SCO wanted to gag Torvalds
Unix company was gathering information to support a court order to silence individuals related to its open-source legal case against IBM
Unix company was gathering information to support a court order to silence individuals related to its open-source legal case against IBM
Software company has condemned some downloads made by its subsidiary TomorrowNow as 'unacceptable', but denies it had access to Oracle intellectual property
Concerns are growing over the monitoring by employers of communications, as one worker wins damages from the European Court of Human Rights
Software giant has confirmed that it will not pursue its open-source patent-infringement allegations, while OpenOffice does not believe Microsoft will substantiate the statements
U.K. lawmakers and privacy activists weigh in on the lack of tech knowledge among politicians and its effect on government IT projects.
Transys partner Cubic has negotiated to run the Oyster card transport system, but has been temporarily legally restrained by consortium partner EDS from taking over the contract
A company has been fined £5,000 for contravening environmental laws, but denies allegations of fly tipping
The Ministry of Defence has admitted losing the details of 600,000 people after the theft of a laptop from a Royal Navy officer in Birmingham last week.
Calling the current ICT syllabus 'harmful and dull', education secretary Michael Gove has said it will be scrapped and lessons will focus more on the basics of programming than on the use of Microsoft Word
Against a background of massive cuts to public spending, Value Licensing believes it has spotted an opportunity to broker Microsoft licences between public-sector organisations