AT&T Likely to Introduce Tiered Data Plans for Phones

AT&T will probably introduce a pricing system that penalizes heavy data users, AT&T's head of consumer services, Ralph de la Vega said, to encourage them "to either reduce or modify their usage so they don't crowd out the other customers in those same cell sites." "We've got to get to those customers and have them recognize that they need to change their patterns or have to face other things," De la Vega told a group of investors at UBS.

  • Read the article: Los Angeles Times

  • Google Sues to Stop Work-at-Home Kits

    Google is taking legal action to stop companies from allegedly using the search giant's name to trick people into paying for supposed work-at-home kits advertised online and in e-mails. The company filed a lawsuit in federal court in Salt Lake City against Pacific WebWorks and other, unnamed defendants alleging trademark infringement and dilution, unfair competition, federal cyberpiracy, and violation of consumer sales practices.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Facebook Users Found to Give Out Personal Info Easily

    Facebook users are too willing to give out their personal information, security firm Sophos has found. According to Sophos' Australian team, which conducted a study to see how likely Facebook users were to offer up personal information, 41 to 46 percent of the 100 people Sophos contacted "blindly accepted" friend requests from two fake Facebook users created by the security firm.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • EU, Microsoft Expected to End Antitrust Dispute

    The European Union and Microsoft are likely to end a decade-long dispute when EU antitrust regulators will accept the U.S. software company's amended offer on allowing consumer choice on Internet browsers, sources said. Three people familiar with the situation said the European Commission was expected to approve Microsoft's plan to make it easier for consumers to choose rival browsers on the firm's Windows operating system, which is used on a majority of personal computers.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Internet Access in Iran Down Due to "Decision by Authorities"

    Most of the Iranian capital's Internet links with the outside world were down, two days ahead of planned demonstrations by opponents of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Sources close to Iran's technical services told AFP the cut was the result of "a decision by the authorities" rather than a technical breakdown, but telecommunications ministry officials were unavailable for comment.

  • Read the article: AFP

  • Lawsuit Targets Bogus Offers on Social Networks

    A class-action lawsuit highlights what thousands of consumers say are bogus offers tied to social games available on Facebook and other social networks. The 16-page lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in nearby Sacramento, details how Rebecca Swift, a 41-year-old self-employed resident of Santa Cruz, Calif., was lured into accepting two "special offers" from advertisers to gain extra game credits for YoVille, a popular virtual-world game developed by Zynga.

  • Read the article: USA Today

  • Teen Internet Addicts Found More Likely to Harm Selves

    Teenagers who are addicted to the Internet are more likely to engage in self-harm behavior, according to an Australian-Chinese study. Researchers surveyed 1,618 adolescents aged 13 to 18 from China's Guangdong Province about behavior such as hitting themselves, pulling their own hair, or pinching or burning themselves, and gave them a test to gauge Internet addiction.

  • Read the article: Reuters

  • Hospital Notifies Patients of Stolen Laptop with Data

    Officials at Aurora St. Luke's Medical Center in Milwaukee said they are in the process of notifying more than 6,400 patients that their names, Social Security numbers, and other personal information may have been exposed after a laptop computer was stolen. A St. Luke's spokesman said the laptop was snagged from a locked office in a "secure physician office" located adjacent to the hospital.

  • Read the article: eSecurity Planet

  • Defense Department Drops Parental Control Software

    The Department of Defense has pulled a parental control product from its online store serving military families after learning that the company collects children's data, according to documents the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) obtained from the government agency. EPIC has filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission alleging that Echometrix, maker of FamilySafe parental control software, violates the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act by collecting personal information from children and disclosing it to third parties for market intelligence purposes.

  • Read the article: CNET News

  • Facebook Members Notified of Beacon Settlement

    An e-mail was sent to Facebook users who were members at the time that its controversial, now-defunct Beacon advertising program was operated: it's the official notice about the proposed settlement for the class-action lawsuit against Beacon. The terms of the settlement have been public since September, but the court-ordered summary notice is the last step in the process before final approval on February 26.

  • Read the article: CNET News