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NEW YORK (Reuters) - A leading sports gambling Web site said Friday it has expanded into the energy arena, opening up betting on how high crude prices will go.

Betting platform BetCRIS.com, which normally focuses on football and cricket, said it is offering 7-to-5 odds that crude will vault over $95 a barrel by the end of the year.

“I have a feeling (oil prices) will continue to cause stress for months and even years to come,” said Esteban Siles, a BetCRIS spokesman.

U.S. crude oil prices have more than quadrupled since 2002 to reach a record $90.07 a barrel this week, bringing them close to the inflation-adjusted high over $100 struck in 1980 after the Iranian revolution.

LOS ANGELES (AFP) - A US surgeon working on a “tele-health” breakthrough has devised a way for video game warriors to feel shots, stabs, slams, and hits dealt to their on-screen characters.

A vest designed by doctor Mark Ombrellaro uses air pressure and feedback from computer games to deliver pneumatic thumps to the spots on players' torsos where they would have been struck were they actually on the battlefields.

The “3rd Space” vest will make its US debut in November at a price of 189 dollars. It will be launched with the first-person shooter game “Call of Duty” and a custom-made title.

“It was originally designed as a medical device,” Ombrellaro told AFP while letting gamers try the vest at the E for All video game exposition in Los Angeles.

“To give medical exams via the Internet to prisoners, the elderly, those in rural communities and other isolated people.”

The medical version of the vest is more sophisticated, enabling doctors sitting at their computers to prod, poke and press patients' bodies from afar and get feedback on what they are virtually feeling, according to Ombrellaro.

That model is pending approval by the US Food and Drug Administration, which wants to be assured that diagnosis made using the vests are reliable.

“You can teleconference with patients but you are missing the hands-on,” the vascular surgeon said. “Being able to do that is the last step to tele-health.”

A 3rd Space vest that mimics the feeling of G-forces and turning pressures for flight and car games is to be launched early next year, after Ombrellaro's company TN Games finds exciting titles to match it with.

TN Games is based in technology giant Microsoft's home town of Redmond, Washington.

“We've had some Microsoft people check it out,” Ombrellaro said.

A British intelligence agency has targeted a new generation of recruits by advertising in computer games.

The Cheltenham-based surveillance service GCHQ hopes to attract the attention of ‘tech-savvy’ gamers.

Adverts featuring the GCHQ website are on billboards within Xbox 360 games such as Splinter Cell: Double Agent and Enemy Territory: Quake Wars.

GCHQ said it hoped the campaign would “capture the imagination of people with a particular interest in IT”.

‘Very successful’

Laura Robertson, who runs the GCHQ account at advertising agency TMP Worldwide, said the aim was to do something different during GCHQ’s graduate recruitment season.

She told BBC Radio Five Live: “When we heard about this opportunity we decided that it was worth investigating and happily when we talked to GCHQ about it they were really pleased to take it on.

“It’s been predominantly used for consumer advertising to date, and very successfully, and this is the first time it has been used for recruitment purposes.

“Hopefully it just raises your attention and the idea is to encourage you to have a look at the website.

“We’re just asking people to have a look at it and go and find out more about the opportunities.”

GCHQ, which works alongside the UK’s other intelligence agencies MI5 and MI6, employs about 5,000 people and provides monitoring information for the government and protecting its communication and information systems.

Earlier this week, Microsoft unveiled its vision of “unified communications” in the enterprise, with one executive saying that the tools “will transform business communications as fundamentally as e-mail did in the 1990s.” But what does unified communications really mean for the enterprise?

In Microsoft's view, it means a unified way of communicating through its products and through a new interoperability standard. The products include Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007, Office Communicator 2007, Office Live Meeting, and a 360-degree videoconferencing tool called Roundtable.

The standard is Unified Communications Open Interoperability, which will certify that qualified telephony systems work with Microsoft's unified communications software.

Up to 30 Percent Savings

Microsoft said that its solutions could reduce the cost of the average corporate VoIP system by half, and could result in “dramatic time savings” and cost savings of up to 30 percent over traditional systems.

The announcements by the Redmond, Washington-company embraced a wide range of communications, from videoconferencing and “presence” to instant messaging. Nora Freedman, an analyst at IDC, said unified communications is “really about streamlining voice capabilities into key business applications,” including SAP, Oracle, and others, as well as Microsoft Office.

“The critical issue,” she said, “is voice.” She noted that the real value proposition for all sizes of businesses is not so much productivity and cost savings, which are key Microsoft points, but “removing the human latency” that is present in many businesses.

Lowering human latency matters across the board for businesses, she said, whether it means a mechanic trying to communicate with a vehicle's owner while both parties keep moving around, or a stockbroker trying to get the most return in the quickest way possible. The idea goes beyond merely increasing productivity, she explained, because it can mean the ability to make more money.

Microsoft Versus Cisco

Freedman noted that the current field for such technologies is “complicated,” with Microsoft's position being “the most formidable player from the software perspective” in a “religious war.” That war is with Cisco.

While there are several major players — including Nortel, Siemens, Alcatel, and IBM — the central competition is between Microsoft and Cisco, she said. Microsoft is looking at a unified communications solution from the point of view of managing via the desktop, while Cisco's orientation is on the intelligence of the network.

Freedman's own viewpoint about this religious war, she said, is “nondenominational,” Neither the desktop nor the network can solve the problems separately, she added.

According to Freedman, Cisco appears further along in leading the field, but she said it's hard to say where the competition stands now. What is clear, she said, is that customers of all sizes, even multinationals, are eager to have a unified communications approach that is simple to implement and manage.

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Wal-Mart's lawyers have an early holiday message for Web sites that post “Black Friday” ads ahead of their official release date: Don't do it.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc said on Friday that its lawyers have sent letters to the Web sites, saying publishing the ads before their official November 19 release date violates Wal-Mart's copyrights and other rights.

“Such violations can give rise to liabilities and severe legal penalties,” said the letter, posted on the bfads.net Web site. “To the extent that the methods of acquisition or use include criminal activity, criminal penalties may also apply.”

November 19 is just four days before “Black Friday,” the day after the Thanksgiving Day holiday when shoppers throng to stores looking for deep discounts that retailers use as a lure to get the key holiday sales season off to a strong start.

But more and more of the advertising circulars retailers put out a few days ahead of “Black Friday” have found their way to Web sites weeks in advance instead.

Wal-Mart has asked the web sites not to post the ads in the past, but the ads have still been posted, said John Simley, a spokesman for the world's largest retailer.

Designers, printers and others all have access to the “Black Friday” sale information well ahead of time as the circulars are prepared.

“We've made notice everywhere in the custody chain of this information that the information is confidential until it is publicly released,” Simley said.

Some of the Web sites are asking readers to contact Wal-Mart and urge the company to change is mind.

“Remember, if this is allowed to happen with one store, it can happen with them all and in the future no ads will be able to be released early,” said a posting on blackfriday.gottadeal.com, which bills itself “the Official Black Friday Deal Site.” The post includes a link to Wal-Mart's online feedback page and also has the Wal-Mart media relations telephone number.

While Wal-Mart has attracted attention with the letter to Web site operators, other retailers also are protective of their advertising circulars.

“We encourage consumers to consult and rely on the Circuit City ads that actually appear in newspapers nationwide on Thanksgiving,” Jackie Foreman, a spokeswoman for Circuit City Stores Inc, said. “We do not confirm or deny content that appears on the Internet other than information on our own site.”

(Reporting by Brad Dorfman, with additional reporting by Karen Jacobs)

(See http://blogs.reuters.com/category/themes/shop-talk/ for “Shop Talk” — Reuters' retail and consumer blog)

San Francisco (IDGNS) - SAP is pushing ahead with two partnerships that aim to provide customers with better user interface options for its ERP (enterprise resource planning) applications.

SAP and Microsoft plan to announce an upgrade in the coming weeks to their Duet software, version 1.5, which will be generally available early next year, officials at SAP's Tech Ed conference said this week.

At the same time, SAP is stepping up its efforts with Adobe Systems to let developers liven up SAP interfaces using Adobe's new AIR (Adobe Integrated Runtime) technology, for building rich Web applications that run outside of a browser.

Both projects, on show at TechEd in Munich, Germany, aim to expand the number of employees who access SAP applications and data. The partnerships are also part of an industrywide trend to bring enterprise software to a wider range of business users.

SAP's standard interfaces are often seen as functional, but not very imaginative or easy to use.

“Anything that improves SAP's interfaces, which are hideous and hard to use, is a good thing,” said James Governor, an industry analyst with RedMonk.

Duet allows workers to view “contextual” SAP data that might help them make business decisions from within Microsoft applications such as Outlook and Excel. In the current version, that contextual data is limited to what SAP and Microsoft chose to provide for a given task.

“It's really the information we think people want, based on our experience and best practices,” said Yifat Ferber-Harel, a Duet product manager with SAP.

Version 1.5 of the product will include tools that allow developers to choose the contextual data they want to present to end users.

For example, a big company might set up a process for approving promotions using Microsoft Outlook. When a senior manager receives an e-mail from a department head suggesting a promotion, a developer will be able to provide related information from SAP's human-resources software, such as the employee's sales figures, absentee record or current pay scale.

The capability should help to deliver on the original promise of Duet, Ferber-Harel said. “Part of our original vision was to give you the information you need to make decisions, and you can't make decisions without the right information,” she said.

The update will also add more user scenarios, the business cases in which Duet can be used. Today they include areas such as leave management and budget planning.

At the same time, SAP is working with Adobe on its AIR technology, a recent addition to Adobe's Flex development environment. AIR is seen as a rival to Microsoft's Internet Explorer because developers can use it to build applications with HTML (Hypertext Markup Language), AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) and Flash that can on a the desktop instead of in a Web browser.

SAP has just developed its first application based entirely on Flex, called Spend Analytics, for aggregating and analyzing spend data, said Matthias Zeller, a senior Adobe product manager, in a presentation at Tech Ed.

Spend Analytics includes a tool called Briefing Book, for capturing snapshots of data that can be shared with other managers. Briefing Book is already unusual for an SAP interface, appearing as an actual book rendered virtually on the screen. The tool is usually viewed in a browser, but Adobe has developed a proof-of-concept version with AIR.

Zeller showed how users can drag and drop data-views from Briefing Book onto the desktop for offline use — something not possible in Internet Explorer. And it lets a user work with spend data in Excel, to create a forecast, for example, and then drag that data into Briefing Book. The AIR interface can't be synchronized with the data in Excel, however.

AIR is available today for the Windows and Mac operating systems and will “very soon” be available for Linux, Zeller said. Spend Analytics is available now to some SAP customers and should be generally available in the first quarter next year.

Customers looking at the technologies should consider that AIR is still in beta, while Duet has been in the market since June 2006. That said, Adobe and SAP have been working together on interactive forms for SAP since 2002. IBM's Lotus Notes group also develops client interfaces for SAP.

Microsoft and SAP are increasingly rivalrous in the business applications area, and for that reason SAP may find Adobe an easier partner to work with, Red Monk's Governor said. (RedMonk does consulting work for SAP and Adobe.) In addition, companies might not always find it easy to bring teams of SAP and Microsoft engineers together, said Alan Rickayzen, an SAP senior product manager.

“Culturally, the SAP people are totally different from those in the Microsoft Exchange world,” he told Tech Ed attendees. “You have to bring together two groups of people who would not normally talk to each other.”

Internet users in Beijing and Shanghai said attempts to access Google Inc. and other search engines were successful Friday, despite claims on a U.S. blog that traffic to these sites was redirected to Chinese search engineBaidu.com Inc.

The claim first surfaced on TechCrunch, a U.S. blog that largely covers Internet startups before being picked up by other sites. The headline of that post alleged “Baidu hijacking Google traffic In China,” but offered no evidence to prove the claim apart from an undated, modified screenshot showing Baidu's Web page below the URL for Google Blogsearch.

In a follow-up post, TechCrunch said “new reports have surfaced that would indicate that China has unilaterally blocked all three major search engines in China and is redirecting all requests to Baidu.” That report cited posts on other blogs, where users claimed to have been redirected from U.S. search sites to Baidu.

A Google spokeswoman in Beijing did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

However, several Internet users– four in Beijing and two in Shanghai– reported on Friday morning that search engines operated by Google, Yahoo Inc. and Microsoft Corp., including Google Blogsearch, one of the sites reportedly most affected, were accessible. Attempts to reach these sites had not been redirected to Baidu, they said.

Internet censorship is a serious problem in China, and regulators routinely block access to sites with content they don't like. But Chinese officials very rarely comment on censorship efforts, making it difficult for users to determine when a site has been blocked or is inaccessible for other reasons.

Timing can be an important factor, with Chinese censors blocking access to some Web sites around politically sensitive dates, such as the June 4 anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre and the Chinese Communist Party Congress, a political confab held once every five years to choose top leaders and set policy that is now underway in Beijing.

Access to a search engine can also be blocked if a user searches for a politically sensitive word, such as a search for information on the banned Falungong religious sect.

Tracking the ebb and flow of censorship efforts can be a challenge, as access to sites can be blocked and opened, seemingly by whim. On Wednesday, Wikipedia remained blocked in China and access to YouTube was shut off. But censors eased off on other sites, opening up access to Google's Blogspot blogging service and permitting users to view pictures on Flickr, which had been blocked even though the site was accessible in China.

Even when Web sites are accessible in China, there can be moments when sites cannot be reached. For example, one of the Chinese Internet users in Beijing contacted for this story said he was unable to reach Google.com three days ago. Attempts to reach the site were not redirected to Baidu, and Google has been accessible during the last couple of days, he said.

While the Chinese government may not be redirecting search-engine traffic to Baidu, censors did this in 2002, just before the previous Party Congress opened in Beijing. At that time, censors cut off access to Google and redirected traffic to several local search engines, including Baidu. However, the rerouting did not affect all users and did not appear to be done at a national level, analysts said at that time.

San Francisco (IDGNS) - Aruba Networks countersued two divisions of Motorola Wednesday, adding a new twist to a wireless LAN (local area network) patent-infringement case that affects some of the biggest vendors in the business.

Symbol Technologies and Wireless Valley Communications, both of which are now owned by Motorola, sued Aruba in August. They claimed Aruba knowingly used technology covered by several patents they own, and are seeking an injunction and damages.

But in its response to their complaint, filed Wednesday, Aruba claimed Symbol knew enough about Aruba's products in 2003 to say they might be infringing Symbol's pending patents. Aruba also argues both Symbol and Wireless Valley withheld information they were required to give to patent examiners. As a result, the patents are invalid and Symbol and Wireless Valley's complaints should be dismissed, the company said.

Aruba also countersued, seeking declaratory judgments that it didn't infringe and that the patents are invalid and unenforceable. Aruba wants Symbol and Wireless Valley to pay the costs of the suit and its attorney fees.

In 2003, when Symbol was an independent company, it came close to buying Aruba, according to the filing. Throughout the first half of that year, as the companies discussed the proposed deal, Symbol had “essentially unfettered access” to information about how Aruba's products were designed and made, Aruba said. Among the engineers inspecting its technology was the inventor on two of the patents involved in the suit, they said. The talks eventually broke off because the companies couldn't agree on terms, the filing said.

Aruba argued that Symbol never warned it might sue over the patents, leading Aruba to infer that it didn't intend to enforce any patent rights. The company waited for four years after that inspection and then sued without warning on the eve of an Aruba quarterly earnings announcement, Aruba said. In addition, both Symbol and Wireless Valley knew about Aruba's business for years and should have known about the activities it sued over, yet only sued after Aruba had invested tens of millions of dollars in designing and testing its products, the company said.

 

San Francisco (IDGNS) - Internet users in Beijing and Shanghai said attempts to access Google and other search engines were successful Friday, despite claims on a U.S. blog that traffic to these sites was redirected to Chinese search engineBaidu.com.

The claim first surfaced on TechCrunch, a U.S. blog that largely covers Internet startups before being picked up by other sites. The headline of that post alleged “Baidu hijacking Google traffic In China,” but offered no evidence to prove the claim apart from an undated, modified screenshot showing Baidu's Web page below the URL for Google Blogsearch.

In a follow-up post, TechCrunch said “new reports have surfaced that would indicate that China has unilaterally blocked all three major search engines in China and is redirecting all requests to Baidu.” That report cited posts on other blogs, where users claimed to have been redirected from U.S. search sites to Baidu.

A Google spokeswoman in Beijing did not immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment.

However, several Internet users — four in Beijing and two in Shanghai — reported on Friday morning that search engines operated by Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft, including Google Blogsearch, one of the sites reportedly most affected, were accessible. Attempts to reach these sites had not been redirected to Baidu, they said.

Internet censorship is a serious problem in China, and regulators routinely block access to sites with content they don't like. But Chinese officials very rarely comment on censorship efforts, making it difficult for users to determine when a site has been blocked or is inaccessible for other reasons.

Timing can be an important factor, with Chinese censors blocking access to some Web sites around politically sensitive dates, such as the June 4 anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre and the Chinese Communist Party Congress, a political confab held once every five years to choose top leaders and set policy that is now underway in Beijing.

Access to a search engine can also be blocked if a user searches for a politically sensitive word, such as a search for information on the banned Falungong religious sect.

Tracking the ebb and flow of censorship efforts can be a challenge, as access to sites can be blocked and opened, seemingly by whim. On Wednesday, Wikipedia remained blocked in China and access to YouTube was shut off. But censors eased off on other sites, opening up access to Google's Blogspot blogging service and permitting users to view pictures on Flickr, which had been blocked even though the site was accessible in China.

Even when Web sites are accessible in China, there can be moments when sites cannot be reached. For example, one of the Chinese Internet users in Beijing contacted for this story said he was unable to reach Google.com three days ago. Attempts to reach the site were not redirected to Baidu, and Google has been accessible during the last couple of days, he said.

While the Chinese government may not be redirecting search-engine traffic to Baidu, censors did this in 2002, just before the previous Party Congress opened in Beijing. At that time, censors cut off access to Google and redirected traffic to several local search engines, including Baidu. However, the rerouting did not affect all users and did not appear to be done at a national level, analysts said at that time.

 

NEW YORK - Comcast Corp. actively interferes with attempts by some of its high-speed Internet subscribers to share files online, a move that runs counter to the tradition of treating all types of Net traffic equally.

The interference, which The Associated Press confirmed through nationwide tests, is the most drastic example yet of data discrimination by a U.S. Internet service provider. It involves company computers masquerading as those of its users.

If widely applied by other ISPs, the technology Comcast is using would be a crippling blow to the BitTorrent, eDonkey and Gnutella file-sharing networks. While these are mainly known as sources of copyright music, software and movies, BitTorrent in particular is emerging as a legitimate tool for quickly disseminating legal content.

The principle of equal treatment of traffic, called “Net Neutrality” by proponents, is not enshrined in law but supported by some regulations. Most of the debate around the issue has centered on tentative plans, now postponed, by large Internet carriers to offer preferential treatment of traffic from certain content providers for a fee.

Comcast’s interference, on the other hand, appears to be an aggressive way of managing its network to keep file-sharing traffic from swallowing too much bandwidth and affecting the Internet speeds of other subscribers.

Comcast, the nation’s largest cable TV operator and No. 2 Internet provider, would not specifically address the practice, but spokesman Charlie Douglas confirmed that it uses sophisticated methods to keep Net connections running smoothly.

“Comcast does not block access to any applications, including BitTorrent,” he said.

Douglas would not specify what the company means by “access” — Comcast subscribers can download BitTorrent files without hindrance. Only uploads of complete files are blocked or delayed by the company, as indicated by AP tests.

But with “peer-to-peer” technology, users exchange files with each other, and one person’s upload is another’s download. That means Comcast’s blocking of certain uploads has repercussions in the global network of file sharers.

Comcast’s technology kicks in, though not consistently, when one BitTorrent user attempts to share a complete file with another user.

Each PC gets a message invisible to the user that looks like it comes from the other computer, telling it to stop communicating. But neither message originated from the other computer — it comes from Comcast. If it were a telephone conversation, it would be like the operator breaking into the conversation, telling each talker in the voice of the other: “Sorry, I have to hang up. Good bye.”

Matthew Elvey, a Comcast subscriber in the San Francisco area who has noticed BitTorrent uploads being stifled, acknowledged that the company has the right to manage its network, but disapproves of the method, saying it appears to be deceptive.

“There’s the wrong way of going about that and the right way,” said Elvey, who is a computer consultant.

Comcast’s interference affects all types of content, meaning that, for instance, an independent movie producer who wanted to distribute his work using BitTorrent and his Comcast connection could find that difficult or impossible — as would someone pirating music.

Internet service providers have long complained about the vast amounts of traffic generated by a small number of subscribers who are avid users of file-sharing programs. Peer-to-peer applications account for between 50 percent and 90 percent of overall Internet traffic, according to a survey this year by ipoque GmbH, a German vendor of traffic-management equipment.

“We have a responsibility to manage our network to ensure all our customers have the best broadband experience possible,” Douglas said. “This means we use the latest technologies to manage our network to provide a quality experience for all Comcast subscribers.”

The practice of managing the flow of Internet data is known as “traffic shaping,” and is already widespread among Internet service providers. It usually involves slowing down some forms of traffic, like file-sharing, while giving others priority. Other ISPs have attempted to block some file-sharing application by so-called “port filtering,” but that method is easily circumvented and now largely ineffective.

Comcast’s approach to traffic shaping is different because of the drastic effect it has on one type of traffic — in some cases blocking it rather than slowing it down — and the method used, which is difficult to circumvent and involves the company falsifying network traffic.

The “Net Neutrality” debate erupted in 2005, when AT&T Inc. suggested it would like to charge some Web companies more for preferential treatment of their traffic. Consumer advocates and Web heavyweights like Google Inc. and Amazon Inc. cried foul, saying it’s a bedrock principle of the Internet that all traffic be treated equally.

To get its acquisition of BellSouth Corp. approved by the Federal Communications Commission, AT&T agreed in late 2006 not to implement such plans or prioritize traffic based on its origin for two and a half years. However, it did not make any commitments not to prioritize traffic based on its type, which is what Comcast is doing.

The FCC’s stance on traffic shaping is not clear. A 2005 policy statement says that “consumers are entitled to run applications and services of their choice,” but that principle is “subject to reasonable network management.” Spokeswoman Mary Diamond would not elaborate.

Free Press, a Washington-based public interest group that advocates Net Neutrality, opposes the kind of filtering applied by Comcast.

“We don’t believe that any Internet provider should be able to discriminate, block or impair their consumers ability to send or receive legal content over the Internet,” said Free Press spokeswoman Jen Howard.

Paul “Tony” Watson, a network security engineer at Google Inc. who has previously studied ways hackers could disrupt Internet traffic in manner similar to the method Comcast is using, said the cable company was probably acting within its legal rights.

“It’s their network and they can do what they want,” said Watson. “My concern is the precedent. In the past, when people got an ISP connection, they were getting a connection to the Internet. The only determination was price and bandwidth. Now they’re going to have to make much more complicated decisions such as price, bandwidth, and what services I can get over the Internet.”

Several companies have sprung up that rely on peer-to-peer technology, including BitTorrent Inc., founded by the creator of the BitTorrent software (which exists in several versions freely distributed by different groups and companies).

Ashwin Navin, the company’s president and co-founder, confirmed that it has noticed interference from Comcast, in addition to some Canadian Internet service providers.

“They’re using sophisticated technology to degrade service, which probably costs them a lot of money. It would be better to see them use that money to improve service,” Navin said, noting that BitTorrent and other peer-to-peer applications are a major reason consumers sign up for broadband.

BitTorrent Inc. announced Oct. 9 that it was teaming up with online video companies to use its technology to distribute legal content.

Other companies that rely on peer-to-peer technology, and could be affected if Comcast decides to expand the range of applications it filters, include Internet TV service Joost, eBay Inc.’s Skype video-conferencing program and movie download appliance Vudu. There is no sign that Comcast is hampering those services.

Comcast subscriber Robb Topolski, a former software quality engineer at Intel Corp., started noticing the interference when trying to upload with file-sharing programs Gnutella and eDonkey early this year.

In August, Topolski began to see reports on Internet forum DSLreports.com from other Comcast users with the same problem. He now believes that his home town of Hillsboro, Ore., was a test market for the technology that was later widely applied in other Comcast service areas.

Topolski agrees that Comcast has a right to manage its network and slow down traffic that affects other subscribers, but disapproves of their method.

“By Comcast not acknowledging that they do this at all, there’s no way to report any problems with it,” Topolski said.

___

Associated Press Writers Ron Harris, Brian Bergstein, Deborah Yao and Kathy Matheson contributed to this story.

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On the Net:

http://www.comcast.com

http://www.bittorrent.com

http://www.sandvine.com