Lawmakers Want to Punish China for Counterfeiting

U.S. lawmakers called for tough new measures to punish China for its failure to stop widespread piracy and counterfeiting of U.S. goods ranging from music CDs to manufactured products. "I think we ought to consider this economic terrorism," Representative William Delahunt said, reflecting the frustration of many Democrats and Republicans at a House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee hearing.

FCC Says Millions Lack Access to Broadband

Between 14 million and 24 million Americans still lack access to broadband internet, and "immediate prospects for deployment to them are bleak," said the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. This newly pessimistic stance contradicted previous statements by the FCC, which had said that high-speed internet service was being made available to all Americans in a timely fashion.

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Judge Puts No Limits on Facebook in Ownership Suit

Facebook may continue business as usual while it fights a New York man's claim he has a contract with founder Mark Zuckerberg that entitles him to 84 percent ownership of the world's leading social networking site, a U.S. court heard. Paul Ceglia of Wellsville, New York, sued Zuckerberg and Facebook last month claiming a 2003 contract with Zuckerberg to develop and design a website now entitled him to a majority stake in the privately-held company.

China Satisfied with Google's Changes

China is satisfied that U.S. Internet giant Google is complying with Chinese laws after it tweaked the way it directs users to an unfiltered search page, a senior official said. The comments from a Ministry of Industry and Information official largely echoed previous Chinese statements, but are still likely to be seen as good news for the company as Beijing has been coy about its long-term future in China.

Al-Qaeda Materials on Blogs Cited for Shutdown

Blogetery.com, a blogging platform that claimed to service more than 70,000 blogs, was shut down after FBI agents informed executives of Burst.net, Blogetery's Web host, late on July 9 that links to al-Qaeda materials were found on Blogetery's servers, Joe Marr, chief technology officer for Burst.net, told CNET. Sources close to the investigation say that included in those materials were the names of American citizens targeted for assassination by al-Qaeda.

Apple Drops Chatroulette App After "Exposing" Complaints

Apple has yanked the iChatr app from the App Store, an application designed to bring the functionality of the popular Chatroulette service to one's mobile device. According to the developer, SKJM, "The iChatr application has currently been removed from the App Store due to reports of a number of users exposing themselves during the random video chat sessions."

Editor Agrees to Turn Over Info in iPhone Theft Probe

Jason Chen, the Gizmodo editor whose computer equipment was seized in April as part of an investigation into a missing prototype iPhone 4, has voluntarily agreed to turn over information to authorities. The agreement between Chen and the San Mateo County District Attorney's office, which calls for the DA to drop attempts to search Chen's property, puts an end to the dispute over whether the search of Chen's computer gear was lawful.

FCC Seeks USF Funds for Building Rural Broadband

The FCC launched an effort to tap the Universal Service Fund to establish a $400 million program aimed at extending broadband service to rural healthcare providers, CongressDaily reported. The changes, consistent with goals laid out in the commission's 10-year national broadband plan, are aimed at expanding eligible applicants from 9,800 healthcare providers to 12,000 by including providers who may not operate within hospitals, such as skilled nursing facilities, off-site administrative offices and data centers, and renal dialysis centers.

China Reportedly Clamping Down on Microblogs

Chinese social networking websites that provide Twitter-like services have suddenly reverted to testing mode and access has been spotty amid reports of a government clampdown. Although Twitter has been banned for more than a year in China, Chinese Internet companies have been quick to fill the void, providing microblogging services that allow users to post frequent updates and follow other posters.

Court Cites Internet in Ruling Against FCC's Indecency

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit said the FCC's rules on indecency are too vague and violate the First Amendment, undermining the government's primary tool for policing civility over the airwaves. The ruling questioned how the FCC can single out broadcast TV while most American families subscribe to cable or satellite TV, watch Internet video on cellphones, and play lifelike video games with few standards of decency.

Google "Street View" Illegal, Australian Official Says

Google broke Australia's privacy law when it collected private information from wireless networks, the country's privacy commissioner said, following an investigation into the Internet giant's "Street View" mapping service. Several other countries are investigating Google over the data collection, and there are growing concerns from regulators and consumer watchdogs worldwide that Google isn't serious enough about people's privacy -- a charge the company denies.