Suicide Reported in China Over Missing iPhone

News media in China are reporting that a 25-year-old employee of Foxconn, which manufactures products for Apple there, committed suicide after being interrogated about a missing prototype for a new iPhone. The reports said the employee, who had been tasked with sending iPhone prototypes to Apple, had been under suspicion for stealing after one of the handsets went missing.

  • Read the article: The Wall Street Journal

  • U.K. Court Says Google Not Liable for Defamation

    A court in the United Kingdom has ruled Google isn't on the hook for defamatory information in its search results, saying the company facilitates access to the information but isn't a direct publisher. The High Court judge, David Eady, offered his conclusion in a case pitting Metropolitan International Schools, a distance learning company, against Google UK and its U.S. headquarters.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Europe Plans Hearing on Google Books Database

    The European Commission is to hold a hearing on September 7 for interested parties to comment on Google's deal with publishers to make millions of books available online and its impact on EU writers' rights. The European Union executive had said in May it would study Google's book deal after Germany complained the company had scanned books from U.S. libraries to create its Google Books database without prior consent of rights holders.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Falun Gong Wants U.S. Help to Defeat Censors Online

    Ten years after a government crackdown drove it underground in China, Falun Gong is trying to position itself to get U.S. government funds to help defeat Internet censors worldwide. The spiritual group's efforts to stay in contact with its members in China spawned a sophisticated effort to evade Chinese censors, which has now expanded enough that it was used by Iranian protesters to get around government controls in June.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Amazon Deletes Two Books from Users' Kindle Devices

    In a move that angered customers and generated waves of online pique, Amazon remotely deleted some digital editions of the books "1984" and "Animal Farm" from the Kindle devices of readers who had bought them. An Amazon spokesman, Drew Herdener, said in an e-mail message that the books were added to the Kindle store by a company that did not have rights to them, using a self-service function.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Report Cites "Serious Privacy Gaps" at Facebook

    The popular social networking site Facebook is not doing enough to protect the personal information it gets from subscribers, and it gives users confusing and incomplete information about privacy matters, Canada's privacy commissioner said. "It's clear that privacy issues are top of mind for Facebook, and yet we found serious privacy gaps in the way the site operates," Privacy Commissioner Jennifer Stoddart said in a report on an investigation into Facebook.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Apple Asks Microsoft to Stop Running Some Ads

    Apple Inc. legal representatives asked Microsoft Corp. recently to "stop running" advertisements suggesting Apple's computers are expensive, Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner said. The interaction has emboldened Microsoft, which plans to continue with its "Laptop Hunter" marketing campaign after learning, however indirectly, how effective the advertisement's underlying message is in rankling Apple.

  • Read the article: The Wall Street Journal

  • Microsoft Sues Over Instant Messaging Scams

    Microsoft filed a civil lawsuit in King County Superior Court in Seattle against Funmobile, Mobilefunster, and several individuals, who Microsoft says is responsible for the intentional misuse of the service to gain the personal information of its users. In the suit, Microsoft cites a multitude of attacks including IMs that appear to be coming from users they know, as well as phishing attacks that mimic the look and feel of an outside service, or an official Microsoft support page.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Google Tells Newspapers How to Avoid Indexing

    In a post written by Josh Cohen, senior business product manager, Google said newspaper publishers can easily tell search engines to take a hike. All it takes is a two-line piece of code, which he helpfully included in his post. Tuck that on your website, and no search engine will crawl it; the stories won't show up when people look for content using search engines.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Security Breaches at Twitter Expose Lapses

    Twitter's latest security hole has less to do with its users than it does with its staff, but lessons can be learned on both sides. In the case of Jason Goldman, who is currently Twitter's director of product management, the simplicity of Yahoo's password recovery system was enough to let a hacker get in and gain information from a number of other sites, including access to other Twitter staff's personal accounts.

  • Read the article: CNET News