India's Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that 122 mobile licenses awarded across 32 service areas in 2008 should be cancelled, giving a new dimension to investigations into alleged malpractices and corruption in the allotment of the 2G licenses.
The U.S. White House has declined to respond to a petition calling for authorities to investigate the head of the Motion Picture Association of America for bribery related to comments he made following successful online protests against two controversial copyright enforcement bills.
Apple has appealed a Chinese court ruling last December that rejected its ownership of the iPad trademark in the country, and could expose the company to trademark infringement lawsuits from a local company.
A court in California rejected Oracle's bid to use a fraud claim to undo an agreement to support the Itanium processor, that it is said to have made with Hewlett-Packard.
Adscend Media, the defendant in lawsuits filed this week by Facebook and the Washington attorney general, on Friday denied the allegations in the complaints and shifted blame to its affiliates.
European regulators have dropped a legal case against the United Kingdom over failure to implement ePrivacy laws saying that changes in UK legislation mean it is now looking after the online privacy rights of its citizens.
A federal judge in Colorado ordered a defendant to decrypt her laptop, denying her claim that being forced to so violates her Fifth Amendment rights. The defendant, Ramona Fricosu. claims that being ordered to release the contents of the drive would be essentially testifying against herself in this criminal case of bank fraud.
Internet users in the European Union will benefit from greater control over their personal data if new proposals to reform the Data Protection Directive are implemented.