Craigslist CEO Defends Site Against Prostitution Suit

Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster has responded to the lawsuit filed by the sheriff of Chicago's Cook County against the Web classified publication. Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart called Craigslist one of the country's largest sources of prostitution in the complaint he filed in federal court and asked the court to force Craigslist managers to remove their erotic services section.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Gore Pushing for New .eco Top-Level Domain

    As the organization responsible for overseeing Internet domains prepares to expand the number of top-level domains available, Al Gore is advocating for a special domain to promote environmental awareness. Two Internet entrepreneurs have formed Dot Eco LLC for the purpose of securing the .eco domain through the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers' new gTLD application process.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Student Sues Ex-Classmates, Facebook Over Group

    Denise Finkel, currently a student at the University of Albany, accused four of her ex-classmates at Oceanside High School of setting up a Facebook group "calculated to hold the plaintiff up to public hatred, ridicule, and disgrace." The group, whose page was password-protected, allegedly said she had AIDS, was an intravenous drug user, and had "inappropriate conduct with animals."

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • FTC Probing Online Stimulus-Related Scams

    President Obama's economic stimulus plan has already spurred activity in at least one online industry, though not one the administration was hoping to encourage. Deceptive Web sites, advertisements, and e-mail campaigns have cropped up across the Web in recent weeks, luring consumers into scams by promising them federal grant money from the stimulus package, the Federal Trade Commission said.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Decisions Await on Spending Broadband Stimulus Funds

    Federal regulators have some critical decisions to make in the coming weeks that could determine whether the $7.2 billion in stimulus funds designated for broadband will create the optimal number of jobs or be distributed wisely, Internet experts said. The stimulus funds will already take too long to distribute, contended some speakers on a panel at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, but decisions such as whether to withhold the money until new policies are developed or broadband data is collected could make the funds even less effective at creating jobs.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Obama's FCC Nominee Favors Net Neutrality

    President Obama nominated Julius Genachowski as the nation's top telecommunications regulator, picking a campaign advisor who has divided his career between Washington, D.C., political jobs and working as an Internet executive. Genachowski had been mentioned as a likely candidate for the Federal Communications Commission post, in part because he participated in the Obama campaign's Internet efforts and previously worked as chief counsel to Democratic FCC Chairman Reed Hundt.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Researchers Warn YouTube Users About Malware

    Researchers are warning that YouTube users may be next at risk as malware authors look for ways to take advantage of some of the most popular social networking and content-sharing sites on the Web. In recent weeks, they've targeted social bookmarking site Digg, spreading malware by adding malicious links into innocuous-seeming comments or in the guise of legitimate posts.

  • Read the article: internetnews.com

  • Calif. Lawmaker Wants Google to Blur Some Map Images

    A lawmaker in California wants to force Google Earth and similar services to blur images of so-called "soft targets" like schools, hospitals, churches and government buildings to protect them from terrorists. Assemblyman Joel Anderson, a Republican from San Diego, said he decided to introduce his bill after reading reports suggesting that terrorists used online map imagery to plan attacks in Mumbai and elsewhere.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Behavioral Advertising Online Prompts Legal Moves

    Behavioral advertising -- the tracking of consumer's Internet surfing activity to create tailored ads -- has triggered an intense legal controversy that has law firms scrambling to stay on top of a burgeoning practice. Attorneys say that behavioral advertising is raising privacy, litigation and regulation fears among consumer advocates, the electronic commerce and advertising industries and legislators.

  • Read the article: law.com

  • Md. Court Upholds Privacy for Online Posters

    Operators of newspaper Web sites, blogs and chat rooms that allow readers to post anonymous comments using pseudonyms do not have to readily reveal the posters' identities in defamation suits, Maryland's highest court ruled, further shaping an emerging area of First Amendment law in the Internet age. The Maryland Court of Appeals reversed a lower court ruling and ordered that NewsZap.com, an online forum run by Independent Newspapers, does not have to disclose the identities of forum participants who engaged in an online exchange about the cleanliness of a Dunkin' Donuts shop in 2006.

  • Read the article: The Washington Post

  • Supreme Court to Hear Freelance Writers' Case

    The U.S. Supreme Court said that it would hear an appeal by a group of publishers seeking to reinstate a settlement with freelance writers in a copyright case involving work included in online databases. The settlement, worth as much as $18 million, was reached in 2005 after about four years of negotiations over claims by the freelance writers that their contracts did not allow for publication of their work electronically.

  • Read the article: Reuters