tunney act
2 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
-
Simplified Management in the Real World with VMware vCenter Operations
With so much of your network becoming virtual, it can be difficult to visualize and manage things. Check out this webcast to learn more about simplified management in a virtualized world.
-
Tunney Act: A call to action
Thanks to the U.S. v. Microsoft case, an obscure Nixon-era antitrust law is finally enjoying its 15 minutes of fame.
-
It's high noon for US v. MS, and the stakes are enormous
This antitrust case is far from settled. Its outcome could determine the future of our industry and even the very foundation of our free enterprise system.
Additional Results
-
Sony, Samsung limiting discounts on their HDTVs. An act of desperation?
The two electronics giants are limiting retailers' ability to discount their televisions, which should help the Best Buys of the world who often can't match the sale prices of online retailers.
-
Lenovo's next growth act will be much trickier
Lenovo's fiscal 2013 growth plan revolves around SMB, consumer, mobile and enterprise gear. The competition will heat up dramatically in those areas.
-
Why every organization needs four CIOs
Chief Infrastructure, Integration, Innovation or Intelligence Officer? CIOs now wear many hats.
-
Petition: Pass the Password Protection Act
Access Now has launched a petition to pass the Password Protection Act (PPA), a bill looking to protect employees from employers asking for access to their social networking accounts.
-
SuccessFactors swaps NetSuite for ByDesign
NetSuite CEO Zach Nelson claims SuccessFactors is a NetSuite customer. SAP says it runs on ByDesign now. Who's right?
-
Flashmob privacy protests target Facebook tomorrow: New York, San Francisco
Privacy activists target pre-IPO Facebook for flash mob protests tomorrow in New York and San Francisco.
-
Password Protection Act: Ban bosses asking for Facebook passwords
The Password Protection Act, which looks to protect employees from employers asking for access to their social networking accounts, has been introduced in both the House and Senate.
-
Queen's speech unveils UK's 'Patriot Act' Web monitoring plan
The Queen has officially lifted the lid on plans for the British government to monitor all U.K. Web, email and phone traffic.
-
Internet users galvanize against Internet law in India's SOPA moment
The new Internet laws added to the IT Act in 2011 are now being challenged.
-
CISPA: more heinous than SOPA, and it just passed
There's still time to take this bill down. Read, learn, and then let your Congress-Critters know that, once again, We The Internet will not stand for these assaults on our rights.
-
How SOPA protests were used to push CISPA
CISPA authors and supporters have tried everything they can to avoid another SOPA protest - except tell the truth about their bill.
-
If you have something to hide from the government, don't use Google Drive
Just as with Dropbox, SkyDrive, or any other cloud service provider, if you have something to hide from the government, don't put it in the cloud. Here's why.
-
Google helped with CISPA, joins Cybersecurity Theatre
GOP chair says Google helped with unprecedented snooping bill CISPA, widely opposed by organizations and individuals alike.
-
After denouncing SOPA and PIPA, how can Facebook support CISPA?
Facebook did not support the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) nor the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA), but it does support the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA). Here's why.
-
Apple too slow to act on Flashback malware
If Apple doesn't act swiftly and decisively on Flashback its squeakily clean image as the malware-free computer platform will quickly become tarnished.
-
US Crowdfund Act: Good news for micro-investors and entrepreneurs
Kickstarter might become a lot more attractive to investors with small amounts of cash. Legislation coming through US Congress is about to change the 1930's law on taking equity in companies in...
-
UK's 'Patriot Act' Web monitoring law could face European veto
New plans by the UK government to monitor all Web and phone traffic, set to be announced at the weekend, could be shot down by the European Commission.
-
Wikipedia owner ditches Go Daddy over SOPA support
Wikipedia's owner said on Friday it had completed the domain name transition away from Go Daddy after the registrar came out in support of the controversial SOPA bill.
The best of ZDNet, delivered
ZDNet Newsletters
Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox




