Services Australia 'legal privilege' robo-debt claim refused by Senate committee
As former Labor Leader Bill Shorten says, relying on a computer algorithm was a 'stupid idea'.
As former Labor Leader Bill Shorten says, relying on a computer algorithm was a 'stupid idea'.
Over 90% of Indian techies in the US are upper-caste Indians and many of them are allegedly making life a living hell for Dalits, those who are classified as the lowest of the low in India, whose horrifying historical persecution has continued in the cradle of tech.
President Bush asks the U.S. Senate to ratify the first international cybercrime treaty.
The music-download site unleashes tracking software it says will help root out who has been illegally trafficking in EMusic songs.
A member of the Federal Trade Commission slams a plan to switch antitrust scrutiny of the cable, media and entertainment industries from the FTC to the Justice Department.
The most meaty part of the November 2 cooperative-technology deal between Microsoft and Novell is also the hardest to understand: The patent portion.
A Danish court bars a news site from linking to other Web sites' back pages without permission--the first legal ruling to outlaw deep linking. Could it be the start of a clampdown?
SunnComm Technologies says it has licensed a new product that can hide data, video, software or an identifying watermark inside music files.
Computers radically change the way lawyers fight court battles, as diet pill fight shows.
**** ZDNet News reader Hal Cohen gives us his own analogy to the Napster/Pirate Ship analogy that had sparked a heated debate between ZDNet News readers; Markus Diersböck, 'History repeats itself' and Janet Fisher, 'Napster is a pirate ship'. Read Hal's analogy below.