Tips for Facebook Timeline Apps: Beware What You Share | PCWorld (Kristin Burnham)

Facebook opened the floodgates to its “new class of apps” this week, unveiling its partnership with more than 60 applications that let users share more about their daily lives.

Facebook TimelineIn September at the F8 developer conference, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced Timeline, Facebook’s new profile design, and the forthcoming apps that “let you express who you are through all the things you do,” according to Facebook.

For example, rather than “liking” something as you traditionally would on Facebook, you can now show what you’re doing, such as running, eating and watching, right on your timeline. These new actions are determined by the individual app.

Among the 60 new applications released yesterday are food apps Foodily, which helps you discover recipes and Snooth, a wine recommendation app; fitness app MapMyFitness, in which you log and share your fitness goals and accomplishments; and an app for Pinterest, an up-and-coming social network that creates pin boards for fashion, decorating and more.

via Tips for Facebook Timeline Apps: Beware What You Share | PCWorld.

E-discovery ruling in KPMG case: Brace for ‘profound’ impact? | Thomson Reuters

For all of its zeal in squelching what it considers unfounded class actions against U.S. businesses, the Chamber of Commerce rarely strays from appellate courts to venture into the weeds of a federal district court discovery dispute. But Monday, the Chamber filed an amicus brief in an uncertified wage-and-hour class action against the accounting firm KPMG, warning that if U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon of Manhattan federal court adopts the order of a magistrate judge, the ruling will set “a dangerous precedent” that will be of “profound significance to businesses in America.” Piling on in their own Nov. 8 amicus brief, the Washington Legal Foundation and the International Association of Defense Counsel assert that the magistrate’s ruling could fundamentally distort class-action litigation by potentially making it cheaper to settle a case than to comply with discovery orders.

So what is this supposedly devastating, albeit preliminary, ruling? On Oct. 11, U.S. Magistrate Judge James Cott issued an order resolving a dispute between KPMG and Outten & Golden, the law firm representing two proposed classes of entry-level auditors who claim the accounting firm owes them overtime wages. The fight involved the computer hard drives of potential class members: KPMG and class counsel agreed that the plaintiffs could use sampling software to limit the electronic information KPMG would have to preserve, but they couldn’t agree on the sampling criteria or the number of computer hard drives to include in the sample. KPMG’s lawyers at Sidley Austin moved for an order limiting the sample size to 100 randomly selected hard drives.

Instead, Cott ruled that KPMG has to preserve the hard drive of every potential class member. “Prudence favors retaining all relevant materials,” Cott wrote, pointing to the seminal e-discovery ruling, Zubulake v. UBS Warburg. The magistrate judge reasoned that because McMahon, the district judge, hasn’t yet ruled on class certification in the KPMG audit associate case, every entry-level auditor in the opt-in action is a potential “key player” under Zubulake, whether in the Manhattan class action or in another case that could be filed depending on how McMahon ultimately defines the class.

“These audit associates are, at the very least, key players in any one of many potential actions that could result if the motion to certify is denied,” Cott wrote. “With so many unknowns involved at this stage in the litigation, permitting KPMG to destroy the hard drives is simply not appropriate at this time.”

via E-discovery ruling in KPMG case: Brace for ‘profound’ impact?.

Intel unveils new class of PC – ‘Ultrabooks’ | ZDNet

Intel has used Computex as the opportunity to introduce to the world a whole new class of PC – the ‘Ultrabook™.’

Note: Yes, note the ™ above!

So what are ‘Ultrabooks?’ They’re mobile systems defined by two words – thin and light. The idea is to take the performance and capabilities of a modern notebook and package this into a ’thin, light and elegant design’ and slap ‘Ultrabook™‘ stickers on them.

These ’Ultrabook’ systems will be powered by 22nm Ivy Bridge 2nd generation Intel Core processors which allow the system to be packaged into a shell less than 20mm (0.8 inch) thick, and sell for under $1,000.

via Intel unveils new class of PC – ‘Ultrabooks’ | ZDNet.

Antitrust Suit Puts Apple at Heart of Pay-limiting Scheme | PCWorld Business Center

A California class action lawsuit puts Apple at the center of a conspiracy involving Google, Adobe, Intel and others to keep employee wages down.

The suit echoes an investigation launched by the U.S. Department of Justice in 2009 that charged the companies with agreeing not to cold call each other’s employees in order to extend job offers. The companies settled with the DOJ, agreeing not to ban cold calling and not to enter into any kind of agreement that prevents competition for employees.

But that settlement didn’t help employees who were potentially paid less because of the deals, the lawsuit, filed in the Superior Court of California in the County of Alameda on Wednesday, argued.

“Without this class action, Plaintiff and members of the class will not receive compensation for their injuries and Defendants will continue to retain the benefits of their unlawful collusion,” according to the suit.

The suit charges the companies with violating antitrust and unfair competition laws for forming agreements aimed at keeping employee compensation artificially low and eliminating competition among the defendants for skilled labor. The suit was brought by Siddharth Hariharan, a former software engineer at Lucasfilm.

The companies agreed to provide notification to the employer when making an offer to an employee and, when offering a position to another company’s employee, neither company would counteroffer above the initial offer, according to the suit.

via Antitrust Suit Puts Apple at Heart of Pay-limiting Scheme | PCWorld Business Center.

Military Struggles to Harness a Flood of Data – NYTimes.com

Data is among the most potent weapons of the 21st century. Unprecedented amounts of raw information help the military determine what targets to hit and what to avoid. And drone-based sensors have given rise to a new class of wired warriors who must filter the information sea. But sometimes they are drowning.

Research shows that the kind of intense multitasking required in such situations can make it hard to tell good information from bad. The military faces a balancing act: how to help soldiers exploit masses of data without succumbing to overload.

Across the military, the data flow has surged; since the attacks of 9/11, the amount of intelligence gathered by remotely piloted drones and other surveillance technologies has risen 1,600 percent. On the ground, troops increasingly use hand-held devices to communicate, get directions and set bombing coordinates. And the screens in jets can be so packed with data that some pilots call them “drool buckets” because, they say, they can get lost staring into them.

“There is information overload at every level of the military — from the general to the soldier on the ground,” said Art Kramer, a neuroscientist and director of the Beckman Institute, a research lab at the University of Illinois.

via Military Struggles to Harness a Flood of Data – NYTimes.com.

Does DIY ediscovery measure up? |Image & Data Manager

David McGrath explores the challenges of insourcing ediscovery. When does it make sense to leave it to the experts and what are the tools, processes and resources you need to be aware of?

A thriving and nuanced ediscovery industry exists in Australia, with many of our providers having been around for some time and quite rightly entitled to consider themselves world class.

There is in fact a growing trend towards insourcing some aspects of ediscovery. The 2009 Litigation Trends Survey by international law firm Fulbright & Jaworski LLP found that around one half of their respondents insourced an aspect of ediscovery.

We all know ediscovery can be expensive so wouldn’t it make sense to do at least some of it yourself? You might be able to save some money whilst creating and retaining valuable knowledge about your processes and data assets for later reuse. Moreover, it can be an important driver for an improved information management strategy.

Obviously, the largest driver for insourcing ediscovery functions is your litigation profile. You can think of your litigation profile in terms of how often you anticipate being involved in litigation, or regulatory investigations, and what risk that poses to the organisation.

Some industries such as construction, pharmaceutical, financial services tend to have higher litigation profiles than others. A good initial test of course is the size of your current litigation spend.

via Image & Data Manager.

Google coughs up $8.5 million to settle Buzz privacy suit

The fallout from Google’s Buzz social networking aggregator continues: the company has agreed to settle a class action lawsuit over concerns that the service’s original configuration violated users’ privacy. While Google has made numerous changes to the service since its February launch and maintains that it did no wrong, the company has agreed to pay out $8.5 million to end the litigation.

Buzz launched in early February to a lukewarm reception, which was quickly followed by an enormous controversy over concerns that the default settings revealed private information. At the heart of the problem was an auto-follow feature meant to facilitate quick adoption. Users quickly found, however, that it could reveal their Google accounts to people they’d like to avoid. Journalists were concerned that confidential sources could be revealed to the public, while one woman noted that her private Google account was auto-followed by her abusive ex-husband.

via Google coughs up $8.5 million to settle Buzz privacy suit.

Clearwire Offers 4G Prepaid Service – WSJ.com

Clearwire Corp. unveiled a pay-as-you-go mobile-broadband service on Monday that uses its fourth-generation wireless network, as the company seeks to attract a new class of customers before rivals launch competing plans.

The service, called Rover, is launching in all of Clearwire’s 49 markets that offer its 4G wireless technology. With Rover, Clearwire is targeting 18- to 24-year-old customers who want to be constantly plugged into the Internet but don’t want to be locked into contracts.

The target customers “come to expect high-speed Internet whenever they connect,” Seth Cummings, a Clearwire general manager, said Monday.

The service costs $5 a day, $20 a week or $50 a month for unlimited 4G usage but requires the purchase of either a “puck,” a portable Wi-Fi hotspot that will support up to eight devices, costing $150, or a “stick,” which supports one device and costs $100.

via Clearwire Offers 4G Prepaid Service – WSJ.com.

AFP: US indicts ex S.Korean airline execs for price fixing

Two former Asiana Airlines executives were indicted in New York on Thursday for a price-fixing scheme involving economy class airfares for travel between the United States and South Korea.

A grand jury in Brooklyn, New York issued the one-count indictment against Joo Ahn Kang and Chung Sik Kwak, both former Asiana vice presidents and South Korean nationals. Kang also served as airline president from 2005 to 2008.

The pair were charged with “conspiring with others to suppress and eliminate competition by fixing passenger fares” from about January 2000 to February 2006, the Justice Department said in a statement.

“As a part of the conspiracy, Kang, Kwak and co-conspirators monitored and enforced adherence to the agreed-upon, noncompetitive rates charged to passengers traveling between the United States and Korea,” it added.

via AFP: US indicts ex S.Korean airline execs for price fixing.

Judge OKs iPhone class action against Apple, AT&T – USATODAY.com

A federal judge says a monopoly abuse lawsuit against Apple and AT&T’s mobile phone unit can move forward as a class action.

The lawsuit consolidates several filed by iPhone buyers starting in late 2007, a few months after the first generation of Apple’s smart phone went on sale.

An amended complaint filed in June 2008 takes issue with Apple’s practice of “locking” iPhones so they can only be used on AT&T’s network and Apple’s absolute control over what applications iPhone owners can and cannot install on the gadgets.

via Judge OKs iPhone class action against Apple, AT&T – USATODAY.com.