Panel Says China Piercing U.S. Government Networks

China's government appears increasingly to be piercing U.S. government and defense industry computer networks to gather useful data for its military, a congressional advisory panel said. "A large body of both circumstantial and forensic evidence strongly indicates Chinese state involvement in such activities," the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission said in its 2009 report to Congress.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Judge Gives Preliminary OK to Google Books Settlement

    The judge overseeing the Google Books case has laid out the schedule for the second round of the final approval process, at the same time granting preliminary approval of the revised deal. Like before, opponents of Google's settlement with groups representing authors and publishers will have a comment period in which to file objections, and books rights holders who want to preserve their abilty to sue Google for scanning their books will have an opt-out deadline.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • British Police Arrest Two in Connection with Trojan

    Detectives have made the first arrests in Europe to tackle a "trojan" computer virus which is believed to have infected tens of thousands of computers across the world, London police said. The ZeuS or Zbot trojan, a type of sophisticated malicious computer programme, has been used to collect millions of lines of data from machines allowing those responsible to obtain a mass of personal information.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • EU Ombudsman Rebukes Regulators in Intel Case

    The European Ombudsman rebuked European Union regulators for procedural errors in their antitrust probe of Intel but the censure will not affect a 1.06 billion euro ($1.58 billion) fine against the U.S. chipmaker. The ombudsman's decision is non-binding but it could help the world's No. 1 chipmaker in its appeal against the ruling to Europe's second-highest court.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • BlackBerry Security Chief Warns of Smartphone Threats

    Hackers could one day turn ordinary smartphones into "rogue" devices to attack major wireless networks, Research In Motion's security chief warned. Scott Totzke, RIM's vice-president of BlackBerry security, said hackers could use smartphones to target wireless carriers using a technique similar to one used in assaults that slowed Internet traffic in the United States and South Korea in July.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Senate Hearing Focuses on Online Loyalty Programs

    Words like "scam," "fraud," and "arrest" filled the air during a Senate hearing that focused on the controversial marketing companies that allegedly dupe consumers into paying monthly fees to join online loyalty programs. Vertrue, Webloyalty, and Affinion generated more than $1.4 billion by "misleading" Web shoppers, said members of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, which called the hearing.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Hackers Attack Website, E-mail of Hitler Supporter

    Self-proclaimed anti-fascist hackers have struck a major blow at controversial World War II historian David Irving by taking down two of his websites and publishing scores of his e-mails and private information. The 16,000-word missive posted to Wikileaks contains the names and contact details of supporters of Irving, who -- among other things -- claims that Adolph Hitler was unaware of the Holocaust.

  • Read the article: The Register

  • Canadian Financial Group Opposes .bank Domain

    A group of financial organizations has suggested that a .bank top-level domain name might help reduce phishing and instill confidence. But the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Canada (OSFI) has sent a letter to ICANN CEO Rod Beckstrom saying that it might undertake an effort to work against .bank's credibility as a safe web address for banking.

  • Read the article: Domain Name Wire

  • Google Offers Access to Historic Legal Opinions

    It may not satisfy the needs of Google's lawyers as they research antitrust law, but Google Scholar now offers the full text of numerous legal opinions from throughout U.S. history. The company announced that Google Scholar users now have the option of searching for specific opinions related to broad topics, like copyright or desegregation, as well as famous cases like Brown vs. Board of Education and Roe vs. Wade.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Egypt Becomes First to Apply for International Domain

    The agency in charge of assigning domain names began accepting applications for domain names written in non-Latin languages, and Egypt -- a country now drawing heated criticism from human rights advocates -- became the first to apply for a domain name in Arabic. Following a controversial decision by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to allow Web sites written in Arabic, Russian Chinese, and other non-ASCII character sets, governments or their designees can now apply for the approval of such names.

  • Read the article: PC World

  • "Jailbreakers" Keep Seeking to Thwart iPhone's Limits

    The iPhone and its App Store not only gave birth to a new digital frontier for mobile software, but created an entire underground ecosystem: the Jailbreak community. In addition to multiple iPhone hacker groups pumping out different unlocking solutions on a regular basis, there are several stores hosting unauthorized iPhone apps and programmers developing software strictly for hacked iPhones.

  • Read the article: CNN.com

  • Internet Companies Want FDA to Revise Ad Requirements

    Internet giants Google and Yahoo have lined up with the pharmaceutical industry in asking the U.S. government to draft new rules that would give drug companies more latitude to advertise online. Current U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulations require that any mention of a drug's benefits must also reveal its risks, including detailed lists of side effects.

  • Read the article: U.S. News & World Report