- Congress Planning To Debate CISPA Behind Closed Doors; No Public Scrutiny Allowed
- CISPA Explainer #1: What Information Can Be Shared?
- CISPA Explainer #2: With Whom Can Information Be Shared?
- CISPA Explainer #3: What Can Be Done With Information After It Is Shared?
- CISPA Explainer #4: Is There Anything Besides Information-Sharing Hidden in CISPA?
- Aaron Swartz's Prosecutors Were Threatened and Hacked, DOJ Says
- Anonymous rallies Twitter protest against CFAA—"The hacker collective ask online networks to voice anger at overreaching cybercrimes law under review in Congress." Salon
- Are You A Teenager Who Reads News Online? According to the Justice Department, You May Be a Criminal
- Google Takes on Rare Fight Against National Security Letters—"Google has filed a rare petition to challenge an ultra-secret national security letter issued by the government to obtain private data about one or more of its users."
- DEA Accused Of Leaking Misleading Info Falsely Implying That It Can't Read Apple iMessages—Was it to instill a false sense of security?
- Surveillance Court's Opinions Must Remain Secret, Feds Say
- The ATF Wants 'Massive' Online Database to Find Out Who Your Friends Are
- FBI loses appeal in StingRay surveillance case
- EFF to Texas High Court: A Cell Phone Isn't a Pair of Pants
- Bill would allow bosses to seek Facebook passwords
- Meet Gabriel Weinberg, the man taking on Google and Bing—If you're after privacy, give DuckDuckGo a go.
- New California "Right to Know" Act Would Let Consumers Find Out Who Has Their Personal Data -- And Get a Copy of It
- Why Facebook Home bothers me: It destroys any notion of privacy
- Google Privacy Policy Under Scrutiny From Regulators
- Casey Anthony: Did she do a Google search for 'fool-proof suffocation'?
- Firefox prepares additional 'Do Not Track' options
- BlackBerry 10 tells your friends when you're watching porn
- French homeland intelligence threatens a volunteer sysop to delete a Wikipedia Article
- Time Warner Cable Systematically Looking To Shut Down Parodist's Accounts
- Opinion: Twitter, hate speech, and the costs of keeping quiet
- America's "second best" law school sues online critic, and loses on appeal—"Cooley Law School goes after former student who skewered it on his blog."
- How a banner ad for H&R Block appeared on apple.com—without Apple's OK—Someone, somewhere is injecting banner ads into webpages on the sly."
- Aereo wins major court battle against TV networks
- HBO: Online piracy is a compliment and doesn’t effect sales
- Reselling Digital Goods Is Copyright Infringement, Judge Rules
- Movie Studios Want Google to Take Down Their Own Takedown Request
- Copyright As Censorship: University Threatens Own Faculty With Copyright Infringement For Campus Survey
- YouTube Won't Put Your Video Back Up, Even If It's Fair Use, If It Contains Content From Universal Music
- File-Sharers Will Not Be Held Liable For Piracy, Russia Says
- Licence restrictions: A fool's errand—"Objections to the Creative Commons attribution licence are straw men raised by parties who want open access to be as closed as possible, warns John Wilbanks."
- The National Digital Public Library Is Launched!—"The Digital Public Library of America, to be launched on April 18, is a project to make the holdings of America's research libraries, archives, and museums available to all Americans—and eventually to everyone in the world—online and free of charge."
- Why You Couldn't Download DC Laws… Until Now—"The DC government claims copyright over the code and has outsourced the actual codification work to different private entities."
- Wikileaks opens Public Library of US Diplomacy (PLUSD), searchable repository of 1970s US diplomatic and intel documents
- British Library's online harvest will paint 'rich and vivid picture' of life in the UK—"The project to capture and store the entire UK web domain will be an invaluable resource for researchers in the future, says Lucie Burgess from the British Library."
- The Patent Protection Racket
- Lodsys lawsuit targets Disney over 'Where's My Water?' iPhone app
- Meet the nice-guy lawyers who want $1,000 per worker for using scanners—"It's not some kind of bull. We're not trying to harass people."
- Why Rackspace Is Suing The Most Notorious Patent Troll In America
- Mathematics Cannot Be Patented. Case Dismissed.
- Developer Freedom At Stake As Oracle Clings To Java API Copyrights In Google Fight
- Google Makes Patent Pledge, Promises It Won't Sue Open-Source Developers