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Twitter challenges US subpoena seeking user data
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) May 8, 2012


Twitter is challenging a court order to turn over to law enforcement data on one of its users involved in Occupy Wall Street in a case described by a civil liberties group as a major test of online freedom of speech.

The motion filed Monday in a New York state court said the order would require Twitter to violate federal law and denies the user the ownership rights to his Twitter messages.

The case involves a Twitter user, Malcolm Harris, who is being prosecuted by for disorderly conduct in connection with the Occupy Wall Street protest on the Brooklyn Bridge last year.

The American Civil Liberties Union on Tuesday applauded Twitter's action, saying the company was standing up for free speech.

"This is a big deal," said ACLU attorney Aden Fine.

"Law enforcement agencies, both the federal government and state and city entities, are becoming increasingly aggressive in their attempts to obtain information about what people are doing on the Internet.

"And while the individual Internet users can try to defend their rights in the rare circumstances in which they find out about the requests before their information is turned over, that may not be enough."

Last month, a judge denied a motion by Harris to quash the subpoena, saying he lacked legal standing. The judge said the data stored on the Internet is not physical property and therefore does not have the same protection,

"As a user, we may think that (Internet) storage space to be like a 'virtual home,' and with that strong privacy protection similar to our physical homes," Judge Matthew Sciarrino said in his April 20 ruling.

"However, that 'home' is a block of ones and zeroes stored somewhere on someone's computer. As a consequence, some of our most private information is sent to third parties and held far away on remote network servers."

The judge also said that while a Twitter user's information and tweets contain a considerable amount of information about the user, "Twitter does not guarantee any of its users complete privacy."

Twitter responded with the motion saying its users have rights to their own tweets and other information.

"As we said in our brief, Twitter's terms of service make absolutely clear that its users 'own' their content," Twitter counsel Ben Lee said in a statement to AFP.

"Our filing with the court reaffirms our steadfast commitment to defending those rights for our users."

According to the brief, the federal Stored Communications Act and Twitter's own policies mean the users have rights to their own postings.

"To hold otherwise imposes a new and overwhelming burden on Twitter to fight for its users' rights, since the (court order) deprives its users of the ability to fight for their own rights when faced with a subpoena from New York State," the Twitter brief said.

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Yahoo! launches probe in CEO credentials flap
San Francisco (AFP) May 8, 2012 - Yahoo! said Tuesday it would create a special committee with the help of an outside lawyer to review the controversy over chief executive Scott Thompson's misstated academic credentials.

Amid stepped up pressure from an activist hedge fund, the Yahoo! board announced that the committee would review Thompson's academic background as well as how much was known by those who hired him.

Yahoo! last week acknowledged an "inadvertent error" in the CEO's online bio, which wrongly indicated that he had a degree in computer science.

The news of the special committee came a day after a hedge fund battling the management of Yahoo! called for the release of documents about the recruitment of Thompson in a scathing filing with regulators.

The filing by Third Point with Securities and Exchange Commission came after the hedge fund's deadline passed on its demand for the ouster of Thompson for misrepresenting his educational background.

Third Point, which owns 5.8 percent of the struggling tech giant, filed its slate of candidates for the Yahoo! board, ensuring a proxy battle, as it stepped up its attack on management.

The special committee is chaired by Alfred Amoroso, an independent director of Yahoo!, and has retained as its independent counsel Terry Bird, a Los Angeles attorney specializing in litigation and internal investigations.

"The special committee and the entire board appreciate the urgency of the situation and the special committee will therefore conduct the review in an independent, thorough and expeditious manner," Yahoo! said in a release.

"The board intends to make the appropriate disclosures to shareholders promptly upon completion of the review."

On Monday, Third Point escalated its attack on the firm, saying it "has not explained how its Search Committee could hire a CEO without doing a rudimentary check on the applicant's credentials -- a check that would have quickly revealed that Mr. Thompson did not have a computer science degree."

Third Point, led by activist investor Daniel Loeb, said that "Yahoo!'s failure of process is especially damning" and will force "a wasteful proxy contest at the 2012 annual meeting."

Meanwhile the Dow Jones tech news site All Things Digital reported that Patti Hart, the Yahoo! director in charge of the search that resulted in the hiring of Scott Thompson, would not stand for reelection to the board at the next annual meeting.



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Google violated copyright, but no damages: jury
San Francisco (AFP) May 7, 2012
A jury in a high-profile technology case ruled Monday that Google violated copyrights owned by Oracle Corp. for the Android mobile platform, but failed to agree on whether damages should be awarded. In a partial verdict, jurors were unable to decide on a key point of whether Google's use of copyrighted Java software was "fair use" that made it acceptable. The verdict prevents any potenti ... read more


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