A look back at the week's biggest Google-related news stories:   Google, Verizon unite on Android devices  Verizon and Google have entered into an agreement to jointly develop wireless devices based on Google's open source Android mobile platform. Verizon says that it will have two Android-based handsets on the market by year-end with more to come by 2010   Google celebrates anniversary of bar code patent  Google's "doodle" on its search home page Wednesday was a bar code that presumably translated into the word "Google". It also said happy 57th anniversary to the awarding of a patent for the bar code by Joseph Woodland and Bernard Silver. During a teleconference Tuesday, Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam and Google CEO Eric Schmidt outlined the companies' new strategic partnership that will see them working together to develop Android-based smartphones, PDAs and netbooks, and to deliver users with applications sold through the Android Market app store. It also coincided with the announcement earlier this week of the Nobel Prize for Physics to Charles Kao for his work on fiber-optic communications and Willard Boyle and George Smith, who invented imaging technology using a digital sensor dubbed a CCD (Charge-Coupled Device). The CCD has enabled developments such as bar codes/bar code readers to come along.   Gmail, other webmail passwords stolen  In the wake of the posting in online forums of stolen account and password information for thousands of Hotmail, Gmail and Yahoo e-mail accounts, evidence emerged of yet more abuse that entails attackers exploiting that information to hack into compromised accounts over the last few days to send spam aimed at stealing credit cards.

Attackers have been taking advantage of the exposed account information for Hotmail, Gmail and Yahoo to break into the victim's e-mail accounts and send out deceptive messages to the victim's contacts to promote the scam.   Google Voice in the middle of things AT&T buoyed the spirits of Google Voice fans this week by saying it would allow the application to run on its network, but later in the week word emerged that lawmakers want the FCC to look into whether Google Voice blocks calls to people in rural areas because they are expensive to connect. According to Patrik Runald, senior manager security research at Websense, the security firm noticed about a 40% surge in spam related to Yahoo, Gmail and Hotmail accounts in recent days, with some of the spam being a phishing scam related to a fake Chinese electronics shopping site. And guess which big carrier is encouraging the lawmakers in this pursuit?   Google Squared freshens up  PC World's David Coursey writes that "Google Squared, the ambitious project that delivers search results as a table, has received an update that improves both the quality and quantity of the information it presents." He cites a post on Google's blog that the update results will allow up to four times as many facts to be squeezed into a square.   Google, Microsoft woo Twitter  Various reports (All Things Digital, Reuters, etc.) had Google and Microsoft chatting with Twitter separately about how to best integrate Twitter with outside search engines.   Google: DRAM, DRAM, DRAM!  Computerworld reports that Google and the University of Toronto released a study of tens of thousands of Google servers showing that "data error rates on DRAM memory modules are vastly higher than previously thought and may be more responsible for system shutdowns and service interruptions." For more on Google, visit Network World's independent Google community, Google Subnet.

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