AP via New York Times: Apple says its new iPhone will be able to play YouTube clips.

Politico: National political conversations, once shaped by a select few, are being transformed by online video.

Thomson: The European Commission will allow the two media conglomerates to provide video content online.

Variety: Neutrogena and Lonelygirl15 have signed a deal where one of the brand's scientists will join the show's cast.

Search Engine Land: AOL's video search engine Truveo has 40 million users.

MSNBC: Michael Eisner-backed Veoh Networks is launching a new TV-like online interface that will let users watch both user-generated vids and content from the major TV networks.

Lost Remote: Nielsen is considering integrating its Web ratings with its household audience data.

ClickZ News: Magazine publisher Meredith Corporation is pushing family-focus Web video offerings.

Business 2.0: Vid search engine Blinkx is working on a new ad platform called Project Trilby that will scan video content for spoken words and link them with contextual ads (a la Google AdSense).

CNet/WebWare: Movavi has launched a new tool that allows you to transfer Web videos into different formats without downloading any software.

Mashable: Site lists 33 ways to watch television for free online.