Canonical takes Ubuntu forums offline in wake of password breach
As for now the breach doesn't seem malicious as much as it is pointing out a security flaw.
As for now the breach doesn't seem malicious as much as it is pointing out a security flaw.
CEO Larry Page was asked eight questions by a congressional privacy group and given until June 14 to answer.
A House committee takes the first step toward a rewrite of US copyright law.
Parliament struggles to reach consensus on new data protection law.
A flaw in Adobe Reader could allow an attacker to see when and where a PDF is opened.
Eight found guilty of £2.5 million campaign
A proposal to expand computer crime law moves in the wrong direction, activists say.
Law enforcement agencies in Turkey, the U.S., the U.K., Germany and France are behind most of the requests.
Excitable house fire interviewee became an internet sensation
Apple could be sued by shareholders if it doesn't do something with the $137.1 billion in cash and investments it has.
Uptick in attacks, bypasses of recommended workarounds will force Microsoft to fix flaw criminals already using to hijack Windows PCs.
Public pressure is more harmful for Facebook than the fines, a German privacy regulator said.
A judge has denied Apple's request for a permanent injunction on 26 Samsung phones that were the focus of the patent lawsuit.
SpongeBob Diner Dash collects personal information from children in violation of U.S. law, the complaint says.
Apple says it's just the store, but judges ruled that it profited from the sales.
Middleware vendor Thought says Oracle is knowingly infringing on a number of its patents
Information about sales, profits and margins for specific Apple products should be made public, the judge hearing the company's lawsuit against Samsung Electronics ruled on Wednesday, though a higher court's decision could keep the data from ever being revealed.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission should "tread carefully" before bringing an antitrust complaint against Google, a veteran U.S. lawmaker said as news reports suggested the agency is ready to move forward.
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers has proposed holding an old-fashioned raffle to determine which applications for new top-level domains should be handled first. To make the lottery legal, the organization hopes to use a loophole in Californian law.
A judge ruled that a contract with HP obligates Oracle to continue porting its software until Itanium is discontinued.
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