U.S. Faces Threats from Cyberwar, Senators Told

Computer-based network attacks are slowly bleeding U.S. businesses of revenue and market advantage, while the government faces the prospect of losing in an all-out cyberwar, experts told Senators in a hearing. "If the nation went to war today in a cyberwar, we would lose," said Michael McConnell, executive vice president of Booz Allen Hamilton's national security business and a former director of national security and national intelligence.

European Companies File Antitrust Complaint Against Google

Google, owner of the world's most popular Internet search engine, faces European antitrust scrutiny after three companies filed complaints about unfair competition. A U.K. price-comparison site called Foundem, a French legal search engine called Ejustice.fr and a Microsoft Corp. service called Ciao From Bing, have brought competition complaints to the European Commission, Google said in a blog posting.

FCC to Unveil National Broadband Plan

U.S. communications regulators will unveil on March 17 a blueprint aimed at bringing fast affordable Internet access to more than 90 million Americans being held back by fees and technology. The Federal Communications Commission said that the long-awaited National Broadband Plan will try to help connect 93 million Americans to high-speed Internet to find jobs, access educational and healthcare services, and reduce household energy costs.

China Requiring Personal Photos for Domain Registrations

Web site owners in China will have to start submitting personal photos to register their sites with the government under new trial regulations, China's latest move in an Internet clampdown focused on porn. The regulations, issued by China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, are part of an ongoing effort by the ministry to create records for all Web sites in the country.

Chinese Official Calls Google Hacking "Groundless"

Google's assertion that its computers were attacked by hackers based in China was "groundless," Beijing said, hardening its rhetoric in a spat with Washington over Internet freedom. The remarks from Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang were the first direct rejection of the firm's allegations. China had previously defended its right to censor content on the Internet and brushed aside the hacking accusations, saying Google must abide by Chinese law.

Amazon Settles Copyright Suit Over Nude Photos

Amazon.com Inc. and Perfect 10 Inc. settled a copyright infringement lawsuit the adult publisher had brought over thumbnail images of nude pictures it said can be viewed with Amazon.com search sites A9.com and Alexa.com. Perfect 10 had sued Google Inc., the world’s most-used Internet search engine, and Amazon.com, the world’s largest online retailer, alleging they were offering users access to copyrighted material on other Web sites.

U.S. Olympic Committee Says Tweets Break Rules

Neither Red Bull or Verizon Communications is an Olympic sponsor, but both have posted items about the Vancouver Games on Twitter and Facebook. That is a violation of Olympics rules, which say advertisers that don’t pay the tens of millions of dollars an official sponsorship costs may not associate themselves with the Games or the athletes during the events or the weeks surrounding them.

FTC Says Data Disclosed on File-Sharing Networks

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission has notified nearly 100 organizations that data from their networks has been found on peer-to-peer file-sharing networks, the agency said. The FTC notices went to private and public entities, including schools and local government agencies and organizations with as few as eight employees to as many as tens of thousands, the FTC said in a statement.

Texas Judge Transfers AdWords Case to California

Siding with Google, a federal judge in Corpus Christi, Texas has transferred a trademark infringement lawsuit by an AdWords marketer to Google's hometown of northern California. U.S. District Court Judge Janis Graham Jack ruled that the marketer, Flowbee -- which manufactures home haircutting systems -- must litigate any matters against Google in California because the AdWords contract provided that any claims related to Google's ad programs would be tried in that state.

U.S. Investigators Focus on Asian Hacking Group

U.S. investigators are homing in on the likely perpetrators of the attacks on Google and as many as 33 other companies, with evidence pointing to an Asian hacking group that is likely Chinese, according to people familiar with the investigation. Initial forensic investigations of several of the companies affected have revealed the electronic infiltration techniques of a prominent Asian hacking group -- one of a handful of the major groups, they said.

California May Require Amazon to Collect Sales Tax

State lawmakers hunting for revenue are eyeing one source that could prove costly to millions of California consumers: Amazon.com. The online retail giant has enjoyed an edge over many competitors in the state because it is not required to collect sales tax from residents who buy books, top-of-the-line plasma televisions, cases of diapers and thousands of other products from its website.

EU Privacy Official Criticizes Internet Monitoring

As international negotiations toward a major cross-border trade agreement to curb intellectual property crimes continue behind closed doors, a top European privacy official blasted the secrecy of the talks, sounding an alarm about Internet monitoring provisions that could press ISPs to filter traffic on their networks for pirated content. The warning from European Data Protection Supervisor Peter Hustinx comes as nations negotiating the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) recently concluded the seventh round of talks at a meeting in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Chinese Schools Deny Role in Google Attacks

Two schools in China where computers were reportedly linked to cyberattacks on Google and other companies have denied involvement in the hack, Chinese state media said. Investigators say they have traced the attacks back to computers at Shanghai Jiaotong University, which is one of China's top universities, and Lanxiang Vocational School in eastern Shandong province, The New York Times reported.

Computer Users Confused About Online Protection

Computer jargon, a "tick box" culture and unimaginative advertising are discouraging Internet users from learning how to protect themselves online. Faced with such gobbledegook, many of the world's nearly 2 billion Internet users conclude that security is for "experts" and fail to take responsibility for the security of their own patch of cyberspace -- a potentially costly mistake.