25 'Anonymous' Hackers Arrested in Europe, S. America

Twenty-five suspected members of the loose-knit Anonymous hacker movement have been arrested in a sweep across Europe and South America, said Interpol, the global police agency. The arrests, in Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Spain were carried out by national law-enforcement officers working under the support of Interpol’s Latin American Working Group of Experts on Information Technology Crime, Interpol said in a statement.

French Agency Says Google's Privacy Policy May Be Illegal

The French data protection authority said that Google’s new privacy policy appeared to violate European Union law, raising the stakes in a showdown with the company only days before it planned to put the new system into effect. Google announced the new policy last month, billing it as a way to streamline and simplify the privacy practices it employed worldwide across about 60 different online services, and to introduce greater clarity for users.

Microsoft, Others Complain to EU About Google+

Microsoft and several other companies have complained to EU antitrust regulators about Google's social networking tool, two people familiar with the matter said, but they declined to provide the names of the other firms involved. The complaints, which have not yet been filed formally with the Commission, may prompt the European Commission to broaden its ongoing investigation into Google, which focuses on whether it is too dominant in the web-search market.

Yahoo Demands Patent License Fees from Facebook

Yahoo has demanded licensing fees from Facebook for use of its technology, the companies said, potentially engulfing social media in the patent battles and lawsuits raging across much of the tech sector. Yahoo has asserted claims on patents that include the technical mechanisms in the Facebook's ads, privacy controls, news feed and messaging service, according to a source briefed on the matter.

Google, Apple Face Patent Suit Over Online Maps

A new lawsuit takes aim at Google and Apple for infringing on another company's technology for use of the Street View feature in Google Maps. In a lawsuit filed in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, Florida-based PanoMap Technologies accuses Google and Apple for infringing on its patent covering the the 3D panorama mode found in the Google Maps app on the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch.

Chinese Internet Users Get Vocal on Google+

Chinese Internet users taking advantage of temporary access to Google Inc's social networking site, Google+, have flooded U.S. President Barack Obama's page on the site with calls for greater freedom in the world's most populous country. "Oppose censorship, oppose the Great Firewall of China!" one user posted, one of hundreds of comments in Chinese or by people with Chinese names that dominated the site.

German Court Rules Against Ban on iPad Sales

A German court said Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc. can't enforce a sales ban on Apple Inc.'s iPad and iPhone devices in Germany for the time being, while Motorola would be infringing antitrust obligations if it demands Apple cease sales of the affected products. The Karlsruhe higher regional court's summary assessment is based on an appeal by Apple against a lower court's earlier injunction barring Apple from selling certain iPad and iPhone devices in Germany.

Internet Users More Actively Managing Privacy Settings

Now that it's pretty much an established maxim that you can get fired or arrested for saying something stupid on Facebook, people are getting savvier at managing their privacy on social networks. As part of its Internet and American Life Project, Pew has released a report that finds Internet users taking a more active role in managing and pruning their social networks.

Man Who Sued AT&T Over iPhone Plan Wins $850

When AT&T started slowing down the data service for his iPhone, Matt Spaccarelli, an unemployed truck driver and student, took the country's largest telecommunications company to small claims court. And won. His award: $850. Pro-tem Judge Russell Nadel found in favor of Spaccarelli in Ventura Superior Court in Simi Valley, saying it wasn't fair for the company to purposely slow down his iPhone, when it had sold him an "unlimited data" plan.

Proview, Apple Face Unusual Trademark Fight

Proview Electronics, the firm trying to stop Apple Inc from using the iPad name in China, has a plausible claim over the unusual methods Apple used to conceal its identity when attempting to acquire Proview's trademarks, according to several legal experts. But Apple also has some strong defenses against a lawsuit Proview filed last week in California - including the argument that Proview cannot sue Apple, but can only sue the corporation that actually bought the trademarks, the experts said.

Proview Sues Apple Over 'iPad' Trademark in California

Proview Electronics Co. has taken its legal battles with Apple Inc. to a U.S. court, claiming the iPhone maker used deception in buying the iPad trademark and should not be allowed to keep it. The lawsuit, which was filed in the Superior Court of the State of California in Santa Clara County on Feb. 17, claimed that Apple had committed fraud when it used a subsidiary, called IP Application Development Ltd., to purchase the iPad trademark from Proview on December 23, 2009 for £35,000.

DHS Analysts Monitoring Social Media Discussions

Analysts for a Department of Homeland Security program that monitors social networks like Twitter and Facebook have been instructed to produce reports on policy debates related to the department, a newly disclosed manual shows. The manual, a 2011 reference guide for analysts working with the department’s Media Monitoring Capability program, raises questions about recent claims by Homeland Security officials who portrayed the program as limited to gathering information that would help gain operational awareness about attacks, disasters or other emerging problems.

White House Outlines Online Privacy Principles

The Obama administration outlined a set of online privacy principles that officials said would help consumers control the use of their personal data gleaned from Internet searches. The framework for a new privacy code moves electronic commerce closer to a one-click, one-touch process by which users can tell Internet companies whether they want their online activity tracked.