Fast Feed [1]
RIP Blockbuster, Tesla Sues BBC, Google Answer Bot, and more...
The Fast Company reader's essential source for breaking news and innovation from around the web--bite-sized and updated all day. Today, featuring Blockbuster, Tesla vs. BBC, Google's Answer Bot, Salesforce, and the Japan Earthquake's DVD drive shakeup.
New Twitter API enhances content interaction on websites [3]
Users may never have to leave a website again to take actions, such as retweet, respond, and follow, to specific content or names on a website via a pop-up. [Updated: 5:04]
Keylogger software found on Samsung laptops [4]
The company is investigating the issue after a Samsung [5] supervisor reportedly admitted to the researchers who uncovered the monitoring software that it was installed to find out how the computer "is being used." [Updated: 5:04]
Kansas wins Google's super-fast broadband pilot [6]
Kansas City was selected from nearly 1,100 applications [7] to receive universal access at "competitive prices" to a one-gigabyte backbone [Updated: 1:07pm]

After 68 Million in losses, the rental icon will go the highest bidder on April 4th.
Tesla Sues BBC Over Critical Review It Says Was Faked [9]
Tesla [10] claims libel against 'Top Gear's' review of their car's poor energy longevity in real-world conditions.
Google Launches Query-Answering Chatbot [11]
For now, Google Talk Guru answers very basic queries through the Google [12] chat interface.
Salesforce Buys Radian6 for 326 million [13]
The popular Customer Relations Management platform will likely expand its services to include sophisticated, real-time social media monitoring [14].
The Japan Earthquake Could Squash the Built-in DVD Drive [15]
Shortage of Slim-type Optical Disk Drive components motivates vendors to reduce the number of computers equipped with the device--a decision that may not be reversed [16].
Sources: Techcrunch, Cnet, Yahoo News, Home Media Magazine, Auto Blog, Mashable, Techcrunch, Digitimes
[Image: Flickr user consumerist [17]]
