Twitter is getting its own photo-sharing service, CEO Dick Costolo announced at the D9 conference, and it will roll out over the next few weeks to all users.

Here is the original post:
Twitter launches photo-sharing service
During an interview at the D9 conference in the US, Hewlett-Packard (HP) CEO Leo Apotheker dropped a mini-bombshell: HP would consider licensing its mobile operating system, WebOS, to other hardware makers.

More here:
HP might license WebOS: Apotheker
Adrian Lamo, the ex-hacker who became notorious for turning in alleged Wikileak-er Bradley Manning, says he has no regrets about his role in aiding the US Army's criminal prosecution of the young soldier.

Original post:
No regrets over Bradley Manning: Lamo
Google today said that it's "detected and disrupted" a plan to gain access to hundreds of Gmail accounts through phishing attacks.

Go here to see the original:
Google 'disrupts' Chinese Gmail hijacking
The Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT) yesterday won a small victory in its legal battle against iiNet, with the Federal Court deciding that the organisation only had to pay 60 per cent of iiNet's legal costs for lost court cases.

See original here:
AFACT to pay 60% of iiNet legal costs
Fairfax launched its new iPad app this week. Is it enough to pay for the company's transition from a traditional newspaper to an online publisher?

See the original post here:
Tablets to solve PayWall headache
Is low broadband penetration due to the fact that lower-income Australians can't afford broadband, or is it simply unavailable in the areas where they live?

Go here to see the original:
Broadband: for love or money?
Communications Minister Stephen Conroy has released the draft regulatory instruments that will ultimately guide the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission when regulating the structural separation of the wholesale and retail arms of Telstra.

Original post:
Conroy releases Telstra separation guide