YouTube appears to be out of options in Brazil.
DRM Spells Trouble for Apple, iTunes
Earlier this week, Yahoo released singles by Norah Jones and Relient K in unprotected mp3 formats as part of an ongoing experiment looking at the viability of offering music tracks that are free of DRM (Digital Rights Management) constraints, which have had audiophiles the world over crying “foul” for quite some time.
IE 7 vs. Firefox (IE 7 having trouble with Google sites?)
Chris Messina, who used to work on Flock (an open source browser based on the same code that runs Firefox), says the beast has woken up. Beast being Microsoft.
The Trouble With Linking
For sites that are trying to move up the ranks in search engines, the time may come where they have to make a choice. Google appears to approach the issue differently than Yahoo! and MSN do, making it difficult, if not impossible, to rank highly in all three.
Sony BMG In Digital Music Trouble
The Allman Brother Band and Cheap Trick have hit Sony BMG with a federal lawsuit accusing it of cheating the bands out of royalties.
The Trouble With Personalization
Personalization has rarely been implemented well. Its failure is usually because of a lack of understanding of customer behavior.
Trouble With Blog Editor for Windows.
For the past few months, I’ve been using RocketPost, an offline blog editor for Windows.
Yahoo! Gets Into Allah-t Of Trouble
Yahoo! has found itself in the midst of a new controversy after blocking the use of the word “allah” in email account registrant screen names. The uproar sparked from an unlikely complainant, Ed Callahan, whose name includes the banned letter sequence. Yahoo! has since reversed its policy.
MySpace In Trouble Over School Threats
After students at a San Antonio high school posted messages on MySpace threatening the school, the school district said it would hold MySpace “accountable” for the problem.
ZabaSearch: A Good Way To Get Reporters In Trouble
Shh! Don’t tell Elinor Mills over at CNet about this, she’ll just cause more trouble. ZabaSearch, a search engine geared toward finding personal information on anybody, is soon to offer a blogging feature that will no doubt produce more gossip than a quilting bee.