Egyptian Blogger Continues to Attract Trouble

Mohamed Abdel Aziz has bolted from trouble a number of times, including dashing from security forces closing in on a demonstration in the port city of Alexandria. His less mercurial moments have three times landed him in police stations, but upon each release he has returned to his computer, opened his blog and conspired in cyberspace to end President Hosni Mubarak's 27-year rule of Egypt.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Colleges Report Screening Applicants on Networking Sites

    According to a new report by the National Assn. for College Admission Counseling, about a quarter of U.S. colleges reported doing some research about applicants on social networking sites or through Internet search engines. The study, which included 10 California colleges, did not specify which schools acknowledged the practice or how often scholarships or enrollment offers might be nixed because of online postings.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Justice Department Probing Google Book Settlement

    The Justice Department has begun an inquiry into the antitrust implications of Google's settlement with authors and publishers over its Google Book Search service, two people briefed on the matter said. Lawyers for the Justice Department have been in conversations in recent weeks with various groups opposed to the settlement, including the Internet Archive and Consumer Watchdog.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Three Swedish ISPs to Erase Users' Traffic Data

    Having apparently been scared off illegal file sharing in large numbers by a new Swedish law that went into effect April 1, pirates in that country now have a new safe harbor to escape law enforcement. Three Swedish Internet service providers, among them Tele2, one of the country's three major broadband operators, have stated that they will erase traffic data to protect their customers' privacy.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • RIAA to Accept Small Payment in High-Profile Case

    After battling a suburban family for four years over music downloads, the recording industry has agreed to accept $7,000 -- paid in installments -- to settle its federal piracy lawsuit. If approved by a judge, the settlement will end a well-publicized tussle that began with five record companies accusing Patricia Santangelo, a mother of five, of illegally downloading and distributing music.

  • Read the article: Forbes

  • FTC Chair Says Online Tracking Firms Get "Last Chance"

    Companies that track consumer behavior on the Web for targeted advertising without proper consent are near their "last chance" to self-regulate, the head of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said. Privacy advocates say regulations on big phone and Internet companies, such as AT&T and Google, are too lax, giving the firms excessive control over consumers' personal information.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Court Orders Apple to Pay $19 Million in Memory Patent Case

    In a rare public legal defeat, Apple this week was found to have infringed on a patent for computing technology and has been asked to pay $19 million in damages. A court handed down the amount after ruling that Apple had "willfully" violated three claims in a patent for predictive snooping of cache memory that helps shuttle information between a processor, its memory and other elements of a computer.

  • Read the article: AppleInsider

  • Twitter User Arrested for Threatening "War"

    An Oklahoma City man who allegedly threatened on Twitter to turn a tax protest into a massacre has been arrested on suspicion of making interstate threats in what is believed to be the first federal prosecution based on posts made to the micro-blogging site. Using the micro-blogging site, Daniel Knight Hayden allegedly threatened to start a "war" against the government at the Oklahoma City Capitol where a "Tea Party" tax protest was planned.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Oklahoma Department of Human Service Loses Laptop

    The Oklahoma Department of Human Services reported that a laptop was stolen from one of its employees. The laptop contained the personal data of people receiving government assistance, specifically those enrolled in the following programs: Medicaid, Child Care assistance, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, Aid to the Aged, Blind and Disabled and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

  • Read the article: internetnews.com

  • White House May Get Bigger Cybersecurity Role

    The federal official overseeing a 60-day review of the U.S. government's cybersecurity efforts indicated that the final report recommends shifting more responsibilities to the White House. "It provides the president with recommendations for a White House organizational structure that can effectively address cyberspace-related issues," Melissa Hathaway, acting cyberspace director for the White House's National Security and Homeland Security councils, said at the RSA computer security conference.

  • Read the article: CNET News