Louis Vuitton Argues Google Case at EU's Top Court

Louis Vuitton told the European Union’s highest court that Google Inc. doesn't have the right to sell trademark-protected names to advertisers that trigger "sponsored links" when the name is used in an Internet search. Google, owner of the world's most-used Internet search engine, and LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA have been locked in a six-year fight over Internet searches that link users to sites selling counterfeit fashion accessories. Google is appealing a 2006 ruling by a Paris court that it breached Louis Vuitton's trademark rights.

  • Read the article: Bloomberg

  • Telecoms Oppose Broadband Speed Requirement

    Telecom companies vying for $7.2 billion in broadband funds included in President Obama's economic stimulus plan urged regulators not to mandate a super-fast Internet speed as a criterion for winning the money. Critics of this approach, though, say no government standards led to the United States lagging its industrialized peers in average broadband speed, viewed as a key driver of economic development.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • U.K. Considers Surveillance of Social-Networking Sites

    The U.K. government is considering the mass surveillance and retention of all user communications on social-networking sites, including Facebook, MySpace, and Bebo. Vernon Coaker the U.K. Home Office security minister, said the EU Data Retention Directive, under which Internet service providers must store communications data for 12 months, does not go far enough.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Discovery Communications Sues Amazon Over Kindle

    Discovery Communications, parent company of the Discovery Channel and Animal Planet, has filed a complaint against Amazon.com alleging that some security and copy protection features in the Kindle and Kindle 2 violate the company's patents. In the lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, Discovery has asked for unspecified monetary compensation.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • FTC Considers New Regulations for Cloud Computing

    Federal regulators met to hear about whether the benefits of cloud computing justify increased regulation, as privacy activists claim, or whether such an approach would do more harm than good. "We need to be smarter about dealing with technology, and cloud computing is posing (a) risk for us," said Hugh Stephenson, deputy director for international consumer protection at the Federal Trade Commission's Office of International Affairs.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • U.N. Group Urges Action Against Online Drug Sales

    The U.N. narcotics watchdog issued guidelines on how to crack down on Internet drug peddling at the request of governments struggling to contain growing abuse of prescription drugs. A U.S. study last year found that only two of 365 so-called Internet pharmacies were legitimate -- selling internationally controlled substances only with the required prescription, International Narcotics Control Board chief Hamid Ghodse said.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • WIPO Reports Record Number of Cybersquatting Cases

    Companies and celebrities ranging from Arsenal football club to actress Scarlett Johansson filed a record number of "cybersquatting" cases in 2008 to stop others from profiting from their famous names, brands and events, a United Nations agency said. The most common business sector in which complaints arose was pharmaceuticals, due to websites offering sales of medicines with protected names.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • More Than 8,000 Comcast Customer Records Exposed

    A list of more than 8,000 user names and passwords for customers of Comcast, one of the nation’s largest Internet service providers, sat unprotected on the Web for the last two months. Kevin Andreyo, an educational technology specialist in Reading, Pa., and a professor at Wilkes University, came across the list Monday on Scribd, a document-sharing Web site.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Berners-Lee Warns About Too Much User Tracking Online

    Surfers on the Internet are at increasing risk from governments and corporations tracking the sites they visit to build up a picture of their activities, the founder of the World Wide Web said. Tim Berners-Lee, whose proposal for an information management system at the European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN 20 years ago led eventually to the World Wide Web, said tracking website visits in this way could build an incredibly detailed profile of who people are and their habits.

  • Read the article: Reuters