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Friday, November 23, 2007

Visually Impaired Now Have Own Yahoo! Mail

Yahoo! IncWith the launch of a new product called the Yahoo! Mail Classic, the company’s products have become more accessible to the users – even the visually impaired. Interestingly, the Yahoo! Mail Classic functions on all standard screen reader software and can be used by the common masses too.

It is a novel idea, where the screen reader software identifies the text for the user and then transforms it to sound and speech or even a Braille printout that helps even the blind to use the mail.

Usually the screen readers are used help the visually impaired in the educational efforts and this technology has now been successfully utilized by Yahoo! to enable them in sending and receiving e-mails.

For instance, when a person clicks on the mail icon, the software will send out speech or sounds like ‘enter your user id’, ‘now enter your password’ or ‘click on the following icon’ making it easy for the visually challenged to use the mailing system on the Internet.

Yahoo! R&D experts in Bangalore have made this possible in accordance with the company’s ideology to make its products easily accessible to one and all. The team of experts was led by Victor Tsaran, popularly known as accessibility guru! Now, with this breakthrough people across the board and will all disabilities can benefit from the Internet.

Source: Yahoo! FanClub Visually Impaired Now Have Own Yahoo! Mail

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Microsoft eyeing Yahoo?

Shares of Yahoo! jumped by almost 7% on Friday amid market speculation that it could be a takeover target for Microsoft, which said this week that it plans to improve its online search market share, from 10% to 30%.



Former Merrill Lynch analyst Henry Blodget said that buying Yahoo would give Microsoft 30% market share in online search space instantly. It would also boost Microsoft's ad share close to its 40% goal.

On Thursday, Kevin Johnson, Microsoft's executive in charge of its advertising business, said that the software giant was aiming to be one of the top two players in Internet advertising within three to five years.

Johnson said that Microsoft aims to be one of the top two players in Internet advertising within three to five years. It aims to get there by increasing its share in Web search, page views, advertising dollars and time spent online.

Blodget argued that Microsoft is still trailing both Google and Yahoo in web search space as also in online advertising. So, the only way the company can achieve its targets is by going for an acquisition, he said.

According to web site analytics firm, Compete, Microsoft' online search market share was 9.2% in September compared to Yahoo's 19% and Google's 67%.

Blodget wrote on the popular blog 'The Huffington Post', that if the deal does materialise, Microsoft would benefit much more than Yahoo. "It will be disastrous for Yahoo!, which is having enough trouble competing with Google on its own."

Yahoo shares closed US$1.40 higher to US$26.82 after trading as high as US$27.13 earlier in the session. Microsoft, the world's largest software company, added 33 cents to US$34.09.

Source: Yahoo! FanClub

Need Yahoo! Mash Invitation ?

YaHoo! Mash Invitation Thread !!!

Hi Y! FC Users,
Yahoo! Mash is Yahoo's own Social networking as myspace, hi5, orkut or friendster. You can easily be in contact with your friends and new users with Yahoo! Mash.

But to get into Yahoo! Mash you need a simple invitation from a friend in Yahoo! Mash. To make our users enjoy the advantage of being a Y! FC user we are providing with the invitation. All you have to do it reply on this topic with your Name and Email Address.

So be fast. Very Happy

Y! FC Admin

Source: Yahoo! FanCLub

Yahoo to pay Chinese families

A week after lawmakers shamed its executives as moral "pygmies," Yahoo Inc. on Tuesday reached an out-of-court settlement with the families of two Chinese journalists thrown into jail for dissidence after the company disclosed their identities to local police.

Yahoo promised to pay the families' legal bills and to create a fund to "provide support to other political dissidents and their families," but the Sunnyvale, Calif.-based company wouldn't disclose other details of the agreement.

The families' lawyer said settlement talks didn't begin in earnest until last week, when Yahoo's visibly humbled chief executive, Taiwan-born Jerry Yang, apologized and tried to defend the company's actions.

Jerry Yang Yahoo Inc
Above Yahoo is keeping details of the settlement with the Chinese families secret. Above, Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang, right, confers with counsel Michael Callahan on Capitol Hill on Nov. 6.

"After meeting with the families, it was clear to me what we had to do to make this right for them, for Yahoo and for the future," Yang said in a statement released Tuesday. "At Yahoo, we believe in the transformative power of the Internet. That's why we are so committed to working to support free expression and privacy around the world."

But human-rights groups criticized Yahoo's requirement that the settlement's terms be kept confidential.

"Because this agreement has been kept secret, we can't be sure that Yahoo is taking the commitment to end censorship seriously," said Amy O'Meara, director of business and human rights at Amnesty International USA.

The controversy surrounds Yahoo's decision in 2004 to turn over to Chinese police, at their request, the names of journalists who had used Yahoo services to share material advocating democratic reform. The information led to the conviction of Wang Xiaoning, who was sentenced to 10 years in prison for "incitement to subvert state power." Another journalist, Shi Tao, was imprisoned too.

The journalists' families filed suit in a federal court in San Francisco in April against Yahoo and Alibaba, a Chinese Internet company in which Yahoo owns a minority stake.

But it was not until after congressional hearings last week that the company engaged in settlement talks, said Morton Sklar, executive director of the World Organization for Human Rights USA, which represented the families.

"It took a tongue-lashing from Congress before these high-tech titans did the right thing and coughed up some concrete assistance for the family of a journalist who Yahoo had helped send to jail," Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Burlingame) said Tuesday. "What a disgrace."

Lantos, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told Yahoo executives that "morally you are pygmies" during his committee's hearings. He said the settlement did little to ensure that Yahoo and other U.S. Internet companies would abide by international human-rights standards when they operated abroad.

Lantos said he and other lawmakers would continue to push for legislation making it a crime for Internet companies to give personal information about their users to governments that use it to suppress dissent.

"I'd rather have a written agreement that was public, that could be enforced by the court and that spelled out Yahoo's complicity," Sklar said of the deal. "But to get those elements would have taken us four or five years of continued litigation, and it was much more important to get a little bit less assurance in return for faster action."

Sklar said the families "wanted to put their hopes in the personal commitment of Jerry Yang" to help free the journalists. "Jerry Yang can go to China and say, 'Give us some relief and free these journalists. Otherwise Congress will act.' "

Although Yahoo's reputation among lawmakers has taken a beating, many of its customers, business partners and investors haven't paid much attention, analysts said.

"Does the brand take a hit? Yes, definitely," said Charlene Li, an analyst with Forrester Research. "Will it have an impact whether people will want to do business with them or use their services? No, I don't think it will."

Investors appeared to shrug off the negative attention, pushing Yahoo's shares up $1.32, or 5.3%, to $26.10.

The case highlights the difficulty of technology companies doing business in emerging markets that don't carry the same values and laws as the United States, said Barry Parr, an analyst with JupiterResearch.

Doing so might mean blocking access to certain websites or disclosing information about users in ways that aren't acceptable in the U.S., he said.

"Those are not simple problems," he said.

Source: Yahoo! FanClub

Friday, November 16, 2007

Newest WebMasters forum settled.

A new Webmaster Forum is settled up. It provides you with the knowledge about various aspects of webmastering. I encourage you to participate in Webmaster Forum

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail strike out Iran

Exclusive Yahoo! and Microsoft have removed Iran from the country lists of their webmail services as stronger US sanctions against the Islamic republic begin to bite.

Google has kept Iran as an option on the Gmail registration page, however.

The US administration stepped up economic pressure on Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's eccentric government less than two weeks ago.

A Yahoo! spokeswoman told The Reg: "Yahoo! continually reviews its business operations to ensure compliance with these restrictions. Consistent with this policy, we cannot accept registrations from countries subject to these restrictions.

So essentially, you can't choose Iran as a country option because we are restricted from conducting business there – all US companies must comply with this policy." She was unable to tell us exactly when Yahoo! applied the rules.

Microsoft said it was unable to comment on the issue.

Google insists the sanctions do not preclude it from including Iran in its Gmail country list. A statement from the firm said: "Google is committed to full compliance with US export controls and sanctions programs and is confident in our compliance with those controls and programs."

A representative of the Iranian embassy in London was unable to provide an immediate response.

On 30 October, the Tehran correspondent of Netherlands newspaper NRC Handelsblad reported (in Dutch) that his paid Skype account had been cancelled. An email from the VoIP outfit said its financial services provider had been forced to stop taking payments from Iran.

That's perhaps more easily understable than a blockade on free email. Whether Yahoo! and Microsoft's apparent action is the result of an over-zealous compliance lawyer or not, the effect on US interests of denying ordinary Iranians access to free international communications is questionable at best.

Of course, the Iranian government itself heavily restricts what its citizens can access online. The OpenNet Initiative, a collaboration of Harvard, Toronto, Oxford, and Cambridge universities, describes it as having installed "one of the most extensive technical filtering systems in the world".

Source: Yahoo! FanClub

New Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 Beta

Introducing Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 Beta, the next version of our popular IM software for Windows. This new version has a whole new look and feel, along with some great new features that make it well worth the upgrade. Here’s a quick look at what’s new in Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 Beta:

- A whole new look for your contact list. Keep it in detail view to see larger Avatar images for your friends, or switch to compact list view (in the Contacts menu). Plus, you can just hover and click to IM, SMS or call a friend.

- Brand new skins and emoticons! Click the dot near the top of your Messenger window to choose a skin, and check the emoticon menu for the new ones that were inspired by user entries in our Emoticontest earlier this year (more on our winners in a future post).

- New Flickr integration in the photo sharing feature. Easily share photos from your Flickr.com account, or save photos shared with you directly to Flickr.

- A new in-line media player that makes it easy to view maps, photos and videos from sites like Yahoo! Video and YouTube right in the IM window. No plug-ins needed, no extra downloads — it’s built right in. Just send a video, map or photo link to another friend who’s also on 9.0 to try it out.

- New features for voice calls. You can have your incoming Phone In or free PC calls forwarded to another number like your mobile, home or office phone, even if you’re signed out of Messenger (Phone Out account required). Plus there’s a new way to get voicemail. When someone leaves you a voicemail in Messenger, an email is sent to you with an MP3 of the voice message attached.

Download Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 Beta

Here’s a brief video that demonstrates the new features of Yahoo! Messenger 9.0:



The new Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 also offers localized versions in six new markets: Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, India (Hindi), and Vietnam. With these additions, Yahoo! Messenger is available in 25 international markets.

As with any new Beta software, Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 is not perfect but we think we got most of the major bugs out. But we need your help to put it through its paces! Install it, give it a run for its money, and then provide your input (good or bad!) on our feedback page. Your comments will help us improve on it for the final release early next year.

I know that many of our Windows Vista users are eagerly awaiting the Beta launch of Yahoo! Messenger for Vista. Don’t worry – we’re still working hard on it and hope to have it to you very soon. In the meantime, we hope you’ll try out Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 which is designed for both Windows XP and Vista.

We look forward to receiving your feedback on Yahoo! Messenger 9.0 Beta!

Sarah Bacon
Product Manager

Source: Yahoo! FanClub