How will BYOD other than cell phones be impacted by a California court ruling that “when employees must use their personal cell phones for work-related calls, Labor Code section 2802 requires the employer to reimburse them”?  On August 12, 2014 in the case of Colin Cochran vs. Schwan’s Home Service,

Continue Reading BYOD Ruling Requires Employers to Reimburse for Work-Related Calls

A recent report concluded that the “cybersecurity programs of US organizations do not rival the persistence, tactical skills, and technological prowess of their potential cyber adversaries. Today, common criminals, organized crime rings, and nation-states leverage sophisticated techniques to launch attacks that are highly targeted and very difficult to detect. Particularly

Continue Reading 8 Issues of Cyber Insecurity which Lead to Cybercrime


A Judge ruled it was unreasonable to ask Apple “to execute a search warrant” which “could pose problems, as non-government employees, untrained in the details of criminal investigation, likely lack the requisite skills and expertise to determine whether a document is relevant to the investigation” according to a report in

Continue Reading Court Grants Search Warrant to Entire Apple eMail Account for [REDACTED]@mac.com



A Hong Kong Judge disagreed with Google that Google’s Autocomplete may have created libeleous content and “cited Europe’s recent ‘right to be forgotten’ ruling requiring Google to remove embarrassing or outdated search results upon request” as reported by the Washington Post.  On August 5, 2014 Deputy High Court Judge Marlene

Continue Reading Judge Allows Libel Suit Based on Google Autocomplete Search Results


As part of a drug trafficking investigation the US government persuaded a Court to issue a warrant that “purports to authorize the Government to search any and all of Microsoft’s facilities worldwide” according to Microsoft’s opposition brief filed on June 6, 2014 in the US District Court for the Southern

Continue Reading Cloud at Risk as Microsoft is Ordered to Produce Data in Ireland


My first blog was on August 1, 2008 and at the time it seemed like the FCC had Net Neutrality under control, but not really… and now the FCC wants to “explore the possibility of helping cities build their own connections to the Internet and bypassing the commercial broadband providers

Continue Reading 6th Year of Blogging and Net Neutrality May be Moot if Cities Build Their Own Internet Systems


A recent report estimates that the ”cost of cybercrime includes the effect of hundreds of millions of people having their personal information stolen—incidents in the last year include more than 40 million people in the US, 54 million in Turkey, 20 million in Korea, 16 million in Germany, and more

Continue Reading Cybercrime is Growth Industry Estimated to be as Much as $575 Billion


Approximately “91,000 requests” to be forgotten have been submitted to Google since the May 2014 EU European Court of Justice ruling which has led to “a total of 328,000 links that applicants wanted taken down” according to a BBC news report.   The report went to say that Google’s ‘right

Continue Reading Challenges to EU ‘right to be forgotten’ Implementation


As part of an “investigation of possible conspiracy to commit money laundering” a Judge stated that he perceives “no constitutionally significant difference between the searches of hard drives… and searches of email accounts.”  On July 18, 2014 Magistrate Judge Gabriel W. Gorenstein (US District Court, Southern District of New York)

Continue Reading Google Ordered to Produce All Content for xxxxxx@gmail.com in Criminal Investigation