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Archive for June, 2009

Former Blogger Googler Shellen joins LiveJournal

Jason Shellen, who was the founding product manager for Google Reader, is joining social network and blogging platform LiveJournal as vice president of product development.

Shellen will be based in San Francisco in new offices LiveJournal will be opening in 2008, according to the company. He arrived at Google in 2003 as part of the acquisition of Pyra Labs, the creators of Blogger, and left Google in August.

Report: Google’s Orkut fights off worm attack

A computer worm has been spreading on Google’s big-in-Brazil Orkut social network, according to a report on the Sounds from the Dungeon blog.

The relatively harmless worm appears to use JavaScript and Flash code to create new scrapbook entries on profiles with a New Year’s message in Portuguese before propagating to the victim’s friends.

It may have infected as many as 400,000 users, according to a post on a blog called “c0d3w12.”

According to the Packet Storm security site, a vulnerability affecting Orkut was discovered November 8 and fixed last week. It was not clear whether this was the same…

Microsoft, Yahoo, Google to pay $31.5 million for illegal gambling ads

Microsoft, Yahoo, and Google will pay a combined $31.5 million to settle allegations they accepted money for illegal gambling ads, according to the Associated Press.

All three companies said they stopped accepting ads for gambling years ago. The agreement settles an investigation launched in 2000 and conducted by the U.S. Attorney’s office, the IRS, and the FBI.

Microsoft is paying out the most at $21 million, Yahoo is paying $7.5 million, and Google’s share is $3 million. Part of the payment will go to the International Center for Missing and Exploited Children and for public service ads.

Google: Microsoft-Viacom deal helps our DoubleClick defense

At a Capitol Hill hearing in September, Microsoft’s top lawyer skewered the proposed merger of Google and DoubleClick as a sure path to an online advertising monopoly.

“One company will become the overwhelming dominant gateway that connects the universe of online advertisers to the millions of websites that display ads,” general counsel Brad Smith told a U.S. Senate antitrust panel in his prepared remarks.

Now Google is pointing to a new, $500 million ad deal between Redmond and Viacom on Wednesday as proof positive that there’s plenty of competition in the online ad market–a not-so-thinly-veiled reminder that its planned purchase…

Europeans to hold hearings on Google-DoubleClick and privacy

European lawmakers plan to hold a hearing next month to scrutinize the privacy implications of the proposed Google acquisition of online-ad firm DoubleClick, according to the Associated Press.

The proposed $3.1 billion deal has provoked complaints that it would give Google an unprecedented amount of information about consumers’ online activities, with a view into not only what people search for, but exactly where on the Internet they go and what ads they click on.

The hearing will be held either Jan. 21, said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, who will be testifying.

A Google spokesman…