Daily Links: That's mass with an M, your honor. "Mass" media pirates.
- Media firms say Google benefited from piracy
Allege Google employees suggested keywords and sold ads directly to two sites -- EasyDownloadCenter.com and TheDownloadPlace.com -- that paid Google $809,000 in ad dollars. - Bolt.com sells itself to GoFish to escape UMG lawsuit
Will pay settlement and royalties on future uploads. - YouTube to host classic TV shows
Over 4,000 hours from Digital Music Group, includes "I Spy" and "Gumby" - YouTuber's account deleted because he posted quotes from the Koran
Nevertheless, the supply of self-righteous sanctimony on Slashdot exceeds my demand. - YouTunes: Matches YouTube videos with iTunes Top 10
Because I needed a better way to find Nelly Furtado. Fart noise. - Fred Wilson derides Barack Obama's video and web 2.0 social networking skills
Irony 2.0: venture capitalists showing politicians how to be more inclusive. - Three scenarios for the future of cable TV
Adapt, migrate or perish. - Claims that Google isn't able to scale for Web TV are greatly exaggerated
Richard Bennett in the comments: "Google proposes to build direct links from their massive server complexes to the cable systems that bypass the Internet and conform to the more efficient broadcast model." - Share.tv
Torrents for TV shows. The link to each network's official site is priceless. - Nick Douglas is launching his new video show (here's the site)
"Equipment is sunlight and two lamps, and pre-production means me putting on a proper shirt."
And now, a video of little superstar giving dance lessons. I believe in God only because it should be impossible to pack so much kitsch into such a tiny man.




