- It's Official: CISPA is back.
- CISPA Claws Back to Life
- CISPA is Back: Dangerous Cybersecurity Legislation Threatens Online Privacy
- Meet the American Company Helping Governments Spy on "Billions" of Communications
- Software that tracks people on social media created by defence firm—"Raytheon's Riot program mines social network data like a 'Google for spies', drawing ire from civil rights groups."
- US Authorities Can Access iCloud Data Stored by Non-American Citizens Without a Warrant
- FBI Files Unlock History Behind Clandestine Cellphone Tracking Tool
- Canada: Conservatives killing off controversial Internet surveillance bill
- European Court Of Human Rights: No, Copyright Does Not Automatically Trump Freedom Of Expression
- EU data law draft uses language—word-for-word—from US, EU corporations
- Arizona Politician Parodied By Fake Twitter Accounts Pushes Bill To Make Online Impersonation A Felony
- Politician moves to make vulgar Photoshopping illegal—"A state lawmaker in Georgia is so perturbed that someone used Photoshop to put his head on a porn star's body that he now wants any kind of lewd Photoshopping to be banned. "No one has a right to make fun of anyone," he says." Butthurt.
- Russia Uses New Internet Censorship Bill To Silence Prominent Reporters Who Criticized The Government
- Internet 'Under Assault' by Censoring UN, Regulator Says
- White House Owes Response To Petition To Fire Prosecutor Of Aaron Swartz And Other Hackers
- Why I'm unfriending you on Facebook—"My specific concern with Facebook is what NYU Professor Helen Nissenbaum calls a lack of 'contextual integrity,' – which is a fancy way of saying that when I share information with a certain group or friend on Facebook, I am often surprised by where the data ends up."
- Government watchdog: warrantless laptop searches at border are A-OK
- Homeland Security: Not Searching Your Laptop Doesn't Benefit Your Civil Liberties, So We Can Do It
- OkCupid's New Venture, Combosaurus, Worries Privacy Advocates
- Maryland landlord used tiny cameras to sexually spy on tenants
- Path Reaches Settlement with FTC Over Address Book Privacy Concerns
- Google Play privacy slip-up sends app buyers' personal details to developers
- Facebook: We do track logged-out users, but trust us
- Julian Assange files formal application to run for Australian Senate—Says it's his ticket to freedom.
- Jemima Khan: Julian Assange risks becoming 'Australian L Ron Hubbard'—"Former close supporter of WikiLeaks founder accuses him of obfuscation, misinformation and demanding blinkered devotion."
- Icelandic MP who released WikiLeaks video plans US visit despite legal threat—"Birgitta Jónsdóttir says she has held back from visiting long enough and plans tour to express support for Bradley Manning."
- Keep Megaupload out of our server seizure case, US lawyers say—"They don't want Megaupload to "pre-litigate" its criminal case via Kyle Goodwin."
- Copyright Lobby Groups Want Canada Back on Piracy Watch List
- IP Address Snapshots Not Sufficient Evidence To File Infringement Suit; Prenda Lawyer Faces Sanctions
- Sony Rootkit Redux: Canadian Business Groups Lobby For Right To Install Spyware on Your Computer
- Fall of SOPA explained in 3 minute video
- Site plagiarizes blog posts, then files DMCA takedown on originals—Wow.
- North Korea propaganda taken off YouTube after Activision complaint
- Don't Copyright Me launches to protect US schoolkids' homework
- GameStop: 60% of customers won't buy console that doesn't play used games
- Games Workshop trademark bullying goes thermonuclear: now they say you can't use "space marine" in science fiction
- 2011: Online retailing: The Great Australian Gouge
- 2012: Aussies gouged on tech prices, inquiry hears
- 2013: Apple, Microsoft, Adobe Called By Lawmakers To Defend Higher Prices In Australia—A reporter says that "if you chose to fly to the United States to purchase CS6 Master Collection you would save AU$228 over buying a digital copy locally, and it's a whole AU$684 cheaper than buying a boxed copy."