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  1. Is Google Sucking the Life Out of Your Identity? Are They Alone?

    The Justice Department certainly hasn't been bashful about asking various search engines and social media platforms to share privileged data before – even without a warrant. Only a handful of people really know if it's close to correct, and since...

  2. SOPA Explained: Why It’s Bad for the Web & How to #StopSOPA

    SOPA’s predecessor COICA would have allowed the Justice Department to seize domain names and order credit card and banks with U.S.operations to cease doing business with the accused sites immediately.

  3. 'The Power of Google' Senate Hearing is Must Watch TV Today

    CEO Rich Skrenta noted that the products Apple has brought to market have done far more damage to Microsoft than the Department of Justice lawsuit they faced in the 1990s. In a blog post, "Blekko's not afraid of Google, why is Washington?

  4. Did Senator Wyden Save The Internet?

    There is - well make that was - a new internet censorship bill being considered in Washington DC - Combating Online Infringements and Counterfeits Act (COICA) - that would have allowed the Justice Department to use court orders to shut down...

  5. SearchDay | Online Videos as Learning and Marketing Tools

    mod=hpp_us_whats_news) ---Quote--- Washington -- The Justice Department has quietly hired one of the nation's best-known litigators, former Walt Disney Co.vice chairman Sanford Litvack, for a possible antitrust challenge to Google Inc.s growing...

  6. Now States are Investigating Yahoo-Google Deal

    Just a few weeks after the US Department of Justice formally opened its investigation to the Yahoo-Google search advertising partnership. A spokeswoman for the Attorney General Bill McCollum told the Post, "We are reviewing the proposed transaction...

  7. SearchDay: Yahoo's Judgment Day

    The Justice Department has begun a formal antitrust investigation into the search advertising agreement recently announced between Google and Yahoo. But other internet companies will be required to provide documents, according to the Washington Post.