JebBush.com Domain Redirects Visitors to Trump's Website

Jeb Bush's campaign never bothered to register JebBush.com and has been using Jeb2016.com instead. For the first several months of the campaign, that didn't hurt the campaign; as of late September, JebBush.com was benevolently blank, according to the internet archive site the Wayback Machine. But sometime last fall, someone appears to have noticed an opportunity, and arranged for the Australian company that owns the domain name to redirect visitors to DonaldJTrump.com.

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Film Says U.S. Had Plan for Cyberattack on Iran

In the early years of the Obama administration, the United States developed an elaborate plan for a cyberattack on Iran in case the diplomatic effort to limit its nuclear program failed and led to a military conflict, according to a forthcoming documentary film and interviews with military and intelligence officials involved in the effort. The plan, code named Nitro Zeus, was designed to disable Iran’s air defenses, communications systems and key parts of its power grid, and was shelved, at least for the foreseeable future, after the nuclear deal struck between Iran and six other nations last summer was fulfilled.

American Airlines Sues Gogo Over Slow Internet Speeds

American Airlines filed a lawsuit in district court against Gogo, its current Internet provider for in-flight Wi-Fi, saying it notified Gogo that it has found a faster Internet service. In the lawsuit, American says its contract with Gogo allows it to renegotiate or terminate its agreement if another company other than Gogo offers a better service.

Facebook Considers 'Counter Speech' to Fight Hate Online

Tuesday mornings, Monika Bickert and her team of content cops meet to discuss ways to remove hate speech and violent posts from Facebook Inc., the world’s largest social network. Recently, the group added a new tool to the mix: “counter speech.” Counter speakers seek to discredit extremist views with posts, images and videos of their own.

U.K. High Court Rules for Google in Mapping Case

Alphabet Inc.’s Google has won a U.K. court case filed by online mapping company Streetmap. EU Ltd, which alleged the U.S. technology company was skewing search results in favor of its own mapping product, the companies said. The U.K. High Court ruled against Streetmap, saying Google didn’t abuse its dominant position and that its mapping product doesn’t harm competition.

Immersion Files 'Force Touch' Patent Suit Against Apple

Haptic technology company Immersion has filed suit against Apple, claiming that the newest iPhones and Apple Watches infringe on its patents. The suit, filed in federal district court in Delaware, alleges that Apple’s “3D touch” and “force touch” features infringe on Immersion’s patents for providing feedback when the screen of an electronic device is touched.

Uber Executives Won't Face Jail in France

French prosecutors asked a court to penalize two executives of Uber Technologies Inc. with fines and a ban on running companies, but declined to ask for prison time during the second day of a high-profile trial against the car-hailing company. In a criminal court in Paris’s Palais de Justice, Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, head of Uber’s operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, and Thibaud Simphal, its chief in France, face six charges on counts including illicit storage of personal data and operating a service that connects passengers with car-service drivers who have no professional licenses.

Facebook Must Face French Court in Nude Painting Case

A French court ruled that a case against social networking company Facebook over a painting of a nude woman can be tried in France, rejecting Facebook's argument that it is governed by Californian law. Facebook blocked the account of a French professor and art lover after he uploaded a picture of Gustave Courbet’s 1866 canvas 'The Origin of the World', which shows a close-up view of female genitals.

ISPs Ask FCC to Allow 'Flexibility' on Customers' Privacy

Broadband industry lobby groups urged the Federal Communications Commission not to impose privacy rules that dictate "specific methods" of protecting customer data, since that would prevent "rapid innovation." ISPs should have "flexibility" in how they protect customers' privacy and security, said the letter from the American Cable Association, Competitive Carriers Association, Consumer Technology Association, CTIA, the Internet Commerce Coalition, the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, and USTelecom.

Senate Gives Final Approval to Ban on Internet Taxes

Congress voted to permanently bar state and local governments from taxing access to the Internet, as lawmakers leapt at an election-year chance to demonstrate their opposition to imposing levies on online service. On a vote of 75-20, the Senate gave final congressional approval to the wide-ranging bill, which would also revamp trade laws. President Barack Obama is expected to sign it.

DHS Secretary Vows 'Intensified' Work on Cybersecurity

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said that improving the nation’s cybersecurity and protecting against terrorism remain two of the department’s “cornerstones” in the final year of the Obama administration. “In the time left to me in office, I pledge all my energy to continue to protect the homeland and leave the Department of Homeland Security a better place than I found it,” Johnson said in a speech at the Woodrow Wilson Center.

Uber Agrees to $28.5 Million Safety Settlement

Uber has agreed to pay $28.5 million to settle litigation brought by customers who alleged the ride hailing service misrepresented the quality of its safety practices and the fees it charged passengers, the company said. The two proposed class action lawsuits said Uber charged passengers a "Safe Rides Fee" of as much as $2.30 per trip to support its "industry leading background check process."

Google Executives Defend U.K. Tax Settlement

Executives for Alphabet Inc.’s Google business defended their settlement with the U.K.’s tax authority before a panel of British lawmakers, attempting to stanch criticism of a deal that detractors say let the search giant off too lightly. In testy exchanges with lawmakers, Tom Hutchinson, Google’s vice president of finance, said the deal reached with the U.K.’s tax authority was the largest settlement the Internet giant has paid outside the U.S.

Google to Scrub Search Results for European Users

Google will start scrubbing search results across all its websites when accessed from a European country to soothe the objections of Europe's privacy regulators to its implementation of a landmark EU ruling, a person close to the company said. The U.S. company has been at loggerheads with several European Union data protection authorities since the European Court of Justice ruled in May 2014 that people could ask search engines such as Google and Microsoft's Bing to remove inadequate or irrelevant information that appears under searches for their name -- dubbed the "right to be forgotten."

Obama's Op-Ed on 'Cybersecurity National Action Plan'

In an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, President Obama writes: "[T]oday, I’m announcing our new Cybersecurity National Action Plan, backed by my proposal to increase federal cybersecurity funding by more than a third, to over $19 billion. This plan will address both short-term and long-term threats, with the goal of providing every American a basic level of online security."

U.S. Official Warns of Large Internet Vulnerabilities

Attacks by "homegrown" terrorists are among the most imminent security threats facing the United States in 2016, along with dangers posed overseas by Islamic State and cyber security concerns, the top U.S. intelligence official said. In his annual assessment of threats to the United States, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper warned that fast-moving cyber and technological advances "could lead to widespread vulnerabilities in civilian infrastructures and U.S. government systems."