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Obama administration moves to stop release of classified information

The Obama administration invoked the state secrets privilege on Friday in a lawsuit pertaining to government eavesdropping intended to intercept terrorist communications, and one privacy advocacy group called the decision "incredibly disappointing."

The coming-out stories of anonymous bloggers

Blog fans in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, saw PittGirl as their masked superhero -- a comedian and local commentator who jibed the mayor without reserve and ranted freely about her hatred of pigeons.

Time.com: Maligned Online? How to Retaliate Against Web Attacks

If you've been slandered on the Web, your bad reputation may follow you offline too. Here are some tips for burnishing your online image

Time.com: Court Limits Employer Access to Employee Email

A federal appeals court has made it more difficult for employers to snoop legally on e-mails and text messages their workers send from company accounts

Time.com: Wiretapping Bill Puts Telcos on Hold

Bush's eavesdropping win on Capitol Hill failed to resolve the concerns of nervous phone companies

CNNMoney: AT&T overhauls privacy policy

Phone service provider AT&T announced Thursday a privacy policy overhaul that removes a key reference from its previous policy, which had said the company "does not access, read, upload or store data contained in or derived from private files without the members' authorization..."

CNNMoney: Judge: AT&T docs can be used in wiretap suit

The judge hearing a case challenging the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program said Wednesday that the plaintiffs may keep documents AT&T says contain proprietary information for use in preparing their case, but the documents must remain under seal.

CNNMoney: Color printer as people finder?

If you want to go into hiding, get rid of your color printer.

CNNMoney: Practicing safe blogging

Add blogging to the list of extracurricular activities in need of some protection.

Fortune: WHAT TO WATCH IN THE WEEKS AHEAD

Should technology companies be held liable when consumers use their products to violate copyrights? No, the Supreme Court said in 1984, when it ruled that the Sony Betamax videocassette recorder ha...

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