• Just An Online Minute... Social Sites Leverage Sound Of Music
    In another move leveraging its strong ties to music fans, MySpace is joining forces with Viacom's MTV for a new TV program that will air in the U.K.
  • Just An Online Minute... Nine Inch Nails Test Free Downloads
    Nine Inch Nails just released its latest album online, Ghost, free of DRM restrictions and at pay-what-you-wish pricing. For frontman Trent Reznor, the initiative marks the second time he has experimented with letting consumers set the price.
  • Just An Online Minute... Kerry: Comcast Shills Show Need For Net Neutrality
    Add Sen. John Kerry to the list of people irritated with Comcast for its antics this week at an FCC hearing in Cambridge. Blogging in the Huffington Post, Kerry criticized Comcast for packing the audience with supporters by paying line-standers to reserve seats in the room for Comcast employees.
  • Just An Online Minute... Bragging Rights For Qtrax? Not So Much
    Despite its disastrous debut last month, Qtrax's CEO Allan Klepfisz is continuing to tout the company's upcoming music download service as if nothing is amiss....
  • Just An Online Minute... Civil Rights Groups Protest Site Shutdown
    A federal district court's broad order shutting down Wikileaks.org has been widely -- and justifiably -- criticized for violating the First Amendment. Now, a host of civil rights groups and news organizations are getting involved in the case, arguing that the order violates the free speech rights of people who post to the site as well as people who read it.
  • Just An Online Minute... Comcast, FCC Standoff At Net Neutrality Conference
    Net neutrality advocates are cheering remarks Federal Communications Commission members made Monday at a hearing at Harvard Law School.
  • Just An Online Minute... Markey: 'No Country for Old Bandwidths'
    Congressman Ed Markey today urged the Federal Communications Commission to be very wary of companies' statements that they slow traffic to peer-to-peer sites in order to manage traffic on their network. "We want to look back years from now and look back and be able to celebrate that this is no country for old bandwidths," he said, adding that the FCC shouldn't stand by while there's a "transformation of Bit Torrent into Bit Trickle."
  • Just An Online Minute... Europe's Anti-Piracy Laws Not Likely Here
    A U.K. lawmaker this week threatened to introduce a bill requiring Internet service providers to crack down on piracy unless the companies voluntarily take steps to stop it. That move follows a new "three strikes" law in France that requires Internet access companies to cut off users who engage in piracy three times. These kinds of laws might sound good to record labels or movie studios, but implementing them is another matter.
  • Just An Online Minute... Google Health Records Set Off Privacy Alarms
    Google today unveiled a pilot program that enables people to store and share information about their medical conditions online.
  • Just An Online Minute... VideoEgg To Price Ads Per Interaction
    Video ad network VideoEgg said it will implement a new pricing system that charges marketers only when users initiate an ad and watch it for a brief time. Previously, the company sold ads on a cost-per-thousand impression basis.
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