Swedish Antipiracy Law Goes Into Effect

A new antipiracy law went into effect in Sweden, and five audio book publishers have already used it to try to out the person behind an IP address they say is linked to illegal file swapping. The so-called IPRED law requires Internet service providers to reveal subscribers' Internet Protocol addresses to copyright holders in cases where a court finds ample evidence of illegal activity.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Texas Budget Could Restrict Buying Windows Vista

    A "rider" in the proposed two-year, $182.2 billion Texas budget would require state agencies to get written approval from the Legislative Budget Board before buying Windows Vista technology related to an operating system, equipment or licenses. Sen. Juan Hinojosa, D-McAllen, added the provision in committee and said it's meant to block purchases of the technology, which has been targeted by criticism: "Don't buy it, because it's not worth it."

  • Read the article: San Antonio Express-News

  • Security Experts Await Attack from Conficker Worm

    A malicious software program that has infected millions of computers could enter a more menacing phase, from an outright attack to a quiet mutation that would further its spread. Computer security experts who have analyzed the Conficker worm's code say it is designed to begin a new phase on April 1, and while it's unclear whether it will unleash havoc or remain dormant, its stubborn presence is rattling businesses with multimillion-dollar budgets to fight cyber crime.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Spam Levels Increase to 94% of All E-mail

    Spam, that annoying but ignorable scourge of the Web, has finally recovered from the jolt it received last November, when Internet backbone providers cut off McColo Corporation, a California Web-hosting service that spammers were using to coordinate e-mail attacks. The average seven-day spam volume during the latter half of March is now at roughly the same levels as October of last year -- around 94 percent of all e-mail -- according to the antispam company Postini, a division of Google.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • EU Leader Wants Limits on Use of Personal Data

    Some Internet companies are abusing consumers' personal data and this cannot be allowed to continue, a top European Union official planned to warn the industry. Consumer Affairs Commissioner Meglena Kuneva, in a speech whose text was obtained by Reuters in advance, will threaten EU intervention to set tougher rules on how Internet users' personal data is collected, analyzed and shared by search engines and service providers.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Online Fraud Rises 33% Amid Recession, Report Says

    Fraud on the Internet reported to U.S. authorities increased by 33 percent last year, rising for the first time in three years, and is surging this year as the recession deepens, federal authorities said. Internet fraud losses reported in the United States reached a record high $264.6 million in 2008, according to a report released from the Internet Fraud Complaint Center, run by the FBI and the National White Collar Crime Center.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • TomTom Ends Patent Suit with Microsoft via License

    GPS navigation device vendor TomTom has agreed to pay Microsoft to settle patent-infringement cases the companies filed against each other in the last five weeks, but Microsoft will not pay fees to TomTom. TomTom will pay Microsoft to license patents for technologies in its car navigation and file-management system, effectively settling a case Microsoft filed against it last month in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington and with the International Trade Commission, Microsoft said.

  • Read the article: InfoWorld

  • Google Offers Free Music Downloads in China

    Google launched free downloads of licensed songs in China, while sharing advertising revenue with major music labels in a market rife with online piracy. Lee Kai-Fu, president of Google in greater China, said one reason Google lagged in the mainland search market was because it did not offer music downloads, the missing piece to its strategy in a market where it trails leader Baidu.com.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • 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