A group of Chicago Police are suing for overtime pay since the City allegedly expected the officers “to be available twenty-four [hours] per day via Blackberry.” In their lawsuit the officers “felt obligated to respond to these email communications and telephone call while off duty.”

Huffingtonpost reported that the officers

Continue Reading Overtime Pay for Use of Cell Phone?


Ownership of Social Media content and contacts got a little clearer by a court ruling. But in the case of LinkedIn users, they give LinkedIn an irrevocable and perpetual license to everything posted. That means LinkedIn has an ownership claim to everything posted, as a result LinkedIn really has an

Continue Reading Court Rules that Ex-Employee Keeps LinkedIn Content and Contacts


A new feature on Google called Interactive Account Manager now allows Google users to selected trusted contacts to receive data from many Google services. On April 11, 2013 posted a blog entitled “Plan your digital afterlife with Inactive Account Manager.” Amusingly enough Google admits the title for the new service

Continue Reading Internet Wills for Digital Afterlife Now Available on Google


FairSearch.org filed a complaint with the EU asserting that Google’s use of the Android operating system dominates the mobile marketplace and is anticompetitive. FairSearch states that it “is an international coalition of 17 specialized search and technology companies whose members include Expedia, Microsoft, Nokia, Oracle, and TripAdvisor.” In the

Continue Reading Google’s Android Operating System Now Target of EU Antitrust Charges


Secret offshore banks accounts and shell companies were disclosed with a data leak of an estimated value of TRILLIONS of dollars. The 2.5 million files were released by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) which is “an active global network of 160 reporters in more than 60 countries

Continue Reading Disclosure of Secret Monies May Lead to Tax Problems


Google’s March 2012 Privacy Policy has never been well-received in the EU, and after waiting for Google to change its Privacy Policy the EU now plans to take action. The CNIL (Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés) announced on April 2, 2013 that 6 EU states have launched coordinated

Continue Reading Privacy Update -EU Launches Enforcement Against Google


The supreme court in NY ruled that Internet businesses should be taxed on an equal footing with brick-and-mortar businesses, which likely lead to a US Supreme Court challenge. Accounting Today reported that the NY Court of Appeals, ruled 4-1 on March 28, 2013 that Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman wrote for

Continue Reading NY Sales Taxes Apply to Amazon and Overstock


World-wide law enforcement agencies requested information regarding 137,424 Microsoft and Skype accounts in 2012 based 75,378 requests for customer information. Microsoft’s General Counsel Brad Smith blogged that the Microsoft’s first Law Enforcement Report includes customer requests for:

 Skype, Hotmail, Outlook.com, SkyDrive, Xbox LIVE, Microsoft Account, and Office 365.

In

Continue Reading Law Enforcement Requests Report from Microsoft


Privacy of GPS data location in the US may improve if Congress passes the proposed bill that would require court-order search warrants before law enforcement can obtain GPS data. Although a similar bill was introduced in 2011 it failed to become law, however the pervasive use of GPS by law

Continue Reading Federal Law Proposed to Require Warrants for GPS Data