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Amazon Offers Free One day Shipping For Kindle Orders On December 23

Amazon.com said today it is offering free one day shipping for orders of its Kindle placed on December 23 and promises delivery in time for Christmas. The company is also offering free two day shipping for Kindle orders placed today. Last week Amazon said its Kindle broke another record with its best sales day. The company did not provide any specific sales figures. Amazon boasts that its Kindle continues to be the most wished for, most gifted and best selling product across the company. "It's easy to get busy during the holidays, so we've decided to make it easy even for procrastinators to order Kindle, the #1 most wished for gift on Amazon, and get it delivered for free and in time for Christmas," said Ian Freed, Vice President, Amazon Kindle . "With Kindle, you can give the gift of choosing over 390,000 books and more than 100 top newspapers and magazines from around the world and begin reading in less than 60 seconds." Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amazon, amp, black-friday, christmas, gift, holidays, kindle, noble-says, review and story, sales-record, selling-product, vice president, walmart, wins | Leave a comment

Analyst Raises Expectations For Google’s Stock

Last week, Yahoo experienced a small win on the financial front as an analyst gave its stock a "buy" rating and increased his price target from $19 to $20. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amp, google yahoo, jefferies & co., kaufman bros, manager-backs, microsoft stock, nasdaq, perform-well, score-report, search, victory, youssef | Leave a comment

Lime Wire’s Plans for Working with the Music Industry

Earlier this year, we spoke with Lime Wire CEO George Searle about the music industry and the company's future, as it offers one of the most widely used file sharing services. Now we have engaged in a Q&A with Zeeshan Zaidi, who came to Lime Wire as the company's Head of Global in July, with a background as a record label executive, a musician, and a lawyer. WebProNews: We're told the LimeWire software has been translated into Arabic and will soon be translated into Persian, while the software and website are translated into a total of 23 languages. How are languages chosen and what does this means for the global peer to peer community? Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged 50 million, amp, Business, languages, limewire, middle-east, network, north africa, plans, searle, time, torrent, user, videos | Leave a comment

Google Puts Its Own Dictionary in the Spotlight

Google Dictionary is in the spotlight because Google is now using it for its "definition" link on search results pages for word searches. Previously Google pointed users to Answers.com. Mark Milian at the LA Times brought this change to the industry's attention , saying that Google was "quietly" rolling out its own dictionary. Google Dictionary has actually been around for a while, but "quietly" is still an accurate adverb for Google's promotion of the service. The service is worth bringing to the attention of the masses, because it showcases yet another area where Google is attempting to "organize the world's information." Definitions are a significant part of that. Of course this isn't the only way Google users can access word definitions. The search engine has long had a search operator in place, which allows users to simply type "define:" before the word they wish to look up in order to get a set of definitions from various sources. The search operator is perhaps a more convenient way to access definitions via Google, but Google Dictionary itself has some extra frills. For example, you can "star" words just as you would star a message in Gmail or an article in Google Reader. That way you have it in a list for quick future reference. Google Dictionary also gives you quick access to nearly 30 dictionaries for different languages. Google's integration of its dictionary service into its search results is not the only example of a translation feature going into mainstream Google Search. Google is also in the process of rolling out a "Translated Search Option." Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amp, different languages, google-dictionary, google-feature, industry, mainstream, reference dictionary, search options, search-engine, search-operator, showcases, spotlight, translation feature, which allows users, word definitions | Leave a comment

Perfect 10 Comes Out Swinging at Google Again

Those who have been following the search industry for some time, may recall that Google had some legal issues with the (former) magazine Perfect 10 (nsfw). The company, which ceased publication of its magazine, but still operates on the web, has issued a press release saying that its five year battle with the search giant is "about to heat up." This week, Perfect 10 completed its filing of a motion for sanctions against Google in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. Perfect 10 is accusing Google of "widespread discovery abuse," which the company says includes multiple violations of three separate court orders. Perfect 10's legal feud with Google began back in 2004. The case dealt with Google's use of thumbnails from Perfect 10's site. It was essentially a question of whether or not that was considered fair use. Google had eventually lost the case, but the ruling against Google had been tossed out by an appeals panel . That was in 2007. However, it did not end there. Fast forward to now. "Google appears to have the view that it is above the law," says Perfect 10 President, Dr. Norm Zada. "We spent a great deal of time and effort obtaining Court orders requiring Google to produce documents critical to our case. In our view, Google has not complied with those orders." Perfect 10 says the case revolves around the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which was passed by Congress in 1998 to address issues concerning copyright infringement on the Internet. "Under the DMCA, a search engine such as Google may receive limited immunity from monetary damages for copyright infringement if it complies with the requirements of the DMCA," Zada says. "The search engine must act expeditiously to remove or disable access to infringing material upon receiving notice of infringement from the copyright owner, and it must adopt a procedure so that copyright holders will not have to provide the search engine with notices about the same infringing material or the same infringers over and over." Perfect 10 says it has argued that Google has "failed to satisfy" these things. Perfect 10 says a judge ordered Google to produce its DMCA log, which the company says is defined as "a spreadsheet-type document summarizing DMCA notices received, the identity of the notifying party and the accused infringer, and the actions (if any) taken in response." Perfect 10 is insisting in its press release that Google has violated multiple court orders, and that Perfect 10 can't "fairly litigate the case" without such documents. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amp, case, congress, digital, fairly-litigate, immunity, internet, law, Legal, motion for sanctions, perfect, search, search industry, search-engine, time | Leave a comment

Google Makes it Easier to Tell Where Results Originate From

Google has begun including geographical region information on some search results. The information is used when supplied by webmasters, and appears in the green address line on the results that include it. "Country-code top-level domains (or ccTLDs) can provide people with a quick and valuable clue about the location of a website—for example, ".fr" for France or ".co.jp" for Japan," explains Google software engineer Piyush Prahladka. "However, for certain top level domains like .com, .info and .org, it's not as easy to figure out the location." "With the new display, you no longer need to refine your search or click through the results to figure out which page is the one you're looking for," says Prahladka. "In general, our hope is that these region tags will help searchers more quickly identify which results are most relevant to their queries." If you wish to provide Google with the information required for getting your site's region to show up in search results, you will need to log in to Webmaster Tools and go to Site configuration > Settings > Geographic Target . There you will be able to associate a country/region with your site. Webmasters have been able to utilize the feature that lets them associate their sites with regions for quite some time, but that information hasn't appeared in search results in the past. Right now, Google is only showing region tags in results for certain domains like .com and .net. They don't show them at all for sites that have location-specific ccTLDs (.br, .co.uk, etc.). The feature is designed to help users figure out where a site is based if that is not already clear. It is also worth noting that Google will only show the region tags when the region associated with the site is different than the region the searcher's query originates from . So if I search from here in the US, I will not see results that say "US", but I might see results that say "Canada". Related Articles: > Get More Links in Your Actual Google Results > Google Gives Forums More Links on SERPs > Google Improves Universal Results for Locations Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged amp, Business, google search results, google-improves, green, japan, location, related, results, review and story, search, search-results, webmaster-tools | Leave a comment