HP Studied Spying on Newsrooms: NY Times
Hewlett-Packard conducted feasibility studies on placing spies in news bureaus of two publications as part of an investigation into leaks from its board, The New York Times reports.

Q&A: Meet Your New Office
Jim Louderback sat down with Microsoft's Antoine LeBlond to discuss the new version of Office, Google's productivity tools, and what makes this the biggest Office update ever.

Surprises in Spectrum Bidding
Google may be the least surprising of the known bidders for 700MHz spectrum.

Twitter Developing Location-Based API
Twitter platform developers are now working on a location-based API that will provide accurate information on your whereabouts.

American Airlines Adding Streaming Video Services to Flights This Summ
Passengers on American Airlines flights are about to get a new perk. Instead of craning their necks to catch reruns of "Monk" and excerpts from "The Tonight Show" on tiny aisle TV sets, they'll be able to wirelessly stream content to their personal devices from the comfort of their own seats.
This Article About Porn Could Land Me in Jail
Opinion: If Attorney General Alberto Gonzales has his way, a new law would let the government prosecute Web sites just for referring to obscene material.
Study Touts Flex Pricing for Universal Broadband
A flexible pricing model for broadband will help the United States reach universal broadband access by 2017, according to new study released by Georgetown University.

RIM Observers Seek Word of Pearl Sales in Earnings
Research In Motion reports second-quarter earnings on Sept. 28 and investors and analysts will be watching for word of sales of the new BlackBerry Pearl, the wireless e-mail device the company is hoping will capture a slice of the broader consumer market.

eHarmony to Segregate Gay Matchmaking Site
Online dating site eHarmony.com has settled a lawsuit with the New Jersey attorney general's office and will start matching gay and lesbian customers by March 2009. However, eHarmony will partition those matches into a separate site dubbed "Compatible Partners".
CeBIT Sees a Product Evolution
There may have been a dearth of revolutionary enterprise products at this year's CeBIT, but vendors gave customers what they were looking for.