When it rains, it pours. At least, that seems to be the climate in the tech world. In a nutshell, here's what has been keeping me busy this week:
1. The file-sharing world couldn't help but focus on Canada after the a Federal Court judge ruled that our copyright laws make downloading and uploading music legal. What's ironic about this decision is the ISPs who argued they couldn't or wouldn't disclose the name of their customers who had shared music using Kazaa, et al have built their high-speed businesses on the appeal of downloading music. Looks like ISPs can eat their cake and have it too.
2. Not sure if anyone is still interested in Manitoba Telecom's battle against the evil hedge funds but it looks like the Allstream deal is nearly done, while the income trust dream is as good as dead. That is, unless hedge fund manager Jim Macdonald has a a trick up his sleeve. Hey, he almost got the Toronto Stock Exchange to do his dirty work by tapping little-used regulations.
3. So what do you make of Google's move into the e-mail market. Sounds like a good deal: it's free and you get a whopping one gigabyte of storage. Whoever said there's no such thing as a free lunch was right. The "fee" for using Gmail is you agree to let Google look at your e-mail messages so it can deliver "contextualized" advertising. It's a great thing for Google; great for advertisers but a mixed blessing for Gmail users.
Speaking of Gmail, I wonder if the Fan 590's Gord Stellick is thinking about trademark infringement given that he's been using the term "Gmail" for the last couple of years. Gord, you should have registered the domain and made Google give you a few of their pre-IPO dollars for it.
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Thursday, April 1
by
Mark Evans
on Thu 01 Apr 2004 11:20 PM EST
by
Mark Evans
on Thu 01 Apr 2004 08:07 AM EST
Mark Evans
Financial Post To be perfectly blunt, the music industry was badly spanked yesterday when the Federal Court denied ... more » |
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