 21

Mogulus, a New York-based company that’s part of the crowded pack of live-video streaming sites, has raised a new round of funding from news media conglomerate Gannett, publisher of USA Today and about two dozen other newspapers.

The two companies have had a partnership in place for the past three months, and the new investment is considered to be an extension of the partnership.

Financial terms were not formally disclosed, but a source close to the deal told us that–consistent with blog reports–the capital is about $10 million.

So far, Gannett’s partnership with Mogulus has given the video site some bragging rights: when former Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton made some controversial remarks about the Robert Kennedy assassination in 1968, that interview had been recorded and live-streamed on Mogulus by one of the participating Gannett newspapers–the Argus Leader of Sioux Falls, S.D. Other newspapers picked up on the remark, and the rest is (recent) history.

Besides cementing the relationship with what is probably its highest-profile client, Mogulus likely could use the extra cash: live video is bandwidth-heavy, and there are plenty of competitors in the field, from Kyte to Ustream to Justin.tv. Additionally, the company is working on supplementing its ad-supported free service with a paid offering.

Aug 21

T-Mobile G1

(Credit:
T-Mobile)

T-Mobile and Google just announced the first-ever handset with the new Google Android operating system. Called the T-Mobile G1, it has both full touch-screen functionality, a QWERTY keyboard, a trackball for one-handed navigation, plus access to mobile Web applications like Google Maps Street View, Gmail, YouTube, and more. The G1 is available for pre-order now in the U.S. in limited quantities at T-MobileG1 if you’re an existing T-Mobile customer. It will be available in retail stores beginning October 22, for $179 with a two-year voice and data agreement. As for our European brethren, it will be available in the U.K. beginning November and across Europe in early 2009.

Without further ado, here are the features: Wi-Fi, 3G (with dual-band UMTS), multimedia messaging, e-mail support (Gmail as well as other POP3 and IMAP e-mail services), instant messaging (with Google Talk as an option of course), a full HTML browser, GPS functionality, a 3-megapixel camera, the ability to multitask, a music player with access to the Amazon MP3 store, Bluetooth, and quad-band GSM support. Another very exciting feature (in my opinion) is it has one-click contextual search, which lets you search for anything simply by typing in something with the keyboard. This is very similar to the search feature on the Helio Ocean, in that it can search your contacts as well as the Web just by tapping in a few letters.

As for Google Maps, it will support Google Maps Street View, which lets you explore cities at the street-level as if you were right there on the corner. It will also have a built-in compass on the phone and allow you to view locations and navigate 360 degrees by moving the phone around. The aforementioned Amazon MP3 store is also a huge boon for the T-Mobile G1, as all of the songs on Amazon are DRM-free, and you can buy and download the song directly from the store to the device (only if you have a Wi-Fi connection though; you can search, sample, and buy with a cellular connection however). A song is $0.89, while an album is anywhere from $5.99 to $9.99.

Last but not least, the G1 will offer access to the Android Market, which is an application store similar to the iTunes App Store. Some of the available applications include ShopSavvy, an application that lets you scan the UPC code of a product with the phone’s camera and instantly compare prices with other stores; Ecorio, an application that tracks your carbon footprint; and BreadCrumbz, an application that lets you create a step-by-step visual map using photos. Of course, you can also buy games like Namco’s Pac-Man.

It’s important to note that the T-Mobile G1 won’t have Microsoft Exchange support right off the bat, though its open-source infrastructure means that can be easily remedied with a third-party application (according to Google anyway). Also, Gmail is available as push and yes, you can use it to read MS Office documents and PDFs. There is no stereo Bluetooth, and you can’t use it as a tethered modem. And no surprise here, the G1 is SIM locked to T-Mobile for the time being, though I expect there will be efforts to unlock it.

Click here for full coverage of Google Android.

Aug 21

SAN FRANCISCO–NBC Universal would like to have its TV shows distributed once again through Apple’s iTunes service, a top executive said Wednesday, but he called for antipiracy measures to help protect his business’ revenue.

George Kliavkoff, chief digital officer at NBC Universal, didn’t specifically mention Apple by name in his request, but it was clear he had the
iPod maker in mind when it came to combating people’s consumption of pirated content.

George Kliavkoff, chief digital officer at NBC Universal

(Credit:
Stephen Shankland/CNET Networks)

“If you look at studies about MP3 players, especially leading MP3 players and what portion of that content is pirated, and think about how that content gets onto that device, it has to go through a gatekeeping piece of software, which would be a convenient place to put some antipiracy measures,” Kliavkoff said in an onstage interview at the Ad:Tech conference here. “One of the big issues for NBC is piracy. We are financially harmed every day by piracy. It results in us not being able to invest as much money in the next generation of film and TV products.”

Apple’s iTunes service has become the largest music retailer in the United States, but relations between Apple and NBC Universal are strained. In 2007, NBC Universal pulled its TV content from iTunes when the two companies disagreed about pricing. Kliavkoff made it clear that he’d like the conduit back, though.

“We’d love to be on iTunes. It has a great customer experience. We’d love to figure out a way to distribute our content on iTunes,” he said, but wouldn’t comment on any negotiations. “We have film distribution with iTunes so yes, we do talk to Apple,” he said.

Price appears still to be a sticking point. NBC Universal sets a wholesale price for content it offers to distributors, and then distributors are free to set the retail price.

“They can mark up the price and make a profit or use it as a loss leader to get people in the door,” Kliavkoff said. “It’s really difficult for us to work with any distribution partner who says ‘Here’s the wholesale price and the retail price,’ especially when the price doesn’t reflect the full value of the product.”

“The music industry guys would have something to say about how the pricing has affected their product over the last few years,” he added.

The Apple-NBC Universal spat has been a game of brinksmanship over which company needs the other more. Analysts at Forrester Research think Apple needs the content more than NBC needs the distribution.

NBC Universal, through a 50-50 partnership with NBC and News Corp., has its own mechanism to view entertainment TV shows on the Web: Hulu. However, the site doesn’t offer downloads and doesn’t support mobile devices, at least today.

Hulu is in part an attempt to combat piracy on Google’s YouTube, Kliavkoff said.

“It used to be that at the end of Saturday Night Live, YouTube would have clips up faster. You can fight that all you want, but until you provide a place to go at 1:05 a.m. Eastern time that has the digital short, you won’t get anywhere.” Now, with Hulu, viewers can get the same content through legitimate channels.

YouTube, he added, is a “fantastic promotional vehicle for some of our product,” such as trailers. And it’s the “market leader for amateur content.” But sites like Hulu will change its position for professionally produced video, he predicted.

“I think that balance will shift a little bit. I think at the end of the day people, more often than now, will want to see professionally produced content,” Kliavkoff said.

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