- Congressmen want answers from Aaron Swartz prosecutors
- Why Did the Justice System Target Aaron Swartz?
- Aaron Swartz, Financial Fraud and the Justice Department—"The Justice Department's determination to commit substantial time and resources to prosecuting Swartz presents a striking contrast to its see-no-evil attitude when it comes to financial fraud by the Wall Street banks."
- How the Legal System Failed Aaron Swartz—and Us
- Congresswoman to Propose Computer Crimes Amendment in Wake of Activst's Death
- What the Aaron Swartz Tragedy Means to His Generation
- Aaron Swartz protesters take over government websites, install Asteroids
- Carmen Ortiz and Stephen Heymann: accountability for prosecutorial abuse—"Imposing real consequences on these federal prosecutors in the Aaron Swartz case is vital for both justice and reform."
- Prosecutor in Aaron Swartz 'hacking' case comes under fire—"''He was killed by the government,' Swartz's father, Robert, said at his son's funeral in Highland Park, Ill."
- Aaron Swartz's embattled prosecuting attorney releases first statement, says conduct was 'appropriate'
- Still More About The Death Of Aaron Swartz—"United States Attorney Carmen Ortiz, who still has political ambitions beyond her current station, and her husband, and some unfortunate media enablers, have finally organized a response to the torrent of criticism she and her office have received in regard to her breaking-a-butterfly-on-a-wheel prosecution of activist Aaron Swartz, whom Ortiz's office tried to throw in prison for the crime of stealing stuff the actual owners eventually said that they didn't care that much about."
- Aaron Swartz prosecutor 'drove another hacker to suicide in 2008 after he named him in a cyber crime case'
- Swartz didn't face prison until feds took over case, report says—"The late Internet activist was facing a stern warning from local prosecutors. But then the U.S. Attorney's office, run by Carmen Ortiz, chose to make an example of Aaron Swartz, a new report says."
- White House Must Respond to Petition to Remove U.S. Attorney in Aaron Swartz Case
- Web inventor says governments stifling net freedom—"The inventor of the World Wide Web warned Friday that government control is limiting the possibilities of the Internet, as dozens of countries and businesses signed a cybersecurity deal at the Davos forum."
- Homeland Security's Napolitano invokes 9/11 to push for CISPA 2.0
- Pentagon to increase cyber security force fivefold - report
- Greenwald: Pentagon's new massive expansion of 'cyber-security' unit is about everything except defense—"Cyber-threats are the new pretext to justify expansion of power and profit for the public-private National Security State."
- The Hunt for Red October: Virus Hunters Try to Catch Diplomatic Time Bomb—It's been going on for five years.
- 31 Years Ago Today, the Computer Virus Was Born
- Cisco Annual Security Report: Threats Step Out of the Shadows
- Researchers Find Serious Security Flaws in Universal Plug and Play—The recommendation is to turn it off.
- Oracle: 'We Have to Fix Java'—And Java's vulnerabilities aren't the only problem with it.
- Zero-day exploits: Should the hacker gray market be regulated?
- Apple Now Locking Screenshots for Submitted Apps, Shutting Down Popular Scam Tactic
- Internet criminals: so reliably dumb at hiding their tracks
- How Newegg crushed the "shopping cart" patent and saved online retail—Patent trolling should be illegal.
- CNET forbidden from reviewing Aereo following CBS-Dish controversy—Throwing their journalistic integrity out the window.
- Sim City beta EULA includes company-wide ban for unreported bugs
- Amazon deletes negative feedback, but only for its own shipping service
- How PRWeb Helps Distribute Crap Into Google & News Sites
- In Asia's trend-setting cities, iPhone fatigue sets in
- Has Apple finally abandoned its sad claim to the 'Multi-Touch' trademark?
- Judge: Samsung didn't 'willfully' infringe Apple patents—"A California judge made a post-trial ruling today in the Apple vs. Samsung case that will most likely prevent the iPhone-maker from collecting millions more in damages."
- Social oldies mean Facebook loses its cool
- Facebook: Yeah, We're Getting Tough With Developers—"Under fire for cutting off popular new apps, Facebook has announced new rules for developers using its social network."
- Addicted To Facebook? It May Be Time To Rethink Your Priorities, Consider A "Facebook Diet"