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- Google Books settlement sets geographic, business limits
- Medpedia to best the more democratic Wikipedia?
- Ricky Gervais helps reveal pain of cell phone salesmen
- NASA spacecraft confirms water ice deposits on moon
- Microsoft patching zero-day Windows 7 SMB hole
- Running a contest on Facebook? That'll cost you
- Wife poses as schoolgirl online to snare husband
- All CNET News headlines
Blogs and opinion
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Elizabeth
Armstrong
Moore: - Medpedia to best the more democratic Wikipedia?
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Chris
Matyszczyk: - Wife poses as schoolgirl online to snare husband
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Rafe
Needleman: - Reporters' Roundtable 10: Funny business
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Scott
Stein: - iPhone: The board gamer's paradise
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As alternative energy grows, NIMBY greens
With more renewable energy projects trying to come online, the country grapples with the balance between local land use and a national push for clean energy.
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Photos: Top-rated reviews of the week
Here are a few of CNET Reviews' favorite items from the past week, including the Amazon Kindle, HTC Droid Eris, and Canon PowerShot S90.
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Google Books settlement sets geographic, business limits
Revised settlement narrows scope of countries for the out-of-print works, sets limits on the future businesses for Google, and gives copyright holders more rights.
(Posted in Digital Media by Elinor Mills) -
Running a contest on Facebook? That'll cost you
The social network tightened its rules for companies running contests on its platform last week, and sources say those companies will be required to buy ad space too.
(Posted in The Social by Caroline McCarthy) -
NASA confirms water ice deposits on moon
Deliberate crash of an empty rocket stage in a permanently shadowed crater near the moon's south pole last month kicked up definitive signs of water ice, scientists say.
(Posted in The Space Shot by William Harwood) -
Microsoft: Windows 7 tool used GPL code
Microsoft confirms that a tool intended to allow Netbooks to more easily move to the new operating system was based in part, and unintentionally, on open-source code.
(Posted in Beyond Binary by Ina Fried) -
AT&T: Verizon ads are 'blatantly false'
The wireless provider, which has been taking a beating in a series of parody ads over its 3G coverage, adds heat to its lawsuit. No word on what the misfit toys think.
(Posted in Signal Strength by Marguerite Reardon) -
Microsoft patching zero-day Windows 7 SMB hole
Company warns customers that exploit code for the Server Message Block hole is available and suggests a workaround until a patch is ready.
(Posted in InSecurity Complex by Elinor Mills) -
Wary green-tech venture investors shift gears
Applying the venture capital model of IT onto energy isn't working, which is something many clean-tech venture capitalists will learn the hard way, say experts.
(Posted in Green Tech by Martin LaMonica) -
Coders charged with helping Madoff falsify records
The FBI arrested two computer programmers who worked for Bernard L. Madoff's investment firm, prosecutors said on Friday.
(From The New York Times) -
Nissan says all-electric Leaf will compete on price
Kicking off a marketing tour for the all-electric vehicle, CEO says price will be "key to the mass market" but that it's too early to say what that price will be.
(Posted in Green Tech by Reuters) -
A CNET Conversation with Eric Schmidt
Google's chief sits down for an extremely rare and wide-ranging interview and discusses Google's two operating systems, government scrutiny, and, of course, evil.
(Posted in CNET Conversations by Tom Krazit)
Video: Conversation with Schmidt
Transcript of CNET Conversations with Eric Schmidt -
Week in review: Pre-holiday buying spree
Lots of big tech players go shopping, while Intel closes antitrust deal. Also: Windows 7 inspired by Mac OS?
(Posted in Business Tech by Steven Musil) -
With $1.25 billion, can AMD finally compete?
After settling with Intel, AMD must now compete with Intel on its merits. Some experts weigh in on how it will do.
(Posted in Nanotech - The Circuits Blog by Brooke Crothers)
What Intel bought for $1.25 billion: Less risk
Intel hires antitrust expert as new top lawyer
No big change for consumers
Intel to pay AMD $1.25 billion -
Google says Docs to catch up to Office next year
A Google exec says that Docs isn't "mature" enough yet for businesses but that another 30 to 50 updates will bring it up to speed with Microsoft Office.
(Posted in Business Tech by Victoria Ho) - All CNET News headlines








