Chinese Web Users Call for Boycott Over Filtering

Chinese Internet users are calling on fellow web surfers to stay offline on July 1, the debut of a controversial software filter that critics say the Chinese government is using to tighten censorship. New regulations from Beijing mandate "Green Dam," a program sold by Jinhui Computer System Engineering Co., be pre-installed on personal computers manufactured or shipped after July 1.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Survey Shows 8% Admit to Illegal Video Downloads

    Eight percent of all consumers in Britain, France, Germany and the United States admit to downloading video illegally from the Internet, according to a survey, showing the scale of the ongoing fight against piracy. Two-thirds of those surveyed in Britain often or sometimes watched TV, movies and video on their PC or laptop computer, with U.S. consumers not far behind.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • City Stops Requiring Passwords from Job Applicants

    The city of Bozeman, Mont., has rescinded its long-standing policy that job applicants provide user names and passwords to social-networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace. According to a press release: "The extent of our request for a candidate's password, user name, or other internet information appears to have exceeded that which is acceptable to our community."

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • European Technology Helps Iran Censor Internet

    The Iranian regime has developed, with the assistance of European telecommunications companies, one of the world's most sophisticated mechanisms for controlling and censoring the Internet, allowing it to examine the content of individual online communications on a massive scale. Interviews with technology experts in Iran and outside the country say Iranian efforts at monitoring Internet information go well beyond blocking access to Web sites or severing Internet connections.

  • Read the article: The Wall Street Journal

  • Woman Ordered to Pay $1.92 Million for File-Sharing

    Jammie Thomas-Rasset was found guilty of willful copyright infringement in a Minneapolis federal court and must pay the recording industry $1.92 million. In a surprise decision, the jury imposed damages against Thomas-Rasset, who was originally accused to sharing more than 1,700 songs, at a whopping $80,000 for each of the 24 songs she was ultimately found guilty of illegally sharing.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • PC Makers Say China Not Relaxing Censorship Stance

    American computer makers say the Chinese government has not backed down from a requirement that Internet censorship software be preinstalled on all computers sold in China after July 1, despite reports that the rule had been relaxed. In a further sign that Chinese officials are trying to assert more Internet control, the city of Beijing wants to recruit 10,000 volunteers by summer's end to monitor online content, said an employee of the city government's Spiritual Civilization Office.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Facebook Defends Its Behavioral Targeting Practices

    Facebook's targeted advertising program is "materially different from behavioral targeting as it is usually discussed," Chris Kelly, the social network's chief privacy officer, said in remarks prepared for a earing before two House subcommittees. "In offering its free service to users, Facebook is dedicated to developing advertising that is relevant and personal without invading users' privacy, and to giving users more control over how their personal information is used in the online advertising environment," read the remarks for two subcommittees of the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Energy and Commerce.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Google to Blur Faces in Street View for Canada

    If your face was captured by Google's Street View cameras in recent weeks, your mug is in the company's image database -- but it won't be for long, the head of Google Canada said. "We'll be permanently blurring them and permanently anonymizing them, so there's no imagery in there that's identifiable," said Jonathan Lister, managing director and head of Google Canada, about two hours before he was to answer questions from the Commons ethics committee about Street View.

  • Read the article: CBC

  • Google Agrees to Street View Changes in Germany

    Google is willing to concede to German demands the company erase photos for its panoramic mapping service after they have been processed, a data protection official said. Johannes Caspar, head of the Hamburg regional office for data protection, said Google had agreed to erase the raw footage of faces, house numbers, license plates and individuals in Germany who have told authorities they do not want their information used in the service.

  • Read the article: SiliconValley.com

  • W3C Looking Into Apple Patent on Software Updates

    The World Wide Web Consortium is opening the possibility of pushing back against an Apple patent on software updates that Apple had refused to license royalty-free for use in a proposed Web standard. The patent, which Apple applied for in 1995 and was granted in 1998, involves this scenario: "a software program running on a computer automatically replaces itself with a newer version in a completely automated fashion, without interruption of its primary function, and in a manner that is completely transparent to the user of the computer."

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • State Department Helps Social Sites Amid Iranian Drama

    Senior officials say the State Department is working with Twitter and other social networking sites to ensure Iranians are able to continue to communicate to each other and the outside world. By necessity, the U.S. is staying hands off of the election drama playing out in Iran, and officials say they are not providing messages to Iranians or "quarterbacking" the disputed election process.

  • Read the article: CNN.com