- ACTA Update V, Open Enterprise
- Tor’s latest project helps Iran get back online despite new Internet censorship regime, Ars Technica
- Is Google planning to offer IP video to Kansas City?, Ars Technica
- The Pirate Bay says goodbye to (most) torrents on February 29, TorrentFreak
- BitTorrent doesn’t hurt US box-office, delayed international releases drive downloading, Boing Boing
- European Parliament president criticizes ACTA, Techdirt
- Acta: European Parliament’s Schulz criticises treaty, BBC News
- Will Do Not Track kill the ‘free’ Internet?, ITworld via Slashdot
- Despite media confusion, Raspberry Pi boards still on schedule, Slashdot
- Iranians get some services back, The Register
- The right to be forgotten, Stanford Law Review via Slashdot
- Firefox roadmap for 2012 calls for Chrome catch-up and better privacy tools, ReadWriteWeb
- MIT’s online education prototype opens for enrollment, Slashdot
- Internet crackdown in Iran continues, but Tor users are all back online, Ars Technica
- Mozilla will demo a smart phone OS this year, Technology Review
- ACTA Update VI, Open Enterprise
- Happy Valentine’s Day: US government breaks up with LightSquared, Ars Technica
- Beastie Boy Mike D forces AT&T to let shareholders vote on net neutrality, Techdirt
- Major Bitcoin exchange shuts down, blaming regulation and loss of funds, Ars Technica
- Book publishers shut down library.nu and iFile-it, TorrentFreak
- Senators question Twitter’s censorship, The Hill’s Hillicon Valley
- Police: download a file, go to jail for 10 years and pay an “unlimited” fine, Ars Technica
- First look: Mozilla’s Boot2Gecko mobile platform and Gaia UI, Ars Technica
- MP3 reseller accuses Capitol Records of sabotage, Threat Level at Wired.com
- Head of Mozilla says ACTA is ‘a bad way to develop internet policy’, Techdirt
- EU member Bulgaria halts ACTA, Minister of Economy offers resignation, Techdirt
- IFPI & other lobbyists tell Parliament that ACTA protests silence the democratic process, Techdirt
- ACTA Update VI, Open Enterprise
- Google hit with FTC complaint, says circumventing Safari privacy features accidental, Ars Technica