Canadian Lawmaker Wants to Question Google on Maps

An Ottawa-area MP is to ask a federal committee to request the head of Google appear to defend a controversial venture that saw camera-equipped cars prowling 11 Canadian cities taking images. The motion, to be filed by Nepean-Carleton Conservative MP Pierre Poilievre, a member of the access to information, privacy and ethics committee, will ask Google Inc. chief executive Eric Schmidt to appear before the Canadian government.

  • Read the article: canada.com

  • EC Says U.S. Gambling Ban Violates WTO Commitments

    A U.S. Justice Department crackdown on European online gambling companies violates U.S. commitments under the World Trade Organization, the European Commission said in a draft report. But the European Union executive, which oversees trade policy for the 27-nation bloc, said it would seek a negotiated solution with the United States rather than file a groundbreaking complaint at the WTO.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Egypt Releases Blogger-Activisit After Seven Weeks

    Egyptian authorities have released a 22-year-old Egyptian blogger and activist after nearly seven weeks in detention, an Egyptian human rights group said. Police detained Diaa Eddin Gad on February 6 outside his home in the Nile Delta province of Gharbiya. London-based rights group Amnesty International said in February that his incommunicado detention in an unknown location put him at danger of torture.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Cybersecurity Experts Cautious About White House Plan

    The comprehensive cybersecurity legislation currently in development in the Senate aims to bring high-level government attention to the serious problem of cybersecurity by giving one White House official oversight of critical network infrastructure. Yet the proposal in the draft legislation to give the national cybersecurity adviser the ability to disconnect federal or "critical" networks under threat of cyberattack may create more uncertainties than solutions, at least initially, cybersecurity experts warn.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Phishing Scam Uses IRS Logo, Promises Stimulus Funds

    Fraudsters are using the logo of the Internal Revenue Service combined with the promise of federal stimulus money to dupe cash-strapped people into divulging credit-card information to a phony Web site, the International Trademark Association said. It's the latest example of attempted identity theft rising amid the current economic turmoil, hitting a range of areas from mortgages to tax returns.

  • Read the article: The Wall Street Journal

  • Canadian Judge Orders Website to Identify Posters

    An Ontario Superior Court judge has ordered a pair of website owners to turn over identifying information about eight people being accused of defamation after posting anonymous comments. "In my view, the defendants are under an obligation to disclose all documents in their power and control," Justice Stanley Kershman said in a ruling delivered Monday to defendants Connie Wilkins-Fournier and Mark Fournier of Kingston, Ont., who run the website Free Dominion.

  • Read the article: CBC News

  • Comcast, Cox, AT&T Helping Music Industry Online

    The Internet service providers that have agreed to work with the recording industry to battle illegal file sharing are starting to come forward. Joe Waz, a senior vice president at Comcast, the nation's second largest ISP, told a gathering of music industry executives that the company has issued 2 million notices on behalf of copyright owners, according to multiple people who were in attendance.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Fake Police Department Twitter Page Shut Down

    After complaints from the City of Austin and the Texas attorney general's office, the social networking site Twitter has shut down a fake account that pretended to issue Austin Police Department bulletins with official-sounding messages that included "warming up my radar gun for SXSWi." The page now states that the account "has been suspended due to strange activity."

  • Read the article: Austin-American Statesman

  • ACLU Sues Over Prosecutor's Threats for "Sexting"

    The American Civil Liberties Union sued a Pennsylvania prosecutor over his threats to charge three teenage girls with child pornography for allowing themselves to be photographed partly clothed with cellphone cameras. The case involves the growing practice among teens of "sexting," a play on the term texting, in which nude or semi-nude photos are sent on cell phones or posted on the Internet.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Google Claims China Blocking YouTube Website

    Google said that its YouTube video-sharing Web site had been blocked in China. Google said it did not know why the site had been blocked, but a report by the official Xinhua news agency of China on Tuesday said that supporters of the Dalai Lama fabricated a video that appeared to show Chinese police officers brutally beating Tibetans after riots last year in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Ga. Court Revives Suit Against Net Travel Companies

    The Georgia Supreme Court revived a hotly contested lawsuit by the city of Atlanta against online travel companies that claims the firms are illegally pocketing millions of dollars in hotel tax revenue. The city filed suit in 2006 against 17 Internet travel reservation companies, including Expedia, Travelocity.com, Hotels.com, Priceline.com and Obitz.

  • Read the article: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

  • White House Sides with Music Industry in P2P Case

    The Obama administration has sided with the recording industry in a copyright lawsuit against an alleged peer-to-peer pirate, a move that echoes arguments previously made by the Bush administration. A legal brief filed in a case that the Recording Industry Association of America is pursuing in Massachusetts argues that federal copyright law is not so overly broad and its penalties not so unduly severe that they count as "punitive."

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • China, U.S. Debate WTO's Ruling on Software Piracy

    China and the United States traded blows over entertainment and software piracy as the World Trade Organization formally ruled some Chinese practices were illegal but exonerated it of other complaints. But the comments also showed that major trading powers were still ready to work within the international rules-based system to resolve rows even if the economic crisis is increasing protectionist pressures.

  • Read the article: Reuters