Judge dismisses Winklevoss case against Facebook – latimes.com

A federal judge has dismissed Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss’ latest attempt to pursue claims that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg stole the idea for the world’s most popular social networking site.

U.S. District Judge Douglas Woodlock in Boston dismissed the case on Friday. The Winklevosses abandoned an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court last month. Instead the Winklevoss twins and their business partner Divya Narendra asked Woodlock for permission to investigate whether Facebook had suppressed instant messages and other evidence during settlement talks.

The Winklevosses’ attorney Tyler Meade said Friday that he expected the ruling and would be submitting a post-judgment motion relying on a federal rule that allows judges to reopen a case if vital information was not produced. So this may not yet end the seven-year legal feud that was featured in the hit movie “The Social Network.”

The Winklevosses could not be reached for comment. Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes declined to comment.

In June, the Winklevosses abandoned an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. They had wanted the nation’s highest court to review the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that upheld the $65-million cash-and-stock settlement they reached in 2008 with Facebook.

via Judge dismisses Winklevoss case against Facebook – latimes.com.

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FBI shares secrets of botnet ring take-down — Government Computer News

The FBI, in cooperation with cybersecurity experts and law enforcement officials in the United Kingdom, Europe and Ukraine, last year busted a Zeus botnet ring believed responsible for trying to illegally transfer $220 million from U.S. banks.

They managed to get $70 million, but Operation Trident BreACH succeeded in bringing charges against 92 persons and making 39 arrests, including the five suspected ring leaders in Ukraine as well as mules in the United States and United Kingdom believed to be moving the money.

The operation was a learning experience in the complex task of policing the Internet. The first lesson: you don’t have to be a genius to use the Internet to steal millions.

Related coverage:

Can we fight cyber crime like the Untouchables fought Capone?

“I have been continually unimpressed with the skill level and computer knowledge” of criminals engaged in computer crime, even the programmers, said Gary Warner, director of research in computer forensics at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and a frequent contributor to investigations. “But they get the job done.”

Warner was one of a panel, which included FBI agents Dean Kinsman and Michael Eubanks, that summed up the lessons learned from Trident BreACH at last week’s FOSE conference in Washington. The great lesson of the operation, one of the most successful takedowns of organized online criminals to date, is that despite the complexities of international law enforcement agencies on different continents can cooperate and get results.

via FBI shares secrets of botnet ring take-down — Government Computer News.

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Google Says It Rejected Sun’s $100 Million Java-Android Deal – Bloomberg

Google Inc. rejected an offer by Sun Microsystems Inc to pay $100 million in royalties to use Java in its development of the Android operating system before Sun was acquired by Oracle Corp. (ORCL), a Google lawyer said.

Robert Van Nest, Google’s attorney, said yesterday at a hearing in federal court in San Francisco that the proposed $100 million three-year “all-in” deal in 2006 was for a technology partnership to jointly build Android, rather than for just a patent license.

Separately, Oracle won permission yesterday to question Google Chief Executive Officer Larry Page in a deposition about his knowledge of the search-engine company’s alleged infringement of patents that Oracle got when it acquired Sun.

Oracle, based in Redwood City, California, is seeking as much as $6.1 billion in damages from Google in a lawsuit that claims Android software uses technology that infringes Oracle’s patents. Google denies infringing and asked U.S. District Judge William Alsup at yesterday’s hearing to throw out Oracle’s damage estimate.

Alsup said it appeared that Google “has a product out there that is in direct violation of these patents,” and pressed Van Nest to explain why the Mountain View, California- based company discussed a license with Sun.

“There wasn’t any specific discussion of patents,” Van Nest said. While a few lines of code in Android are “identical” to Java, that code probably came from a third party, he said. “We are investigating that,” Van Nest said.

via Google Says It Rejected Sun’s $100 Million Java-Android Deal – Bloomberg.

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Former China Mobile Executive Sentenced in Bribery Case – NYTimes.com

A former executive at China Mobile, one of this country’s biggest state-owned telecommunications companies, was sentenced to death with a two-year reprieve Friday for accepting bribes, according to Xinhua, the state-run news agency.

Zhang Chunjiang, the former vice chairman of China Mobile, the world’s largest mobile phone operator by subscribers, was charged with accepting more than $1.15 million in bribes while working at a series of state-run telecom companies between 1994 and 2009, when he was removed from his post. The two-year reprieve means that with good behavior his sentence could be commuted to life in prison. The sentence, which was handed down by a court in north China’s Hebei province, is the latest development in an unfolding corruption investigation into this country’s powerful telecom oligopoly.

While state executives and government officials are regularly arrested on corruption charges, only a handful have received the death penalty in recent years. Four years ago, the head of China’s Food and Drug Administration was executed for corruption and failing to protect consumers.

via Former China Mobile Executive Sentenced in Bribery Case – NYTimes.com.

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Is your IT support making you vulnerable to hackers? – Computerworld

Network World – Data breaches are more prevalent and more costly than ever. Smarter technologies seem to breed smarter hackers, making it difficult for IT to keep up. But sometimes IT unwittingly helps the bad guys by improperly using core tools, such as remote support mechanisms.

According to a Verizon report which examined more than 700 data breaches from 2010, a whopping 71% of all attacks were conducted through remote access and desktop services pathways.

IN THE NEWS: House panel approves data breach notification bill

Given the cost and efficiency benefits of fixing a system remotely versus dispatching a tech, remote support isn’t likely to lose favor anytime soon. So how can companies take advantage of remote support while maintaining security and keeping data safe?

via Is your IT support making you vulnerable to hackers? – Computerworld.

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Court Upholds Sanctions against “International Man of Mystery” citing Affirmative Actions to Destroy Relevant Documents in Unallocated Space : Electronic Discovery Law

As previously summarized on this blog (here), the Delaware Court of Chancery ordered sanctions against the defendant for wiping the unallocated space on his company’s computer system, despite a court order prohibiting such destruction.  On appeal, the Delaware Supreme Court upheld the sanctions, citing the defendant’s intentional, affirmative actions to destroy documents, and clarified that it did not “read the Court of Chancery’s Spoliation Opinion to hold that as a matter of routine document retention procedures, a computer hard drive’s unallocated free space must always be preserved.”

Briefly refreshing your recollection: defendant Genger is a true “International Man of Mystery” who performed “sensitive tasks” related to national security for his government contacts in Israel.  Apparently, Mr. Genger maintained information related to those contacts on his company’s computer system.  In the course of the underlying litigation, he sought to segregate those very personal files from those relevant to the action and recruited legal assistance in doing so.  After the fact, however, upon learning that the unallocated space (which was not preserved for litigation during the segregation efforts) may contain sensitive information, the defendant instructed his personal IT consultant to wipe the data.  At the time of the deletion, however, the defendant was subject to the court’s Status Quo Order which specifically prohibited the destruction of “Company-related” materials.  Moreover, based on evidence that documents expected to be contained on the defendant’s computers were not found there, the court concluded that relevant information had likely been deleted by the defendant and was then permanently destroyed when the unallocated space was wiped.  Accordingly, the court found that the defendant was in contempt and that intentional spoliation had occurred.  Sanctions were ordered, including payment of attorney’s fees and expenses related to the sanctions motions.  In the Final Judgment, the court awarded $3.2 million in fees, an amount that was agreed upon by the parties.  The defendant appealed.  On appeal, the Supreme Court of Delaware upheld the sanctions imposed by the Court of Chancery.

via Court Upholds Sanctions against “International Man of Mystery” citing Affirmative Actions to Destroy Relevant Documents in Unallocated Space : Electronic Discovery Law.

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Lost Data? Create An Emergency Response Plan | napset.com

Chances are this may have happened to you: A letter or e-mail arrives from a company with which you do business, informing you that their customer data files were “accessed by a third party.”

These messages generally include reassuring statements that they take your privacy very seriously, that steps have been taken to improve data security and you have no need to worry. Sometimes, they even apologize for the inconvenience.

What should you do next? Here are a few suggestions:

• Be Cautious: The company that lost your personally identifiable information may tell you they believe your important information is secure because it was encrypted, kept on a different server or not saved after your last transaction. This may be accurate but you should take necessary precautions.

• Change Your Password: Start with the online site that was compromised. If you use the same username and/or password to access other sites, change those passwords too.

• Use Strong Passwords/ Passphrases: Your phone number or pet’s name is too easy to guess. Skilled hackers can break most passwords in a matter of seconds. Use a random password generator, which lets you choose password length, case sensitivity and whether to use special characters. Then store them with a password manager or in a secure place of your own. Consider using a pass “phrase” instead of a password.

via PROTECTING YOUR ASSETS.

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US approves Blackberry PlayBook for federal government worker use – The China Post

Blackberry’s PlayBook electronic tablet has been approved for use in all U.S. federal government agencies, becoming the first tablet to get certified, developer Research in Motion (RIM) said Thursday.

The Waterloo, Canada-based RIM said its PlayBook, which has an 18-centimeter (seven-inch) high definition screen, received Federal Information Processing Standard certification, which is delivered by the National Institute of Standards and Technology.

via US approves Blackberry PlayBook for federal government worker use – The China Post.

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Canada’s Anti-Bribery Cops Reel One In

(Business Law Currents) Though Canada has had foreign bribery legislation in effect for over a decade, prosecutions have proven very few and very far between. So it remains to be seen whether the recent guilty plea by Calgary’s Niko Resources under Canada’s Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act marks a scaling-up of Canadian efforts on this front, or just another blip on the radar screen.

Canada’s Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act (CFPOA) entered into force on February 14, 1999. The Act contemplates prosecutions in respect of three offences: bribing a foreign public official, laundering property and proceeds, and possession of property and proceeds. In addition, the CFPOA enables prosecutions for conspiracy, aiding and abetting, counselling, and the like.

One aspect of the CFPOA that has attracted criticism from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and Transparency International is that there must be a “real and substantial link” between the offence and Canada. While a Bill has been introduced to eliminate this requirement, it has not passed into law, and arguably remains a significant barrier to investigations.

According to the last report of the Minister of Foreign Affairs to Parliament on the enforcement of the CFPOA, prior to this year there had only been one conviction under the Act. In 2005, Red Deer-based Hydro-Kleen Group Inc. pleaded guilty to two counts of bribing a U.S. immigration officer at the Calgary International Airport.

In addition, in 2010, charges under the CFPOA were laid by the RCMP against an employee of Cryptometrics, a facial and fingerprint recognition software company based in Ottawa. The allegations were that payments had been made to an Indian government official to facilitate the execution of a multi-million dollar supply contract. That matter apparently remains before the Canadian courts.

via Canada’s Anti-Bribery Cops Reel One In.

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Enforcement Watch: The FSA’s Record Anti-Bribery Fine

(Business Law Currents) As allegations of corruption continue to belittle Britain’s anti-sleaze credentials, the FSA has come out fighting, imposing its largest fine to date for financial crime and control failings. In June 2011, the FSA fined Willis Limited, a UK insurance broker, £6.895 million for inadequate anti-bribery and corruptions systems as it turns up the heat on corruption and bribery.

The FSA chose to impose the fine after concluding that Willis Limited had created an unacceptable risk by having made payments to overseas third parties that could be used for corrupt purposes.

The FSA found that between January 2005 and December 2009, Willis Limited made payments to overseas third parties who assisted it in winning and retaining business from overseas clients, particularly in high risk jurisdictions. These payments totaled £27 million which were paid:

Without Willis establishing adequate commercial rationale for the payments;

Without conducting adequate due diligence on the risk of doing business with these third parties;

With no regular review of whether the business relationship was necessary.

via Enforcement Watch: The FSA’s Record Anti-Bribery Fine.

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