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Online Peers Stand Up for Craigslist in Lawsuit
Google, Amazon, AOL and Yahoo are helping defend online peer Craigslist against a lawsuit that would hold the Web site liable for discriminatory housing ads. The suit, filed by the Chicago Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, argues that Craigslist has violated the Fair Housing Act by letting users post ads in which they discriminate in seeking tenants, asking, for instance, for a "gay Latino" or a "godly Christian male." Craigslist claims immunity under the 1996 Communications Decency Act.Computer Hacker 'Mafiaboy' Pleads Guilty
A teen-age computer hacker accused of crippling several major Internet sites including CNN, Yahoo, and Amazon.com, pleaded guilty Wednesday to 56 charges of mischief. The trial of the 16-year-old from Montreal known as "Mafiaboy" had been set to convene when the prosecutor announced that the youth had pleaded guilty to most of the charges.A Quick Orientation to Cloud Search Tools
A look at some of the Web-based search tools that can get you information quickly.E-Mail Carries the Power of Paper, Mass. Court Rules
A recent Massachusetts Appeals Court ruling enforcing an e-mail settlement agreement of a contractual dispute is a reminder to lawyers that e-mail settlements carry the same weight as deals on paper.E-Mail Carries the Power of Paper
A Massachusetts Appeals Court ruling enforcing an e-mail settlement agreement of a contractual dispute between Amazon.com and a software maker serves as a reminder to lawyers that courts will enforce settlements contained in e-mail messages that meet the traditional criteria of an enforceable contract.Publishers Charged With E-Book Pact
In his Antitrust column, Elai Katz, a partner at Cahill Gordon & Reindel, analyzes the government's suit against Apple and a number of publishers for their tactics in a struggle to wrest control of the e-book market from Amazon, a recent Second Circuit decision and other developments.Friday Six-Pack: BlackBerry Gets Good News, Bill Gates in Trouble, Amazon Enters Smartphone Market
Friday Six-Pack: BlackBerry Actually Gets Some Good News, Bill Gates in Trouble, and Amazon Enters the Smartphone Market. Could Cerberus swoop in and take over BlackBerry? Bill Gates' reign at Microsoft could be over. Amazon is planning a 3D smartphone.Is Google's Expansion Causing Privacy Risks?
Currently a powerful search engine and a growing e-mail provider, Google's rapid expansion into other Web functions is prompting concerns that the company may know too much: what you read, where you surf and travel, and whom you write. Some privacy advocates worry that the data's very existence, conveniently located under a single digital roof, makes Google a prime target for abuse by overzealous law enforcers and criminals alike.Trending Stories
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