Posted by on under hannover zeitung, die welt, deutsche welle, financial times, afp, dpa, stern |

Tagi: hannover zeitung, die welt, deutsche welle, financial times, afp, dpa, stern
Posted by on under sueddeutsche de, deutsche welle, washingt, financial times, armer, massaker, proteste, armen, orf, ankara |

Tagi: sueddeutsche de, deutsche welle, washingt, financial times, armer, massaker, proteste, armen, orf, ankara
Posted by on under chinese search engine, largest search engine, google, digg, financial times, impasse, censorship, china |

Talks with China over censorship have reached an apparent impasse and Google, the world's largest search engine, is now "99.9 percent" certain to shut its Chinese search engine, the Financial Times said on Saturday.



Tagi: chinese search engine, largest search engine, google, digg, financial times, impasse, censorship, china
Posted by on under berlin polizei, focus line, financial times, spiegel, alibi, berliner, poker, werk, welt |

Tagi: berlin polizei, focus line, financial times, spiegel, alibi, berliner, poker, werk, welt
Posted by on under youtube video, european telecoms, deutsche telekom, slashdot, france telecom, google, policy director, whitt, data networks, network operators, free ride, financial times, technology company, internet search, pipes, bandwidth, sword, bas, europe, traffic |

An anonymous reader passes along a Financial Times piece that covers a push by EU telecoms to get Google to pay them directly — years after US ISPs began rattling that sword, to little effect thus far. "Some of Europe's leading telecoms groups are squaring up for a fight with Google over what they claim is the free ride enjoyed by the technology company's YouTube video-sharing service. Telefónica, France Telecom, and Deutsche Telekom all said Google should start paying them for carrying bandwidth-hungry content such as YouTube video over their networks.... Some European telecoms groups fear Google will reduce them to 'dumb pipes' because the internet search and advertising company pays the network operators little or nothing for carrying its content. Rick Whitt, a senior policy director at Google in Washington ... said Google was spending large amounts on its own data networks to carry its traffic to the point where it is handed over to telecoms companies round the world." Note that FT.com operates on a "first few per month free" paywall basis.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Tagi: youtube video, european telecoms, deutsche telekom, slashdot, france telecom, google, policy director, whitt, data networks, network operators, free ride, financial times, technology company, internet search, pipes, bandwidth, sword, bas, europe, traffic