Asper v. MacDonald; calling VeriSign’s bluff; future of email
Still more on Asper v. MacDonald, via the Toronto Star media column by Antonia Zerbisias and a press release from Leonard Asper about the aforementioned Canadian Press article.
ICANN successfully calls VeriSign’s bluff.
Matthew Haughey on why he likes Google’s AdSense program — and though my results haven’t been as financially rewording, they should be able to cover my hosting costs. Meanwhile, they’ve put the National Coalition Against Censorship in an awkward position.
CBSNews.com suffers an embarrassing, but obvious, hack. Although it was a more sophisticated message this time, it still wasn’t one of the more subtle hacks I’ve been anticipating for almost two years.
Neal Stephenson’s notion of the Metaweb seems to reflect some of the early ideas about online journalism. Could be an interesting endeavour.
The Weekly Standard published a long essay on the future of email, in world where spam is omnipresent (via Steven Johnson)