Apple Sued for Location Privacy in South Korea

Apple has been sued by a group of about 27,000 South Koreans in a class-action lawsuit over alleged privacy violations related to location services on iPhones, iPads and the iPod Touch. The suit, filed in Changwon, South Korea, seeks about 27 billion won, or about $26 million, in damages, which would work out to about $930 for each plaintiff, the Associated Press reports.

IAB Says New Domain Names Will Damage Brands

An online advertising coalition urged the nonprofit responsible for the Internet's address system to reverse its decision to allow for new domain names. The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB), which represents media and technology companies that sell online advertising, said the plan from the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) would result in "incalculable financial damage to brand owners."

Facebook Says Ceglia Contract Doesn't Mention Facebook

Facebook Inc. says it's discovered the "authentic contract" signed by its chief executive officer, Mark Zuckerberg, and Paul Ceglia, the western New York man who claims he's entitled to part-ownership of the company. The contract doesn't mention Facebook and was found on Ceglia's computer, embedded in electronic data from 2004, a year after Ceglia claims he and Zuckerberg signed the contract on which he basis his claim, according to papers filed by Palo Alto, California-based Facebook in federal court in Buffalo, New York.

Verizon Says Motorola Deal Could Ease Patent Spats

Verizon Communications Inc. said Google Inc.'s $12.5 billion bid for Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. was a welcome development because it may bring "stability" to a recent slate of smartphone patent disputes, though it stopped short of totally endorsing the proposed acquisition. "Google should be in a much better position to protect itself and its partners from legal attacks," said Robert W. Baird & Co. analyst William Power, noting that Libertyville, Ill.-based Motorola has an additional 7,500 patents pending.

German Court Lifts Most of Ban on Samsung Tablet

Samsung can sell its latest iPad rival in most of Europe again after a German court lifted most of an injunction it had imposed at Apple's request. The Duesseldorf regional court said it was questionable whether its authority extended to international companies operating outside Germany, so it restricted a preliminary ban imposed last week on Samsung Electronics to Germany.

Google-Motorola Deal May Face Antitrust Issues

Already under investigation by regulators in the U.S. and Europe, Google likely will have to quell a couple of tricky antitrust questions as part of completing the $12.5 billion acquisition of Motorola Mobility, antitrust experts say. One set of challenges could come from the top makers of Google Android smartphones, most of whom issued perfunctory statements welcoming the deal.

Group Calls for Amazon Boycott Over Taxes

A coalition of health, welfare and social services advocates is calling for a boycott of Amazon.com Inc. until the Internet retailer drops a referendum to repeal a new law requiring it to collect sales taxes on Californians' purchases. At a news conference on the steps of the state Capitol, the Think Before You Click campaign asked shoppers to cancel accounts with the Seattle-based company.

FTC Settles Child Privacy Charges with App Developer

Several members of Congress praised the Federal Trade Commission for settling charges with a mobile app developer accused of invading the privacy of tens of thousands of children, but the lawmakers say more needs to be done to protect kids online. The FTC accused Broken Thumbs Apps, owned by W3 Innovations, of collecting personal information from children who submitted comments and blog posts to the online character "Emily."

Missouri Law Bans Teachers from Contacting Students Online

As the school year resumes, Missouri teachers will have to think twice about making private contact with students on Internet sites such as Facebook. The state's school districts are under orders to draft policies to comply with a new law restricting such communications in an effort to prevent inappropriate relationships between teachers and students.

Judge Says Ceglia Must Disclose Facebook Documents

Paul Ceglia, the western New York man who claims he’s entitled to part-ownership of Facebook Inc., can’t keep dozens of documents found on computers he owned confidential, a judge ruled. U.S. Magistrate Judge Leslie Foschio in Buffalo, New York, ruled that Ceglia’s lawyers improperly designated all 120 of the documents, including versions of the contract Ceglia claims he signed with Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg in 2003, as confidential.

Hackers Leave Mark on Bay Area Transit's Site

Anonymous has apparently made good on a promise to wreak havoc on the Web site of the Bay Area Rapid Transit System, although not exactly as planned. Earlier, the amorphous collective had threatened to take Bart.gov offline for six hours today, or twice the amount of time BART managers took cell phone service offline at some BART stations Thursday night in order to head off a planned protest then.

Company Aims to Streamline Mobile Privacy Policies

With growing concern over data collection, including proposed legislation to more closely protect consumers, one company is trying to make privacy policies that are both easy for consumers to read and easy for mobile application developers to create. "Everybody complains that no one reads privacy policies and that privacy policies are too long and too difficult," said Jim Brock, the founder of PrivacyChoice, a company that has analyzed and indexed the data in hundreds of privacy policies across the Web.