In today's technology roundup: Chipmakers fined for price-fixing, German cyber crime forum hacked, Google tries to push Web forward, and US DNA database to expand.
In today's technology roundup: YouTube streams 2bn videos daily, EU maps IT growth, Hotmail upgrade targets Gmail and Yahoo, Microsoft sues Salesforce.com, and Shatner to star in Twitter-inspired show.
In today's technology roundup: Space Agency signs managed network contract, China urged to open tech policy, crimeware gang's ISP knocked offline, and firms rethink tablet plans.
In today's technology roundup: Technology makes women happier, single group did 66% of phishing, lasers scan future possibilities, and Internet approaches addressing limit.
In today's technology roundup: Biometric cash machine lands in Europe, UK govt accused of 'stealth' e-profiling, campaign seeks to derail Net plan, and DoS attack uses Web servers as zombies.
In today's technology roundup: Twitter suffers disruption, Microsoft set to release Office Web Apps, Mozilla releases plan for Firefox 4, and Canonical unveils Unity, Ubuntu Light.
In today's technology roundup: Porn exiled from Wikipedia, rule change for Net access in US, Obama warns on iPod, iPad, and robots could prove lethal.
In today's technology roundup: First non-Latin Web addresses go live, UK firms lack confidence in IT, spammers to pay tiny ISP $2.6m, and worm spreads via Yahoo Messenger.
In today's technology roundup: Adobe retaliates, Google readies e-book plans, Blizzard's Battle.net to integrate with Facebook, and Apple demands apology for iPhone spoof.
In today's technology roundup: Critics attack US broadband plans, ATM hacking spree foiled, Intel unveils chip for smartphones and tablets, and LoveBug celebrates 10th anniversary.
In today's technology roundup: Smartphones get novel memory material, US Treasury site serves up malware, IE drops below 60% market share, and lawmakers draft Web-ad privacy safeguards.
In today's technology roundup: Iron Man 2 online before US debut, Palin e-mail hacker found guilty, $100 laptop targets east Africa, and Boy Scouts develop video game badge.
Enterprise social networking leaves companies open to data leakage and risk to reputation, says Rik Ferguson, solutions architect, Trend Micro.