Several weeks ago, M logged into his company's AdSense account at Google.com to monitor the advertising revenue generated from advertisements Google.Com places on their websites. Later the same day, he visited YouTube - and noticed that, although he had never set up a YouTube account, and did not want one, he was marked as signed in. Now Google has started writing to all of its users explaining a new policy which it says it is going to put into force. Is your company at risk?
It was the big splash story two days ago. Wikipedia, which is website on which contributors post their opinions and views with limited editorial supervision, is against the imposition of a level...
Internet: I never thought I'd agree with Murdoch but...I am shaking my head in disbelief. I actually agree with Rupert Murdoch on something. US internet companies do as they please and then argue that they are so big that what they are doing is right...
Internet: Facebook takes another bite at the privacy cherryWhen the senior officer of an international group of companies changed the default e-mail address provided in his Facebook profile from his corporate domain to a gmail address, he was surprised t...
Internet: How to make a small fortune in Web 2.0Question. How do you make a small fortune in Web 2.0? Answer - start with a large one. News Corp gives up on MySpace.
Internet: killing mad-ads without killing ad revenue modelGoogle may be trying to improve the quality of its search engine results, but it is doing its advertisers and publishers no favours as pages are swamped with one of the most hated ads on the inte...
Internet: Web 2.0 turns into Fraud 1.0 with better tech."The trouble with the internet is that everyone knows your name, but has no idea who you are." So said Nigel Morris-Cotterill, now Head, The Anti Money Laundering Network (*) in a confe...