- AT&T data caps start this week, Ars Technica
- Long running Tivo patent battle settled for $500 million, Ars Technica
- Sony gives more PSN attack details, details “welcome back” packages, Ars Technica
- WikiLeaks cable reveals US pressuring Canada on IP enforcement, Ars Technica
- Unsealed Righthaven agreement has other judges questioning legitimacy of the troll’s lawsuits, Techdirt
- Canada still included on watch list in USTR Special 301 report, Ars Technica
- Some initial reactions to the USTR Special 301 report, Knowledge Ecology International
- The EU Commision tries to defend ACTA, fails miserably, Techdirt
- Google faces another privacy probe, The Register
- Consumers reject AT&T bid to takeover T-Mobile, Washington Post
- House hearing blasts Sony for “half hearted, half baked” response to hack, Ars Technica
- Parliamentary committee suspends intellectual property rights inquiry, The Register
- Apache Software Foundation subpoenaed in Google, Oracle suit, The H Open
- Oracle ordered to reduce claims against Google from 132 to 3, Groklaw
- Copyright lobby groups press European Parliament to pass ACTA, Michael Geist
- Google joins California Do-Not-Track opposition, The Register
- Groups ask FCC to investigate broadband data caps, Public Knowledge
- Sony to offer free identity theft monitoring, Slashdot
- Senator Rockefeller to introduce Do Not Track bill, Washington Post
- Hackers return Linux option to PS3, Ars Technica