Lots of really fascinating Web search news this week, so let's get right to it:
- What's next for FCC on net neutrality? (Washington Post)
- Google boosts social net tools with SlideBuy (PC World)
- Digg critics allege vast right wing conspiracy (TG Daily)
- Google: 129 million different books have been published (PC World)
- In IE8, Web ads won out over privacy (CNet)
- Google, Verizon Deny Tiered-Web Deal Report (Wall Street Journal)
- PlayOn's Web app brings Hulu to Mobile Safari (TUAW)
- Time Warner Cable Profit Increases 8.2% on Web Customers, Reduced Spending (Bloomberg)
- Google mobile gets a Web search history tool (CNet)
- Cosby angry about Web death hoax (Fox News)
- WikiLeaks posts huge encrypted file to Web (AP)
- High tech companies volunteer to digitize Arlington National Cemetery's records (Washington Post)
- Where Is Search Going? Surf Canyon's Mark Cramer (Search Engine Land)
- Search-engine subterfuge hits Google traffic (Market Watch)
- The plagiarism generation (Salon)
- Greek Government Using Google Earth To Find Tax Offenders (Business Insider)
- Yahoo And Bing: The State Of Paid Search Integration So Far (Search Insider)
- YouTube's 'Life in a Day' project Gets 80,000 Entries (Search Engine Watch)
- Bing Revamps Their Maps: Offers AJAX & Silverlight Experiences (SEO Roundtable)
- Google Wave Shuts Down; Google Refuses to Admit it Sucked (Marketing Pilgrim)
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