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Hulu Adding Music Video Channels, Recovery.gov Provides Made-Up Stats


Highlights from this morning's other big tech headlines....
  • Rumors that Hulu may start charging for content have elicited negative responses from many of the site's loyal viewers, but new additions may actually make the content worth a monthly subscription fee. The site is expected to announce today that it will introduce music channels, beginning with one devoted to singer Norah Jones [From: The New York Times]
  • Recovery.gov, the site which provides data on stimulus spending and unemployment rates, has earned heated criticism for reportedly listing inflated and fictitious numbers. Is it possible to get a moratorium on the phrase "government accountability, honesty, and transparency?" [From: The Daily Beast and ABC News]
  • Twitter has apparently relented to incessant conservative whining, and will be eliminating the site's "suggested user" list. Unrepresented California Republicans decried the list because they believed it wasn't fair, so Twitter boss Biz Stone said the site will replace it with one that provides "more relevant suggestions." [From: Beta News]
  • It hasn't taken long for Microsoft's fledgling Bing to make some noise in the search engine arena, as the site's market share increased again in September, giving it an overall 9.9-percent portion. While Google continued to increase its overall lead, as well, Yahoo!'s share dropped by 3-percent. [From: Boy Genius Report]
  • Google Labs is currently experimenting with a new feature known as Google Swirl. The image search function, which is in test phase, categorizes relevant images into groups based on "similar appearance and meaning." [From: Google Labs, via Google]
  • How about paying for "Free" Internet? The FCC is apparently trying to force Internet providers to raise phone fees for the sake of an expanded, less expensive national broadband service. [From: The Wall Street Journal]
  • Although Twitter can be an incredibly effective and efficient method of interacting with customers, a good number of the old fuddy-duddies on the Fortune 100 list still aren't using the service. While some of the big names, like Walmart and Chevron, have designated employees that tweet often, only 73 of the businesses on the list even have accounts. And some of those are certainly impostors. [From: CNET]

Video Games

Compulsive Gaming Is Rarely Addiction, Says Euro-Rehab Founder

compulsive gaming


A treatment center arguing that addiction is over-diagnosed is about as common as a television salesman telling you that TV can rot your brain. But, that is exactly what compulsive gaming counselor Keith Bakker is arguing, the BBC reports.

The founder and head of Amsterdam's Smith & Jones Centre, Europe's only rehab for gaming addicts, Bakker believes that, in most often, the cause for compulsive gaming is of a social, rather than chemical, nature.

"[The] more we work with these kid, the less I believe we can call this addiction," he told the BBC, adding, "what many of these kids need is their parents and their school teachers." This development follows last year's American Medical Association conclusion that gaming is not, in fact, addictive and China's recent conclusion to the contrary.
While he is quick to point out that traditional addiction treatment methods are well suited, and successful, for compulsive gamers also struggling with alcohol or drug addiction, he believes that these types make up only 10% of what could be called 'problem gamers.' The gamers that comprise the other 90% need social guidance in lieu of a recovery program, he has concluded.

In Bakker's estimation, most of these patients are simply plagued with frustration and loneliness, finding both catharsis and acceptance in violent online games. He believes that, if parents and teachers were more communicative with these troubled folks, treatment centers like Smith & Jones could close their doors. [From: BBC]

Computers

White House E-Mails Missing

White House Dragging its Feet on E-Mail RecoveryRemember all those e-mails that went missing at the White House? The Bush administration is hoping you don't. According to an internal memo leaked to the Associate Press (AP) the government is pushing forward with its recovery "effort" the only way it knows how -- completely half-assed.

According to the memo, the White House is missing as much as 225 days worth of e-mail that just so happen to date from the time of the Valerie Plame leak and the Abu Ghraib scandal. The White House is theoretically taking bids from contractors to recover the e-mails, but has no expectation of the work being completed before April of 2009, after the current administration has left office.

According to contractors questioned by the AP, the memo doesn't appear to be a legitimate request for help in the recovery process. The memo says anywhere from 25-225 days of e-mails may be missing. The large discrepancy makes it hard to estimate the man power and time needed to tackle the project. Steve Schooner, co-director of the Government Procurement program at George Washington University said, "Generally, when the scope of the work is expected to fluctuate by a factor of nearly ten, I can only take you so seriously." [From: AOL News]

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