Obama Picks Cybersecurity Leader, Orders 60-Day Review

President Barack Obama ordered an immediate 60-day review of federal cyber security efforts and named Melissa Hathaway, a top U.S. intelligence official, to oversee the effort, according to a White House statement. Hathaway, who served as a top cyber security adviser to Mike McConnell, the former director of national intelligence, will conduct the review for the White House National Security and Homeland Security Councils.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Egyptian Police Reportedly Beat, Detain Blogger

    Egyptian police have beaten and detained a 22-year-old Egyptian blogger and activist who has expressed support for Gaza, an Egyptian human rights group said. A statement from the Cairo-based Arabic Network for Human Rights Information said police officers on Friday beat Diaa Eddin Gad in front of his house in the Nile Delta province of Gharbiya, put him in a police car and drove off.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Maryland Blocks Legislators' Access to Facebook, MySpace

    Computer gurus with Maryland's legislative body announced that they were blocking access to Facebook and MySpace from all General Assembly computers, including those of lawmakers and their staffs. They said the block was made necessary by an uptick in viruses and malicious software that were finding their way into the assembly's computer network through the popular social networking sites.

  • Read the article: The Washington Post

  • Website of Russian Antivirus Vendor Hacked

    The U.S. Web site of Russian antivirus vendor Kaspersky Lab was hacked, exposing the company's customer database. But Kaspersky denies any data was compromised and says the vulnerability wasn't critical. An unidentified hacker reported over the weekend that he was able to access a complete profile of the company's databases, revealing its clients' names, activation codes, list of bugs the company tracks, and client e-mail addresses.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Bahrain Cracks Down on Websites Deemed Indecent

    A Bahraini crackdown on Web sites the government deems indecent or socially explosive has triggered calls for reforms by rights activists and bloggers, who say the ban tarnishes the kingdom's reputation for openness. "Instead of tackling the social issues people discuss online, the government blocks Web sites. But that does not change the reality," said Nabeel Rajab, president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights.

  • Read the article: MSNBC

  • Court Delays Hearing for Accused S.F. WAN Hijacker

    The fight by Terry Childs to have a court dismiss three of the four felony charges he is facing for allegedly hijacking San Francisco's fiber optic wide-area network last year has been prolonged. Childs appeared in court for a motion hearing, but the San Francisco Superior Court has re-scheduled the hearing for February 13, said Connie Chan, deputy director at the San Francisco District Attorney's office.

  • Read the article: internetnews.com

  • Student Charged with Using Facebook for Blackmail, Sex

    An 18-year-old male student is accused of posing as a girl on Facebook, tricking at least 31 male classmates into sending him naked photos of themselves and then blackmailing some for sex acts. Anthony Stancl was charged with five counts of child enticement, two counts of second-degree sexual assault of a child, two counts of third-degree sexual assault, possession of child pornography, repeated sexual assault of the same child, and making a bomb threat.

  • Read the article: The Boston Globe

  • Lawsuits Target Wal-Mart, Netflix in Online Video Service

    A series of lawsuits filed across the country allege that Wal-Mart and Netflix benefited illegally when the world's largest retailer exited the online DVD rental business in 2005. Lawyer Daniel Becnel of Reserve, La., complained in a lawsuit filed in Baton Rouge, La., that Wal-Mart and Netflix improperly negotiated Wal-Mart's departure from the online video market that previously had only two major competitors, Netflix and Blockbuster.

  • Read the article: SiliconValley.com

  • Postal Service Investigating Amazon

    Amazon is under investigation by the US Postal Service for "compliance with Postal Service rules," according to a one-sentence statement in the company's annual 10-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "In January 2009, we learned that the United States Postal Service, including the Postal Service Office of Inspector General, is investigating our compliance with Postal Service rules, and we are cooperating," the filing reads.

  • Read the article: The Register