Hewlett-Packard has announced a settlement with Business Week and New York Times reporters on whom the computer maker spied during a hunt for a boardroom leak.
Hewlett-Packard's top ethics and privacy executives on Thursday said a now infamous investigation into boardroom media leaks was a "wake-up call" that prompted a shakeup in the company's operations.
The California Attorney General's Office said on Thursday in the US that Hewlett-Packard will pay US$14.5 million to settle civil charges related to the company's now infamous spy scandal.
A former Hewlett-Packard executive accused by the company of stealing trade secrets is now saying that he was instructed by the company's management to spy on rival Dell.
Hoping to slow a growing storm of criticism over a controversial leak probe, Hewlett-Packard said last Friday in the US that Patricia Dunn would step down immediately as chairman and board member, to be replaced by CEO Mark Hurd.
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