Flash Drive with Data on 103,000 Students Missing

A flash drive containing the personal information of more than 103,000 former adult education students in Virginia was misplaced last month, state education officials reported. Officials said they do not to believe the information, which includes names, Social Security numbers and employment and demographic information, has been found or is being misused.

  • Read the article: The Washington Post

  • Stolen Laptop Has Data on 800,000 Doctors

    About 800,000 doctors -- nearly every practicing physician in the country -- are being warned that business and personal information such as Social Security numbers, addresses and certain identification numbers may be open for a possible breach after an insurance trade group employee's laptop was stolen from a car in Chicago. The Chicago-based Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, a trade group for the nation's Blue Cross health insurance plans, confirmed an employee "broke protocol and transferred to a personal laptop" information that was later stolen in late August.

  • Read the article: Chicago Tribune

  • NBA Player Gains Control of 800 Celebrity Domain Names

    Toronto Raptors' forward Chris Bosh won control of nearly 800 Internet domain names wrongfully appropriated from professional athletes and celebrities, his lawyer said. The ruling, which Bosh's lawyer said is the first time a court awarded third-party domain names to a plaintiff, gives the basketball player control of www.chrisbosh.com and website names that incorporated names of other NBA stars, including Denver's Carmelo Anthony and Phoenix's Steve Nash.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Class-Action Lawsuit Filed Over Sidekick Data Loss

    An Atlanta woman has filed a class-action lawsuit against Microsoft and T-Mobile over the Microsoft server outage that caused thousands of Sidekick smartphone users to lose their personal data. The lawsuit, brought by Sidekick customer Maureen Thompson, alleges T-Mobile, Microsoft and Microsoft subsidiary Danger failed to make good on their marketing promises that the Sidekick data service would securely and automatically back up users' data.

  • Read the article: Seattle P-I

  • AT&T Says Google Voice Violates Telecom, Net Laws

    AT&T stepped up its campaign for greater federal scrutiny of Google's voice service, reasserting in a letter to the Federal Communications Commission that the search giant's Web phone application violates both telecom and net neutrality laws. The FCC launched an inquiry into Google Voice's blocking of calls and began an review of whether the application should be regulated as a traditional telephone service, also known as a common carrier.

  • Read the article: The Washington Post

  • EFF Seeks Re-Examination for VoIP Patent

    The Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a re-examination request to the U.S. Patent and Trademark office, stating it had discovered a prior patent as well as published reference material that should invalidate a patent that had been granted to a company called Acceris. The patent that Acceris was granted describes how voice over IP technology can be used to make calls to and from traditional analog telephones.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • FCC Chairman Wants to Apply Net Neutrality Broadly

    Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski is proposing that the agency apply tougher open-Internet rules broadly, raising concerns of cable and phone companies and some lawmakers that the government could try to control efforts to offer products such as digital cable or premium business services. Mr. Genachowski's proposal suggests everything in the Internet pipe is covered by rules prohibiting discrimination against any legal Internet traffic, known as net neutrality, unless the agency says otherwise, according to FCC officials familiar with a draft circulating in the agency.

  • Read the article: The Wall Street Journal

  • Microsoft Issues Biggest Software Patch Ever

    Microsoft issued its biggest software patch on record to fix a range of security issues in its programs, including the yet to be released Windows 7 operating system. In a monthly update sent to users of its software, Microsoft released 13 security bulletins, or patches, to address 34 vulnerabilities it identified across its Windows, Internet Explorer, Silverlight, Office and other products.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Lawsuit Accuses Delta of Accessing Coalition's E-mails

    The Coalition for an Airline Passengers' Bill of Rights sued Delta Air Lines Inc. in a federal court in Texas, alleging the airline got hacked e-mails and tried to undermine the organization, according to Houston-based The Gibson Law Firm. Kate Hanni, the executive director and founder of the coalition, which also is known as FlyersRights.org, sued the Atlanta-based airline and Dulles, Va.-based Metron Aviation Inc. after her e-mails, and those of at least two reporters, including one from USA Today, were obtained by Delta and Metron, the suit alleges.

  • Read the article: Atlanta Business Chronicle

  • WhoCanISue.com Website Generates Attention, Criticism

    Boca Raton, Fla.-based firm WhoCanISue.com has scores of billboards and bus-shelter signs dominating the local landscape, matching website visitors with lawyers. But critics say WhoCanISue and other online referral services degrade the legal profession and often steer the public to lawyers who operate under a business model of "bring in as many cases as you can and settle them."

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times