U.S. Probes Tech Firms for Antitrust, Hiring Practices

The Justice Department has launched a preliminary investigation into whether some of the nation's largest technology companies violated antitrust laws by negotiating the recruiting and hiring of one another's employees, according to two people with knowledge of the review. The probe is focused on search engine giant Google Inc., rival Yahoo Inc., iPhone maker Apple Inc., biotech firm Genentech Inc. and others, said the sources, who described the inquiry as "industrywide" and spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was continuing.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Scammers Luring Victims Through Twitter, Google Searches

    Online scammers are targeting people looking for popular topics on Twitter and Google to lure them to Web sites that display fake security warnings and try to sell them antivirus products, PandaLabs said. This technique isn't new, but seems to be widening on Google and is particularly successful on Twitter where links are spread fast and furiously and people often don't think before they click.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Privacy Expectations, Reality Differ Online, Study Says

    When asked about online privacy, most people say they want more information about how they are being tracked and more control over how their personal information is used. Those consumer expectations are rarely in line with the data collection practices of Internet companies, which often collect information about their users not only on their own sites, but also when those users visit other sites across the Web, according to a new privacy study conducted by a group of graduate students at the University of California, Berkeley.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Cybersecurity a Serious Challenge, Obama Says

    Calling protection of government and private computer and communications networks "one of the most serious... security challenges we face," President Obama said he would appoint a White House advisor to oversee a national effort to improve cyber-security throughout the U.S. The president noted that millions of Americans already had been victimized by computer tampering and that his own campaign computers had been breached by hackers between August and October.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Pentagon Set to Create New Internet Military Command

    The Pentagon plans to create a new military command for cyberspace, administration officials said, stepping up preparations by the armed forces to conduct both offensive and defensive computer warfare. The military command would complement a civilian effort to be announced by President Obama that would overhaul the way the United States safeguards its computer networks.

  • Read the article: The New York Times