Roundup: Apple backdating probe dropped, AMD takes big write-off, Webroot founder missing

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Apple criminal backdating probes dropped: It’s a happy day for Apple, and not just because of the iPhone 3G launch. The criminal backdating probe of Steve Jobs and other Apple executives has been dropped, according to the San Jose Mercury News. Attorneys involved in defending various participants said the Justice Department concluded no charges should be brought against Jobs or anyone else invovled in the backdating. The Securities and Exchange Commission, however, is still pressing a civil complaint against former Apple lawyer Nancy Heinen.

Sun Microsystems cutting jobs: The struggling server company said it is cutting about 1,000 jobs across the U.S. and Canada. Of those, 213 are at its headquarters in Santa Clara, Calif., 192 are at its Menlo Park, Calif. office, and 212 at two offices in Colorado. The cuts amount to 3.4 percent of the company’s work force. The company announced it was trimming jobs in May.

AMD to take huge charge: Advanced Micro Devices said Friday it would take a charge of $948 million in the second quarter to write down the value of goodwill for its acquisition of graphics chip maker ATI Technologies. The write-downs amount to more than $800 million in lost goodwill, and are an addition to a $1.6 billion goodwill write-off AMD took last year. You could say that AMD paid a little too much when it bought ATI for $5.4 billion in 2006. AMD will report its second quarter results next Thursday.

Watch out, World of Warcraft: Electronic Arts has launched the beta version of “Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning” for members of player groups known as guilds. More than 10,000 guilds and a total of 750,000 people have applied to join the game, which will officially launch this fall. This is one of the tidbits that game companies are leaking as the E3 game show in Los Angeles approaches on Monday.

Rambus adds to Nvidia’s headaches: Rambus accused graphics chip maker Nvidia of violating 17 patents related to memory controllers. The company alleged that Nvidia’s chip sets, graphics chips, and media communications processors across six product lines infringe Rambus patents. Nvidia reported earlier that its results for the second quarter would be weaker than expected, and it took a $150 million to $200 million write-off for product defect problems.

Meebo expands music distribution: Online chat company Meebo announced a bunch of partnerships with music distributors. Participants include Sparkart, DashGo, Nettwerk Music Group and Wind-up Records.

ON24 raises $8 million round: ON24 has raised an $8 million round of funding as it expands from webcasting to staging virtual trade shows. The company will compete with Unisfair in offering virtual shows for job fairs, training, and conferences in an online format. The 10-year-old company will produce about 25,000 webcasts during the year, and it expects to put on possibly 25 trade shows this year.

[Updated: Previously, we’d cited a report that suggested wrongly that Monster had acquired Alerts. Corrected version follows:] Monster Venture Partners leads bridge round in Alerts.com: Monster Venture Partners has led a $1.2 million bridge investment in Alerts.com, a service delivering alerts and reminders to consumers. Alerts bought the domain Alerts.com from IBM in 2007. In that previous incarnation, Alerts was a service notifying users when content changed on high-traffic sites, but the model failed.

Webroot founder missing: Steve Thomas, founder and former owner of Webroot Software, has been reported missing in Oahu, Hawaii. The Honolulu Star-Bulletin reported that Thomas, who has not been involved in the company since 2004, was disraught and his family hasn’t heard from him since June 30. Meanwhile, the company appointed Frederick Ball as its chief financial officer.

iPhone web use is getting big in Europe: comScore reported that 80 percent of iPhone users in France, Germany and the UK browse the mobile web with their iPhones.

AideRSS announced new ranking system: AideRSS said it has created PostRank as a new system for filtering and ranking online news articles and blog posts.

Swedish ad startup is the bleeping bleep
: VC firm Creandum has invested 420,000 euros in Swedish online video ad startup VideoPlaza, which has an amusing video.

Another day, another game startup gets funded: Sequoia Capital and investor Ron Conway have invested $4.5 million in Challenge Games, a maker of short form browser-based games.

Citizen journalism 2.0: Allvoices has officially launched a new citizen journalism site that weaves together traditional media and new media, creating a forum for sharing news, videos, images and blogs. It will use 4,000 online news sources as well as its own citizen journalists.

Dean Takahashi

Dean Takahashi is editorial director for GamesBeat at VentureBeat. He has been a tech journalist since 1988, and he has covered games as a beat since 1996. He was lead writer for GamesBeat at VentureBeat from 2008 to April 2025. Prior to that, he wrote for the San Jose Mercury News, the Red Herring, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, and the Dallas Times-Herald. He is the author of two books, "Opening the Xbox" and "The Xbox 360 Uncloaked." He organizes the annual GamesBeat Next, GamesBeat Summit and GamesBeat Insider Series: Hollywood and Games conferences and is a frequent speaker at gaming and tech events. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.