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Selasa, 30 November 2010

WikiLeaks has U.S. scrambling to plug holes

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CNET News CNET News Daily Dispatch
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November 30, 2010
  In this issue    
redarrow EC launches antitrust probe against Google
redarrow Where Stanford invents self-driving cars
 
redarrow No, you can't see who viewed you on Facebook
redarrow With Groupon, Google could go beyond engineers

The idea that a lowly Army private sent WikiLeaks about 750,000 confidential files has the feds scrambling for fixes--and answers.
Kinect's role as a tinker toy for garage developers signals a change in how Microsoft is approaching openness in an otherwise closed gaming ecosystem.
Regulators to probe whether Google abused its dominant position as a search engine by unfairly favoring its own services in search results over those from competitors.
A rogue application appeals to Facebook user vanity, but it's merely a viral scam, security researcher Sophos warns users of the social network.
Take a tour of the automotive lab where professors, students, and industry partners come together to build projects like Stanley the self-driving SUV and the Pikes Peak Audi.
Google is said to be seriously interested in buying e-commerce site Groupon, or has already bought it depending on who you believe. Groupon is already making money on its own--but it may want to sell because it can't keep that up indefinitely.
Watchdog groups are imploring federal courts in Texas and West Virginia from allowing adult-film studios to name accused file sharers without proving their guilt first.
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Level 3 has accused Comcast of forcing it into a deal that violates the FCC's Net neutrality principles as the companies renegotiate a network peering relationship.
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Panasonic is in testing stages for its Jungle portable gaming system, News Corp. is considering selling off MySpace, and Mozilla is working on a do-not-track feature for Firefox.

 Top viewed
1. Mythbusters' Savage: I got past TSA with razor blades
2. U.S. seizes sites linked to copyright infringement
3. Pirate Bay appeal falls on deaf ears
4. Xbox birthday signals death of 5-year console cycle
5. Congressman wants WikiLeaks listed as terrorist group
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