Feb
18
2009
With today’s outrage over Facebook’s newly altered Terms of Service at its peak, I figured I’d do a quick comparison of their terms of service as regards user-uploaded content to the terms specified by other social networking sites, just to see if said outrage is fully justified. It looks as though the finger-pointing at the Bush robots.txt file wa
Comments Off on Facebook TOS compared with MySpace, Flickr, YouTube, Twitter | tags: facebook, myspace, network, networking, robot, twitter, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
15
2009
So will downloading YouTube videos now become as frowned upon (to put it mildly) as BitTorrent? Hard to believe that YouTube could close all the holes to downloading (there are so many ways, and many of them free, and still working, when we tried recently).
Comments Off on YouTube Starts Killing Off Video Download Tools | tags: youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
12
2009
Alex Chitu spotted a new ‘purchases’ section in his YouTube account today and YouTube just made it official: YouTube’s partners can now offer their videos for paid downloads. While Google has always given its partners the option to offer downloads of their videos under the Creative Commons
Comments Off on Paid Downloads are Coming to YouTube | tags: google, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
12
2009
GovTechGuy writes “The federal government is on the verge of reaching an agreement with YouTube that would allow agencies to make official use of the popular video-sharing service. A coalition of federal agencies led by the General Service Administration’s Office of Citizen Services has been negotiating with Google, YouTube’s parent company, since summer 2008 on new terms that would allow agencies to establish their own channels on the site. Agencies have not been [allowed] to post videos to YouTube (although many already have) because under the current terms of service, people who post content are subject to their state’s libel laws. Federal agencies must adhere to federal law. On Tuesday, government officials said the negotiations were “very close” to being completed.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Federal Officials and YouTube Nearing a Deal | tags: google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
11
2009
GovTechGuy writes “The federal government is on the verge of reaching an agreement with YouTube that would allow agencies to make official use of the popular video-sharing service. A coalition of federal agencies led by the General Service Administration’s Office of Citizen Services has been negotiating with Google, YouTube’s parent company, since summer 2008 on new terms that would allow agencies to establish their own channels on the site. Agencies have not been able to post videos to YouTube (although many already have) because under the current terms of service, people who post content are subject to their state’s liable laws. Federal agencies must adhere to federal law. On Tuesday, government officials said the negotiations were “very close” to being completed.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Federal Officials and YouTube Nearing a Deal | tags: google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Feb
8
2009
YouTube is inserting more of the information you can get on the website into the embedded videos that are spread far and wide across the Web. Embeds now include both the Title and the Rating for each video – information that dissolves once you click play.
Comments Off on YouTube Adds Title and Rating to Embeds | tags: web, youtube | posted in technical news
Jan
29
2009
Hesham writes “Carnegie Mellon University’s HCI Institute just released details on their “why-didn’t-I-think-of-that-style” 3D video conferencing application. Considering how stale development has been in this field, this research seems like a nice solid step towards immersive telepresence. I was really disappointed with the “state-of-the-art” systems demoed at CES this year — they are all still just a flat, square, video stream. Hardly anything new. What is really cool about this project, is that researchers avoided building custom hardware no one is going to ever buy, and explored what could be done with just the generic webcams everyone already has. The result is a software-only solution, meaning all the big players (AIM, Skype, MSN, etc.) can release this as a simple software update. ‘Enable 3D’ checkbox anyone? YouTube video here. Behind the scenes, it relies on a clever illusory trick (motion parallax) and head-tracking (a la Johnny Lee’s Wiimote stuff — same lab, HCII). It was just presented at IEEE International Symposium on Multimedia in December.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on CMU Video Conference System Gets 3D From Cheap Webcams | tags: google, web, youtube | posted in technical news
Jan
29
2009
An anonymous reader writes “In what has been billed as a world first, four music companies and Irish ISP Eircom have agreed to work together to end illegal music downloading. The Irish branches of the record companies (EMI Records Ltd, Sony BMG Music Entertainment Ltd, Universal Music Ltd and Warner Music Ltd.) brought a High Court action against Eircom last March which has resulted in this settlement after eight days of trial. Eircom will be implementing a three-step process — informing a subscriber that their IP address has been detected infringing copyright; warning the subscriber that if they do not stop they will be disconnected; and finally disconnecting the user if they fail to heed the warning. Which technology they will be using to spy on their customers is currently unknown. EMI and the other record companies have recommended US-based Audible Magic, which (among other things) claims to block copyright violating web content from sites like Youtube and MySpace. However, digital surveillance is nothing new in Ireland and Eircom may have already tested and implemented the necessary technologies.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Ireland’s Largest ISP Settles With Record Industry | tags: google, myspace, technology, web, youtube | posted in technical news
Jan
28
2009
Corey Vidal is no pirate, but he’s been branded one as a result of the licensing spat between Warner Music Group and YouTube. On YouTube, Vidal posted a humorous video tribute to John Williams, the man who scored the soundtracks for such blockbuster films as Indiana Jones, and Star


Comments Off on YouTube users caught in Warner Music spat | tags: google, youtube | posted in technical news
Jan
27
2009
Comments Off on Sony's PS3 Firmware Update Crashing Systems – PS3Center.net | tags: google, japan, news, security, tv, youtube | posted in technical news