New antitrust legislation targets Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google
The legislation could have significant impacts on the industry, even giving the Justice Department the green light to break up big companies.
The legislation could have significant impacts on the industry, even giving the Justice Department the green light to break up big companies.
A scheme to bring women from around the Middle East and Africa to work with tech firms in the US is opening its doors to a fresh round of participants.
The FBI is asking Internet companies not to oppose a proposal that would require them to to build in backdoors for government surveillance.
To say that the legislative picture regarding government support for electric vehicles is blurry would be a serious understatement. Not to get political, but the challenge is that right now much of the support for promoting and testing the nationwide (if not national) infrastructure that we need to get electric vehicles on the road is rolled into highly contentious energy bills.
Good story on the BusinessGreen.com Web site this week about a push by the Climate Group in collaboration with Google and many of the big players in the smart meter business (ala GE, AT&T, Verizon, Intel and Hewlett-Packard) to lobby the federal government for what the article describes as universal smart meters.
How did the attack take place? Did Google strike back at the attackers? Was the Chinese government behind the attacks, and if not who orchestrated them and for what reason? It's time to answer some of the most frequently asked questions.
Viewer's guide to the Copenhagen meetings. The talk, the talk, the talk.
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IT'S ALL OVER, FOLKS. CASH FOR CLUNKERS ENDS MONDAY, AUGUST 24.
Boosted by government initiatives and green spending, China's IT market in 2009 will only be minimally affected by the global economic slowdown, according to a new report.