The one thing that money does, when developers actually get paid for their work, is that it forces people to put aside their differences.
No, the threat of force (by dismissal or even by offers of violence) compels people to work together despite their differences. And sometimes not even that: People walk away, people go on strike. Money is just money -- and sometimes that is not enough.
If it reaches the point where Belgium, which is notorious for its disruptive behavior on the Internet, tries to extract money out of Yahoo! on the grounds of tortuous logic, as its press wing has tried to extort money out of Google, then maybe it is now time to dissolve the Belgian State and distribute its three regions between the Netherlands (Flanders), France (Wallonia) and Germany (Eupen). These groups do not get along, anyway; and the only reason there is still a Belgium is that nobody knows what to do with the capital, Brussels, when the country does break up.
There was an Ars Technica article that discusses font licensing issues and how they would pour ice water on the potential for @font-face:
Until those issues are resolved, don't expect @font-face to make the Web more than bland.
Google needs them just as much as they need Google.
No, Goggle does not. Google is primarily a search engine, whose ads on results make most of its profits. Among the hundreds of millions of Web pages and thousands of sites out there, there are bound to enough sites both useful and popular to make Google enough of a profit to afford the loss of a sideline or two. And Google News is just a sideline.
[Google] are a bit green in the ears when it comes to politics.
Green? It is hard for AP to play ball with Google when Google owns the baseball diamond. All Google has to do is remove all AP articles from News, as YouTube has removed all music video access to Britain, and then wait for the pain on the AP side to become intolerable. There is no naïvité in that tactic.
But then, anyone who does know would not entrust any kind of data to someone's unguarded desktop workstation (as opposed to, say, a firewalled server). It doesn't speak well, not just to the IE fan but also to the State of Colorado for being so cheap as to hire him in the first place and make him use his workstation as a OIT server.
I cannot draw a cart, nor eat dried oats; If it be man's work I will do it.