FCC Wants Details from Google on Nexus Termination Fee

Google Inc. was asked by federal regulators to explain a $350 fee charged to people who drop a contract for the company's Nexus One phones on Deutsche-Telekom AG's T-Mobile network. The request came in letters sent by the Federal Communications Commission, which also asked AT&T Inc., Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel Corp. about fees charged to customers who leave wireless contracts early.

Supreme Court Limits Laws on Online Cigarette Sales

New York City can't use a federal racketeering law to accuse discount cigarette retailers of evading hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes on Internet sales, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled. The nation's highest court, voting 5-3, threw out the city's claims under the U.S. Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act in lawsuits filed in 2003 and 2004.

Companies Urged to Focus on Professional Cybercriminals

Many organizations are focused on stopping random hackers and blocking pornography when they should be concerned with bigger threats from professional cybercriminals, according to a new cybersecurity report. In a survey conducted last year of 523 IT and security managers, top-level executives, and law enforcement personnel, hackers were rated the biggest threat, followed by insiders and foreign entities -- probably because hackers are the "noisiest and easiest to detect," the 2010 CyberSecurity Watch Survey concluded.

Google Wants to Stay in China Despite Clash

Even if its stand against censorship leads it to close its search engine in China, Google Inc. still hopes to maintain other key operations in the world's most populous Internet market. Google is negotiating to keep its research center in China, an advertising sales team that generates most of the company's revenue in the country and a fledgling mobile phone business as the company navigates the delicate negotiations with the government.

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Motorola Wants U.S. to Ban Sale of BlackBerry Devices

Motorola has asked U.S. regulators to bar Research In Motion from the U.S. sale of its products, accusing the BlackBerry maker of infringing on five Motorola technology patents. Motorola, which has been losing market share to Canada's RIM for years, said most of RIM's products infringe on at least one of the patents, which cover technology for Wi-Fi, application management, user interface and power management.

Chinese Newspaper Accuses U.S. of Controlling Internet

China's Communist Party mouthpiece accused the United States of mounting a cyber army and a "hacker brigade," and of exploiting social media like Twitter or YouTube to foment unrest in Iran. The People's Daily accused the United States of controlling the Internet in the name of Internet freedom after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called for more Internet freedoms in China and elsewhere in a speech.

Clinton Warns Countries Against Cyberattacks

Declaring that an attack on one nation's computer networks "can be an attack on all," Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton issued a warning that the United States would defend itself from cyberattacks, though she left unclear the means of response. In a sweeping, pointed address that dealt with the Internet as a force for both liberation and repression, Mrs. Clinton said: "Those who disrupt the free flow of information in our society or any other pose a threat to our economy, our government and our civil society."

EC Approves Oracle's Takeover of Sun

The European Commission said that it had approved Oracle's $7.4 billion takeover of Sun Microsystems after concluding that it would not significantly affect competition in the European Union. The commission, the executive arm of the European Union, had begun a formal antitrust investigation in early September because of concerns that the combination could harm the database software market.

Security Concerns Threaten ICANN Meeting in Kenya

Unease following the arrest of radical Islamic preacher Abdullah al-Faisal threatens to jeopardise Kenya's chances of hosting a key global meeting to discuss the future of the Internet. Organizers of the March conference are currently evaluating their options following recommendations made by consultants sent to the country to assess the suitability of the city to hold the meeting.

Microsoft Attorney Proposes Cloud Computing Advancement Act

Brad Smith, Microsoft's general counsel, urged Congress to introduce a bill that would address privacy and security issues associated with cloud computing. Specifically, Smith proposed the Cloud Computing Advancement Act, which would improve privacy protection, modernize the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to allow law enforcement to go after hackers and deter online crime, truth in cloud-computing principles, and a new multilateral framework to address data access issues globally.