- Some UK plans for white space utilization, The Register
- More horrid details on the latest NZ anti-piracy law, BoingBoing
- Apple, Google called before Senate hearing on mobile device privacy, Ars Technica
- Jobs apparently denies that iOS tracks anyone, Slashdot
- Apple responds to location tracking furor, promises software update soon, Ars Technica
- Customers sue Apple over location data collection, Gadget Lab at Wired
- Windows Phone 7 doesn’t track on device, may do so online, Ars Technica
- Sony told to pay up for removal of OtherOS option from PS3 firmware, Techdirt
- Nottingham hackspace finds a new home, BoingBoing
- Confirmed, US was the lone holdout in releasing the text of ACTA, Techdirt
- Novell sale completed, Slashdot
- More on first deployment of WiFi via white spaces, Ars Technica
- Sony security breach amongst the biggest in history, Michael Geist
- Customer sues Sony due to negligence regarding data breach, Platform Nation
- WikiLeaks cable confirms public pressure forced delay of Canadian DMCA, Michael Geist
- Google sued over Android location tracking, The Register
- Mobile carriers reveal location privacy policies in response to Congressional request, Washington Post
- Who was really behind the Digital Economy Act?, ComputerWorld UK
- Facebook responds to abused DMCA loophole, doesn’t fix system, ReadWriteWeb
- Botched network upgrade responsible for Amazon outage, The Register
- Verizon responds to tracking concerns with warning sticker on mobile phones, Techdirt
- Oracle, Google move to streamline Java suit, Slashdot
- US offered to draft NZ 3-strikes law, fund copyright initiative, Slashdot
- Patent in Google, Linux suit reduced to pure math, Slashdot