HD DVD is Dead, Google Laughs

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Toshiba Officially Drops HD DVD, to End Shipments in March

Old Media Still Doesn't Get New Media

Old media news publishers are trying to lock their information away from search engines and, in the process, shooting themselves in the foot.

Long story short, a bunch of newspaper and magazine types want to have more control over how search engines index their content. Basically, they want Google to stop promoting and linking to their content.

Why wouldn't the AP want Google News to display their headlines and summaries with a link to the article?

It's free traffic! These news sites are getting users pointed to them that they may have never seen before.

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What are they expecting when they post a news story: that no one will see it? That only people who go to their homepage will be able to click to it?

These people are just like the kids who post pictures of themselves on MySpace and facebook and think that no one will see them.

Wake up: when you put something on the Internet, you can't stop people from seeing it and using it.

Why would you even want to stop people from seeing your content? Unless you're targeting a specific, qualified audience (which the AP isn't), there's no reason to block your content from the masses.

Tom Curley, the AP's chief executive, said the news cooperative spends hundreds of millions of dollars annually covering the world, and that its employees risk often their lives doing so. Technologies such as ACAP, he said, are important to protect AP's original news reports from sites that distribute them without permission.

If you don't want your content freely available, then don't make it freely available. Create a TimesSelect to limit distribution (and then watch your numbers soar when you get rid of it).

Maybe these old media folks are upset because their content can't compete. Have you tried writing better Web headlines?

(As always, Techdirt breaks it down into nice, simple terms.)

Google's Most Commonly Asked "Can You Be" Search Question

One of the newer features of Firefox is the ability to suggest searches to you when you begin typing in the built in search bar.

It's convenient, especially when you are asking a question that others have surely asked before.

I got a nice chuckle today when I started to type a "can you be" question and Google suggested these possible searches:

- can you be pregnant and still have a period
- can you be pregnant and still have your period
- can you be pregnant and still get your period
- can you be pregnant and have a period
- can you be pregnant and have your period
- can you be pregnant and get your period
- can you be pregnant if you get your period

And this is only after typing "can you be " (notice the space).

Obviously, this is a popular question among Google searchers.

What does it tell us? I hesitate to make any assumptions or judgments based on this, but obviously it gets asked a lot.

Girl Thinks She is Jack Bauer's Other Daughter, MySpace's It

I was browsing around Wikipedia today, specifically the entry for Jack Bauer, when I noticed an oddity under the "Trivia" section: Jack and Teri had another daughter, named "Cassandra- Joanner Bauer (aka 'CJ'), who (in a twist of fate) was adopted by Lynn McGill after Jacks 'death'." Huh? I'm probably one of the biggest 24 fans out there, and I've never heard of this.

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