European Court Lets Employers Monitor Personal Messages at Work

Bosses can snoop on workers’ e-mails including personal messages with loved ones during working hours, the European Court of Human Rights ruled in a case brought by a Romanian man fired after his employer spied on his private Yahoo! Inc. chats. “It is not unreasonable for an employer to want to verify that the employees are completing their professional tasks during working hours,” the court in Strasbourg, France, ruled.

Qualcomm Asks Court to Disclose Documents in S. Korea Probe

Qualcomm Inc. asked a U.S. federal court to compel some of its biggest customers and competitors — including Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. — to hand over any documents they provided to South Korean antitrust authorities investigating the U.S. chip maker. The maneuver, which some legal experts called unusual, risks setting off court battles with companies that include two major purchasers of Qualcomm chips.

Groups From 40 Countries Push for Strong Encryption

Nearly 200 experts, companies and civil society groups from more than 40 countries are asking governments around the world to support strong encryption — and reject proposals that would undermine the digital security it provides. “The internet belongs to the world’s people, not its governments. We refuse to let this precious resource become nationalized and broken by any nation," Brett Solomon, executive director of Access Now, the online advocacy group that organized the open letter, said in a news release.

Court Lets DraftKings, FanDuel Continue in New York

An appellate panel has ruled in favor of daily fantasy sports sites DraftKings and FanDuel, allowing both to continue operating in the state of New York while their appeal is being heard, according to Darren Rovell of ESPN. The sites are currently appealing a ruling by the New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman who said daily fantasy sports is a form of gambling.

FCC Wants to Increase Broadband Availability

A new report from the Federal Communications Commission finds that while providers have done a decent job building out high-speed Internet, as many as 10 percent of Americans — roughly 34 million people — lack access to what the government considers broadband. As a result, the FCC has concluded that the expansion of broadband isn't happening in a "reasonable and timely" fashion, and the agency says the law calls on the FCC to "take immediate action" to speed things up.

White House Changes Approach to Fight ISIS Online

The Obama administration announced an overhaul of its efforts to respond to online propaganda from the Islamic State after months of acknowledgments that it had largely failed in its attempts to counter extremist recruitment and exhortations to violence on social media. The administration has emphasized that it needs the assistance of some of the nation’s biggest technology companies, and a group of top White House and national security officials flew to California on Friday to plead their case with executives.

U.S. Tech Firms Criticize U.K. Spying Legislation

Leading U.S. technology companies, including Apple Inc., Google Inc. and Facebook Inc., roundly criticized proposed U.K. legislation that would expand the British government’s spying powers, according to responses to lawmakers. The tech companies’ strong push back underscores the challenges the British government will have to overcome to make the proposed laws work in practice, even as police and prosecutors welcome the changes.

White House Officials Meeting with Tech Leaders on Terrorism

Senior Obama administration officials will hold high-level discussions with Silicon Valley CEOs to talk about whether social-media firms can do more to prevent terrorists from using their services to recruit and incite violence, according to people familiar with the planned summit. Some of the most important officials in the U.S. government, including Attorney General Loretta Lynch, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey, White House chief of staff Denis McDonough and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper plan to take part in the meeting, though it wasn’t immediately clear how many of those people will fly out to northern California to meet the CEOs in person, or how many will join instead by teleconference, according to people familiar with the planning.

Twitter Files Suit in Turkey Over Fines for 'Propaganda'

Micro-blogging site Twitter filed a lawsuit in an Ankara court, seeking to annul a fine by the Turkish authorities for not removing content Turkey says is "terrorist propaganda", a source familiar with the case told Reuters. A Turkish official said much of the material in question was related to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) which Ankara deems as a terrorist organization.

Internet Devices Create Privacy Concerns, FTC Chair Warns

Amid the euphoria over connected devices at CES in Las Vegas, Federal Trade Commission Chairwoman Edith Ramirez injected a note of caution. Ramirez said the proliferation of Internet-connected gadgets — from home thermostats to fitness bands to scores of other products on display — raises concerns about the personal information that is being collected, how it’s being used and whether it is adequately secured.

FTC Chair 'Optimistic' About New Data Agreement with EU

The chairwoman of the Federal Trade Commission said that negotiators were “well on our way” to reaching a new agreement governing how American companies can store data belonging to Europeans. “In my mind, I’m optimistic that we’re going to be able to find a solution to this, I’m hoping by the end of this month,” she said while appearing at the trade show CES. “But we’re well on our way I think to doing that.”