Largest Hacking-Identify Theft Case Announced

Authorities announced what they believed to be the largest hacking and identity theft case ever prosecuted on in a scheme in which more than 130 million credit and debit card numbers were stolen. Three men were indicted on charges of being responsible for five corporate data breaches in a scheme in which the card numbers were stolen from Heartland Payment Systems, 7-Eleven Inc and Hannaford Brothers Co, federal prosecutors said in a statement.

  • Read the article: USA Today

  • Founder of Online Gambling Firm Pleads Guilty

    The founder of the defunct British online gambling firm BetOnSports pleaded guilty in U.S. court and agreed to forfeit more than $43 million in criminal proceeds, the Justice Department said. It said Gary Kaplan, 50, who founded the high-profile early player in offshore Internet sports gambling, pleaded guilty to charges of conspiring to violate the federal racketeering and other U.S. laws.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Hate Speech Online Tests Limits of Free Speech

    Incendiary talk is proliferating on broadcast outlets and the Internet, from the microphones of well-known commentators to the keyboards of anonymous netizens, testing the limits of political speech. Mark Potok, an editor at the Southern Poverty Law Center who tracks extremists and hate speech, says he thinks "political speech has gotten rougher in the last six months."

  • Read the article: The Washington Post

  • China Retreats from Mandatory Internet Filter Plan

    Chinese officials retreated from a plan to install so-called anti-pornography software on every computer sold here, saying instead that Internet cafes, schools and other public places must use the program, but that individual consumers will be spared. The industry and information technology minister, Li Yizhong, said the notion that the program, called Green Dam/Youth Escort, would be required on every new computer was "a misunderstanding" spawned by poorly written regulations.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Facebook User Arrested for Impersonating White Supremacist

    An African-American man has pleaded guilty after being accused of impersonating a white supremacist in a fictitious Facebook account to make death threats against an African-American university student. Dyron L. Hart, 20, of Poplarville, Mississippi, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Kurt D. Engelhardt to one count of communicating threats in interstate commerce, according to a Department of Justice statement.

  • Read the article: CNN.com

  • Cell Phones Remain Mostly Unharmed by Viruses

    The worry-free ride over cell-phone viruses will continue, at least in the near future, and not just because Apple quickly circulated a software patch to plug a vulnerability in its iPhone. Rather, for their extended peace of mind, users can credit the more tightly controlled -- some would say strangulated -- structure of the mobile phone industry in the United States.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Judge Bans Microsoft from Selling Word in Patent Case

    A judge ordered Microsoft to stop selling Word, one of its premier products, in its current form due to patent infringement. Judge Leonard Davis of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas issued a permanent injunction that "prohibits Microsoft from selling or importing to the United States any Microsoft Word products that have the capability of opening .XML, .DOCX or DOCM files (XML files) containing custom XML," according to a statement released by attorneys for the plantiff, i4i.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Court Says RealDVD Software Violates DMCA

    U.S. District Court Judge Marilyn Hall Patel ruled in favor of Hollywood movie studios, granting them a preliminary injunction that prevents RealNetworks from selling its RealDVD software or licensing it to set-top box makers. The court, in San Francisco, found that Real, in developing software to copy DVDs, violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and its contract with the DVD CCA, which controls the encryption on DVDs.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Advertising Council Says Bloggers Violate FTC Guidelines

    The Federal Trade Commission is currently investigating fair blogging practices, but an advertising group is one step ahead, and has forced two companies to clearly disclose their relationship with the health-related products they promote via blogs and Web sites. The National Advertising Review Council, a coalition of advertising organizations that seeks out bad actors in the industry, has been in business since 1971, but for the first time has now addressed blogs.

  • Read the article: PC Magazine

  • Anti-Russian Blogger Gains Fame After Attacks

    The massive cyber attack that security experts said was aimed at silencing a single blogger in the country of Georgia instead made him a global celebrity. Cyxymu, as he is known on his mostly anti-Russia blog, has been the subject of news reports worldwide ever since he was identified as the target of the attack that took down Twitter for hours and crippled other popular online services.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Harvard Professor Criticized for Tactics in RIAA Case

    As co-founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at the Harvard Law School, Professor Nesson is renowned for his early interest in bridging technology, law and culture, and his ability to inspire generations of students to see the Internet as a force for positive change, not just cables and computers. But when Professor Nesson, 70, took on the recording industry in an eagerly anticipated civil case here over sharing music online, the champion stumbled.

  • Read the article: The New York Times