News (7)

  • US politicos fire at EU's Microsoft ruling

    U.S. politicians lashed out Wednesday at the European Union's decision to seek sanctions against Microsoft, asking regulators in Brussels to reconsider their decision to levy an unprecedented fine of US$613 million.

  • Bush pushes for cybercrime treaty

    President George W. Bush has asked the U.S. Senate to ratify the first international cybercrime treaty.

  • Power grab could split the Net

    For the first time in its history, the Internet is running a real risk of fracturing into multiple and perhaps even incompatible networks.

  • House vote stymies TIA spy plan

    The U.S. House of Representatives has approved a spending bill that eliminates money for the Terrorism Information Awareness project, effectively putting an end to the controversial Pentagon antiterrorism plan, which sought to assemble computerised dossiers on Americans.

  • U.S. Senate approves anti-spam bill

    The U.S. Senate voted Tuesday for a historic antispam bill, capping more than six years of failed congressional attempts to enact a federal law restricting unsolicited commercial e-mail.

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