Facebook Tries to Simplify Privacy Policy – WSJ.com

In an effort to take some of the legalese out of a legal document, Facebook Inc. unveiled a new draft of its closely watched privacy policy.

Associated Press

The new policy doesn’t change the social network’s data-handling practices, said Edward Palmieri, a privacy and product counsel at Facebook. Rather, the goal was to “apply the Facebook design experience that we bring to everything we do and extend that to our privacy policy.”

In place of an existing document that Facebook admitted was “longer than the U.S. constitution – without the amendments,” the draft policy contains chunks of information organized around more practical headings such as “Your information and how it is used” and “how advertising works.”

“We struggle with really hitting home to users that we do not sell their data to advertisers,” said Mr. Palmieri, so the new policy includes screen shots that show what advertisers see about Facebook users.

Privacy policies are often written by lawyers in notoriously vague language to provide companies legal cover for required notice about user data that’s required by the Federal Trade Commission and other regulatory bodies. But in a recent report, the FTC noted that it was difficult for the average person to understand privacy policies – and that many people assume that just because a company has one, their privacy is being protected.

Efforts to simplify privacy policies and controls have gained steam across a range of companies, including Google Inc., which began offering a new privacy dashboard last fall that helps users learn what the company knows about them.

via Facebook Tries to Simplify Privacy Policy – WSJ.com.

Apple, Once the Scrappy Outsider, Beefs Up Its Antitrust Team – Law Blog – WSJ

For years, Apple relished its reputation as a scrappy outsider, fighting to stay alive in a world dominated by Microsoft Corp.’s Windows monopoly. But a quiet recent hire by the Cupertino company suggests it realizes how much that picture has changed.

A few months ago, Apple hired Kyle Andeer, a top former litigator at the Federal Trade Commission, to be its first in-house antitrust counsel. The hire wasn’t publicly announced at the time and has gone largely unnoticed.

Andeer will likely have his hands full: Apple is facing a proliferating number of antitrust investigations by both the FTC and U.S. Justice Department.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month  that both the FTC and Justice Department are interested in looking at Apple’s recently-announced media subscription service, to see if it runs afoul of antitrust laws. The two agencies must now decide which one of them will take the lead.

via Apple, Once the Scrappy Outsider, Beefs Up Its Antitrust Team – Law Blog – WSJ.

“[T]hrowing the Laptop Off a Building; Running Over the Laptop with a Vehicle; and Stating ‘If This Gets Us into Trouble, I Hope We’re Prison Buddies,’ Unquestionably Demonstrate Bad Faith.” : Electronic Discovery Law

Daynight, LLC v. Mobilight, Inc., 2011 WL 241084 (Utah Ct. App. Jan. 27, 2011)

Appellants appealed the district court’s decision to enter default judgment against a third-party defendant for the destruction of evidence.  Appellants argued that the sanction was excessive and unduly harsh and that the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure require a finding of willfulness, bad faith or persistent dilatory tactics in order to impose sanctions.  Rejecting appellants’ reliance on Utah R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2), a rule “which typically pertains only to a delay in the production of evidence,” the Court of Appeals established that the appropriately applied rule, Utah R. Civ. P. 37(g), did “not require a showing of ‘willfulness, bad faith, or dilatory tactics’ or the violation of court order before a court may sanction a party” – including by ordering default judgment.  Moreover, the court noted that even if such a showing were necessary, the district court concluded that the third-party “chose to willfully and in bad faith destroy the laptop” as evidenced by employees’ recorded comments about “their destruction of ‘potential[ly] harmful evidence that might link [them] to any sort of lawsuit.’”  The Court of Appeals further concluded that the there could be no reliance on Rule 37(g)’s good faith exception (which is identical to the safe harbor provision in Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(e)) in light of certain “actions and words attributable to the third-party defendant after it filed suit, including throwing the laptop off the building; running over the laptop with a vehicle; and stating ‘[I]f this gets us into trouble, I hope we’re prison buddies’” – activities which “unquestionably demonstrate bad faith and a general disregard for the judicial process.”  Acknowledging that an order of default judgment was an “extreme” sanction, the court nonetheless found no abuse of discretion in light of the third-party defendant’s behavior and affirmed the order of the district court.

via “[T]hrowing the Laptop Off a Building; Running Over the Laptop with a Vehicle; and Stating ‘If This Gets Us into Trouble, I Hope We’re Prison Buddies,’ Unquestionably Demonstrate Bad Faith.” : Electronic Discovery Law.

Ten Key E-Discovery Issues to Watch in 2011 | Huron Consulting Group

Abstract

Expert Insight To Manage Successfully

Article by David J. Lender and Hon. Andrew J. Peck

E-discovery issues continue to change the way lawyers prepare for, and conduct, litigation. As the digital information revolution makes available vastly increased amounts of data and evolving types of data, lawyers are having to innovate with technology and new methodology to keep up with the flow, search and assess the material, and hold the line on expenses as cost conscious corporate clients are demanding improved results for less money. The tension, between clients who want certainty and predictability and law firms that live under the threat of sanctions for flawed e-discovery, affects decision-making and the process to resolve e-discovery disputes quickly and effectively.

Ten Key E-Discovery Issues to Watch in 2011

via Ten Key E-Discovery Issues to Watch in 2011 | Huron Consulting Group.

5 Very Cool Underused Chrome Features

Google touts the whole of its Chrome browser as simple, quick and efficient, but there are a lot of nifty supporting features that don’t get much spotlight time. Here are 5 that are sure to help you work better and faster:

1. Pin Tab

Pin Tab is a great feature for those of you that often have a large number of tabs open. Pick the pages that you want to keep consistently open (like Gmail) and right click the corresponding tab. Select ‘Pin tab’ from the menu and the tab will shrink down to just the site’s favicon (on the far left):

(In Gmail’s case, the tiny tab will glow if you have awaiting e-mails.)

2. Task Manager

Because Chrome treats each tab as a separate process, you can kill problematic pages without crashing the entire browser.  Pull up the built-in task manager by pressing Shift+ESC. This will enable you to see the memory and CPU resources consumed by each tab, as well as close them individually:

via 5 Very Cool Underused Chrome Features.

Skype To Go: Taking the Internet Out of VoIP

Skype’s (news, site) new service helps users make calls from any phone, regardless of type, via a special phone number system.

All About the Differentiation

With rival services such as Viber, with its HD Voice offering, and Facebook’s Messenger service springing up, Skype is having to do a lot of work to keep its offering distinct and ahead of the pack. Its latest product is Skype To Go, a service that lets subscribers create up to nine numbers for regular contacts such as friends and family or frequently used businesses.

Users can then ring that number from a landline, old mobile or smartphone and pay Skype’s usual per minute rates for the call. It is currently available in North America, a host of European countries, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

via Skype To Go: Taking the Internet Out of VoIP.

Google Cloud Connect Now Officially Looting Microsoft

Old Tricks, New Solution

If you missed the beta release, here’s a quick overview via the official Google announcement:

Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office is now available to download for all Google Apps domains. With this plugin, you can now share, backup and simultaneously edit Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel documents with co-workers without the need for sending attachments back and forth.

Features include:

Simultaneous editing for Word, PowerPoint and Excel files when using Microsoft Office.

Google Docs sharing URLs for each Microsoft Office file.

Revision history for Microsoft Office files, stored in Google Docs.

Offline editing with smart synchronization of offline changes.

No Microsoft Office upgrade or SharePoint deployment required.

via Google Cloud Connect Now Officially Looting Microsoft.

Google launches preemptive strike at Office 365 | Office software – InfoWorld

How much is good enough? That question kept resonating through my Office 365-drenched brain as I started using the final version of Google’s new Office add-in, dubbed Google Cloud Connect for Microsoft Office (moniker gets high points for steak, not much for sizzle).

The product is a gussied-up version of DocVerse, a collaboration program Google bought in February 2010, and it doesn’t bring anything new to the online collaboration ball game. But it’s fast, easy, free to an extent — more about that shortly — and it offers a few unique capabilities you may find inviting.

Here’s how it works. After you download and install Cloud Connect and re-start Word, Excel, or PowerPoint, you’re prompted to enter your Google credentials. Google asks for permission to allow Cloud Connect (Pavilion) access to your account. You can choose to save your documents to the Google Cloud automatically (every time you save in the application), or you can make the cloud sync manual (when you specifically click on the Sync button).

When the Office app comes up for air, it sprouts a new Ribbon (yech). Although it takes up substantial screen real estate, it allows you to change the sync state between automatic and manual, and it holds the requisite Sync button. When you save a document in automatic mode, or when you click the Sync button, a copy of the doc goes to your Google Docs account. As soon as the doc appears in Google Docs it’s assigned an URL, which you can email to other people and thus invite collaboration.

via Google launches preemptive strike at Office 365 | Office software – InfoWorld.

HP’s new business notebooks sport up to 32 hours battery life

HP has introduced a bonanza of new notebooks aimed at business users, including the EliteBook 8460p with up to 32 hours of battery life.

Computing giant Hewlett-Packard is the top computer maker on the planet, and today the company unveiled a veritable legion of new notebooks aimed at business users, featuring sleek, toughened industrial designs, environmentally-friendly components and manufacturing, and solid performance. And, not daunted by the ThinkPad unveiled yesterday that can run up to 30 hours on battery power, HP is touting the new HP EliteBook 8460p with up to 32 hours of battery life.

“HP is the market leader in business notebooks and we have raised the bar with a completely revamped line of business-grade notebooks,” said HP’s VP for business notebooks, in a statement.

via HP’s new business notebooks sport up to 32 hours battery life.

Facebook Messenger to Challenge Skype

Facebook’s (news, site) new Messenger App could blow a big hole in existing VoIP services and wreck the market for newcomers.

A New Face?

Having dominated social media, Facebook has made a fortune helping friends stay in touch, with just enough distance provided by walls and messages to stop people feeling hassled or put-upon by the new social etiquette. But in the neverending quest for further revenue, it has to take new steps constantly.

So, now we have Facebook Messenger, a paid-for app available on Apple’s App Store for US$ 2.99 (UK£ 1.79) with push notifications that provides your Facebook inner circle of family and friends with mobile chat and free voice-over-IP calling between iOS devices or to the desktop.

via Facebook Messenger to Challenge Skype.