Tech Companies Say Data Protection Guards Against Crime

Internet companies need to be more accountable for the mass of personal data collected from users to guard against cybercrime, industry executives said. "Information is the currency of growth, but it's also increasingly become the currency of crime," Peter Cullen, chief privacy strategist for Microsoft Corp, said at the Family Online Safety Institute's annual conference.

Federal Agencies May Disagree on Internet Privacy

Privacy advocates are pushing for a "do not track" feature that would let Internet users tell Web sites to stop surreptitiously tracking their online habits and collecting clues about age, salary, health, location and leisure activities. That proposal and other ideas to protect online privacy are setting up a confrontation among Internet companies, federal regulators, the Obama administration and Congress over how strict any new rules should be.

Company Accused of Illegal Firing for Facebook Post

In what labor officials and lawyers view as a ground-breaking case involving workers and social media, the National Labor Relations Board has accused a company of illegally firing an employee after she criticized her supervisor on her Facebook page. This is the first case in which the labor board has stepped in to argue that workers' criticisms of their bosses or companies on a social networking site are generally a protected activity and that employers would be violating the law by punishing workers for such statements.

Microsoft Sues Motorola Over Royalties on Xbox

Microsoft stepped up its legal battle with Motorola, as the software company accused the phone maker of charging excessive royalties on network technology used in Microsoft's Xbox game system. The suit, filed in federal court in Seattle, comes a month after Microsoft charged that its former ally Motorola infringed a number of its patents in its Android-based smartphones, which run on software built by Google.

Websites Limit Tracking Tools to Avoid Privacy Risks

Major websites are moving to limit the number of tracking technologies like "cookies" spreading on their sites, hoping to keep lucrative data about visitors for themselves -- and avoid privacy risks. More sites are counting the number of tracking tools -- software that can clandestinely monitor people's activities online -- that are being installed on the computers of people who visit the sites.

Facebook Sues Newspaper, Radio Station Over Patents

Facebook Inc., the world's biggest social-networking website, accused the owner of the Boston Phoenix newspaper and WFNX radio station of infringing two patents related to ways to manage information online. Facebook filed the complaint in federal court in Boston against Phoenix Media/Communications Group Inc. and its People2People Group, Tele-Publishing and FNX Broadcasting units.

European Commission Holds Meeting on Net Neutrality

The global debate over how access to the Internet should be determined and paid for has attracted free speech advocates, telephone network operators and big online businesses like Google and Facebook. This week, arguments over so-called network neutrality move to Brussels, where the European Commission and Parliament are holding a daylong meeting that is expected to draw speakers from industry, government and academia.

Digital Divide Still Exists, Commerce Department Says

Millions of Americans signed up for broadband Internet access over the last decade, but "digital divides" persist between different income levels, ethnic groups and geographical areas of the country, according to a new government report. Some 63.5 percent of U.S. households had broadband Internet access at home in 2009, up from just 9.2 percent in 2001, the U.S. Department of Commerce reported.

Woman Says She Can't Pay $1.5 Million File-Sharing Fine

A Minneapolis mother is refusing to pay a $1.5 million fine for illegally downloading 24 songs, arguing she simply "can't." Jammie Thomas-Rasset has been battling the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for the last four years in one of the RIAA's "top 3" longest-running cases, an RIAA spokeswoman said, basically since the industry body discovered 1,700 songs in her shared folder on P2P site KaZaA.

"Jihadist Content" Dropped After British Lawmakers Complain

"Jihadist content" on a U.S.-based website calling for action against British lawmakers who backed the Iraq War has been removed after Britain contacted U.S. authorities, police said. The RevolutionMuslim.com website printed the details after Roshonara Choudhry was jailed for life for stabbing former minister Stephen Timms twice during an advice surgery in east London in May in revenge for his support for the war.

Microsoft Employs Sophisticated Anti-Piracy Tactics

Microsoft has adopted a hard-line stance against counterfeiting. It has set up a sophisticated anti-piracy operation that dwarfs those of other software makers; the staff includes dozens of former government intelligence agents from the United States, Europe and Asia, who use a host of "CSI"-like forensic technology tools for finding and convicting criminals. But the hunt for pirates carries with it a cost to Microsoft’s reputation.

Net Neutrality Advocates Continue Their Efforts

The prospects for new net neutrality regulations seem somewhat dim these days, given the Federal Communications Commission's failure to move forward with a plan to reclassify broadband access as a telecommunications service. Nonetheless, neutrality advocates are continuing to push the FCC to forge ahead with new rules that would ban Internet service providers from degrading or prioritizing material.

Facebook Defends Privacy Practices to Congress

Facebook Inc. told lawmakers it had taken steps to prevent the sharing of personal information about users, including temporarily suspending certain applications from its site. The statements came in response to a letter from U.S. Reps. Edward Markey (D., Mass.) and Joe Barton (R., Texas) to Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, after The Wall Street Journal reported recently that certain applications on Facebook were sending users' ID numbers to marketers, in violation of Facebook's policies.

European Commission Urges Stronger Net Privacy Laws

The European Commission called for stronger protection of Internet users’ personal information, after news of data leaks at companies like Facebook and Google highlighted concerns about digital privacy. Viviane Reding, the justice commissioner, announced its intention to overhaul the European Union’s data protection rules to take account of the development of social networking, personalized advertising and other Web services that have raised privacy concerns.