Spammers began targeting Google Buzz just days after it was launched, according to security company Websense, Inc.
- Read the article: Computerworld
Spammers began targeting Google Buzz just days after it was launched, according to security company Websense, Inc.
A student who set up a Facebook page to complain about her teacher -- and was later suspended -- had every right to do so under the First Amendment, a federal magistrate has ruled. The ruling not only allows Katherine "Katie" Evans' suit against the principal to move forward, it could set a precedent in cases involving speech and social networking on the Internet, experts say.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center has filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, alleging that Google’s new social networking service Buzz violates federal consumer protection law. It is urging the FTC to open an investigation into the service because it "violated user expectations, diminished user privacy, contradicted Google's privacy policy, and may have violated federal wiretap laws."
When Apple launches its iBook store to sell titles for its new iPad device in March, many of its titles are expected to come with a set of handsome digital locks designed to deter piracy. Veteran iTunes customers will recognize the locks as FairPlay, a digital rights management software that once limited how many times digital songs can be copied onto different computers.
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski said the agency will propose in an upcoming report a minimum Internet speed for American households. Dubbed the "100 Squared Initiative," Genachowski said that he hopes to bring speeds of 100 megabits per second to 100 million households, a speed that is significantly higher than what many households receive.
Apple has banned at least two prominent iPhone hackers from accessing its App Store. The move sparked concerns that Apple might ban all jailbroken iPhones was accessing the App Store.
All week long, officials at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation watched with growing dismay as a YouTube video ricocheted around the Internet. Finally, FDIC officials decided they had had enough, issuing a statement that the video contains "blatantly false claims."
A San Francisco man who had more than 1.8 million stolen bank and credit card numbers on his home computers was sentenced to 13 years in federal prison and ordered to repay $27.5 million to the banks and credit card companies he victimized. Max Ray Vision, who legally changed his last name from Butler, had pleaded guilty in June to his role in an online clearinghouse where identity thieves shared stolen information.
After taking steps to stem the public backlash against its social-networking service Buzz, Google Inc. is planning further updates and considering changing how it tests new Buzz features. Google product manager Todd Jackson said in an interview that the amount of people initially uncomfortable with the service underscored that the company's approach of testing Buzz among its employees hasn't been sufficient.
A new team is being created to tackle online fraudsters operating in Britain amid a failure to secure any conviction under existing measures. The "cyber enforcement team" will be set up as part of a £4.3m investment by the government over three years to tackle Internet and e-mail cons.
A French judge has issued an international arrest warrant against American rider Floyd Landis for suspected hacking into an anti-doping laboratory computer, French anti-doping agency head Pierre Bordry told Reuters. In an interview, Bordy said the judge Thomas Cassuto believed Landis, whose 2006 Tour de France title was stripped after he failed a dope test, wanted to prove the laboratory where his samples were tested was wrong.
A proposed bill in Annapolis, Maryland, would require companies that provide telephone service over the Internet to warn customers four times a year that 911 service will be cut off if the Internet signal dies. "More and more people are going to be using these services, so it's prudent to be proactive and make sure people are notified," said County Executive John R. Leopold, who introduced the measure weeks ago.
More than 70 staff at the Ministry of Justice and the Metropolitan Police Service have been sacked or disciplined in the past 18 months for misusing the Internet and social networking sites, according to official figures released today in response to Freedom of Information Act requests. The MoJ sacked four officials and issued final warnings to three for misbehaving on sites such as Facebook and Twitter, and carpeted more than 40 for internet and e-mail offenses.
More private computers were commandeered by hackers for malicious purposes in China in the last quarter of 2009 than in any other country, including the United States, according to a new study by an Internet security company. These "zombie" computers are often grouped into "botnets," or armies of infected computers that can be used to send spam e-mail or attack Web sites, according to McAfee, a Silicon Valley security firm.
Sergey Brin, a Google co-founder, speaking publicly for the first time about the hacking attacks on Google in late 2009, said that the company still hoped to find a way to continue operating its Google.cn search service in China, which it has blamed for the attacks. “I want to find a way to work within the Chinese system to bring information to the people,” said Mr. Brin, who was interviewed on stage at the annual TED conference.
Google isn't wasting any time in responding to user criticism about Buzz and has rolled out another set of changes to further address Buzz's privacy issues. The biggest change involves the automatic follow system: it's now being switched to a suggestion model, where Google will present you with a list of friends it thinks you'd like to follow, but gives you a chance to deselect them before you start using the service.
Microsoft is expected to secure unconditional EU approval for its landmark search deal with Yahoo to challenge market leader Google, sources familiar with the situation said. U.S. software company Microsoft and Internet firm Yahoo signed a 10-year global Web search partnership last July, which must be approved by regulators to take effect.
In the view of both political analysts and technology experts in China and in the United States, China's attempts to tighten its grip on Internet use are driven in part by the conviction that the West -- and particularly the United States -- is wielding communications innovations from malware to Twitter to weaken it militarily and to stir dissent internally. State media have vented those concerns more vociferously since Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton criticized China for censorship and called for an investigation of Google's claim that its databases had been the target of a sophisticated attack from China.
Google argued in a staunch and sometimes eloquent brief that an agreement reached with the Authors Guild to digitize millions of books was legal and a contribution to human knowledge. Google's ambitious plan has been praised for expanding access to books but the Justice Department criticized it on February 4 on a variety of grounds, saying it potentially violated antitrust and copyright laws.
Google announced some changes to Google Buzz that show it has belatedly recognized the backlash over privacy concerns with the new service. Early users of Google Buzz have found the settings very complicated, especially the ones that pertain to privacy.
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