EU Discussing Deal with Microsoft, Yahoo

EU antitrust regulators are in touch with Microsoft and Yahoo about their search engine deal, a source familiar with the situation said, with the talks seen more as exploratory than indicating any competition concerns. "There are ongoing informal discussions between the European Commission and Microsoft and Yahoo on their search engine partnership," the source said, without giving further details.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Founders of Skype File Copyright Suit Against Company

    Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, who became billionaires after selling Skype to eBay in 2005, filed a copyright lawsuit against Skype in the United States District Court of Northern California. The suit comes a little more than two weeks after eBay announced it would sell most of Skype for $1.9 billion to a consortium of investors led by the private equity firm Silver Lake Partners.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Corporate IT Departments Faulted for Threat Priorities

    Corporate information technology departments are prioritizing the wrong threats to their computer systems, focusing on old problems and leaving their companies open to a raft of new cyberattacks targeting sensitive customer and corporate information. That is the finding of a new biannual report from the SANS Institute, a training organization for computer security professionals, whose senior staff weighed two sets of data that have not been rigorously compared to date: data on the most common attacks hitting corporate networks and data on which vulnerabilities are most prevalent on company networks.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Intel Asks European Court to Set Aside Antitrust Ruling

    Intel has asked Europe's second highest court to annul last May's antitrust ruling against the company, accusing the regulators of erring in law and of producing sloppy analysis, according to details of the appeal made public. The European Commission, the European Union's top antitrust authority, fined Intel a record US$1.45 billion in May for abusing its dominant position in the microprocessor chip market in Europe, at the expense of its only significant rival, Advanced Micro Devices.

  • Read the article: PC World

  • Ex-White House Cyberspace Leader Warns of Threats

    In her first public address since leaving the White House, Melissa Hathaway issued an urgent warning about the severity of the cyber threats facing America's digital networks, a message she tempered with a cautious optimism about the mounting political will toward addressing the challenges. Hathaway, the former White House acting senior director for cyberspace, resigned in August after leading a sweeping review of the federal cybersecurity apparatus that President Obama commissioned in February.

  • Read the article: internetnews.com

  • Judge Refuses to Enforce Overstock's Online Terms

    A federal judge has ruled that Internet retailer Overstock can't enforce the manadatory arbitration agreement set out in its online terms and conditions because there is no evidence that consumers read the policy. A customer "lacked notice of the terms and conditions because the website did not prompt her to review the terms and conditions and because the link to the terms and conditions was not prominently displayed," the judge wrote.

  • Read the article: MediaPost

  • New York Times Site Visitors Hit by Malware Attacks

    The New York Times Company said that NYTimes.com was the victim of an attacker who first posed as a legitimate advertiser, then started hitting site visitors with aggressive advertisements that appeared to be warnings about viruses. "Over the weekend, NYTimes.com was the victim of a malware attack that targeted several news organizations," Diane McNulty, a spokeswoman for the Times Company, said in a statement in response to questions about the rogue ads.

  • Read the article: The New York Times

  • Virginia Won't Push Facebook to Divulge User's Data

    The state of Virginia has backed away from its attempts to force Facebook to divulge the complete contents of a user's account to settle a dispute over workers' compensation, narrowly avoiding what promised to be a high-profile privacy battle in federal court. The Virginia's Workers Compensation Commission said it was no longer going to levy a $200-a-day fine on the social-networking site for refusing to comply with a subpoena from an airline that previously employed a flight attendant named Shana Hensley.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Hacker Pleads Guilty in TJX Identity Theft Case

    A computer hacker who was once a federal informant and was a driving force behind one of the largest cases of identity theft in U.S. history pleaded guilty in a deal with prosecutors that will send him to prison for up to 25 years. Albert Gonzalez, 28, of Miami, admitted pulling off some of the most prominent hacking jobs of the decade -- invading the computer systems of such retailers as TJX, BJ's Wholesale Club, OfficeMax, Boston Market, Barnes & Noble and Sports Authority.

  • Read the article: USA Today

  • Court Calls $358 Million Patent Award Excessive

    A federal appeals court affirmed a lower court ruling that Microsoft infringed on a patent owned by Alcatel-Lucent, but said the jury award of $358 million in damages was excessive. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington, D.C., upheld a ruling that the patent at issue was valid and had been infringed on, but said there was not sufficient evidence to support the calculation of damages.

  • Read the article: CNET News