The European Commission is ready to impose a fine of 2m euros ($2.5m; £1.4m) a day on Microsoft. The Commission is expected to rule that Microsoft has failed to fully implement its 2004 antitrust decision. Under the ruling, Microsoft had to supply rivals with information about its Windows operating system. On Monday, Microsoft said it had begun to provide the information Brussels had demanded, but the Commission has signalled the company acted too late. In December, Brussels informed the software giant that it had failed to comply with the original ruling it issued in March 2004. At the time of the warning, the Commission said Microsoft would face fines of up to 2m euros a day if it did not comply immediately. ... http://news.bbc.co.uk censor News |
Editor - 08:52:00 06-27-06 |
Israel: A history of prisoner deals |
Israel has a history of negotiating prisoner exchanges with her enemies, who have often used hostage taking as a political tool. In 1985 Israel agreed to the release of more than 1,150 Palestinian prisoners in return for three soldiers taken captive in Lebanon.Almost 20 years later, a similar deal was reached with the militant group Hizbullah, in which years of German-brokered negotiations led to an agreement between Israel and the militants in early 2004 to release more than 400 militants in exchange for the businessman Tannenbaum Elhanan, who had been captured four years earlier, and the bodies of three soldiers.Despite a suicide bomber killing 10 Israelis on the day of the prisoners' release, the exchange went ahead without a hitch. Hizbullah arranged for the soldier's remains to be flown to Germany for identification, while Israel began shipping busses filled with former prisoners to Lebanon. ... http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article1099164.ece
full News |
Editor - 00:08:00 06-27-06 |
Afghanistan crisis paves way for return of the Taliban |
Five years after the West promised to rebuild Afghanistan, the country is facing its worst crisis since the Taliban was overthrown. President Hamid Karzai and his western backers are seriously disillusioned with each other, while the Islamic militia is resurgent and people are being killed at a rate not seen since the 2001 American-led invasion.At a recent reception for the Queen's 80th birthday at the new British Council in Kabul the scene may have been picturesque, with hundreds of diplomats, officers and Afghan dignitaries mingling on the lush green lawn, but the talk among them was full of gloom and desperation. Outside, lines of British troops kept guard against a possible Taliban attack.Among the envoys and Afghan politicians there was abundant, and scathing, criticism of Mr Karzai's inability to govern effectively or punish those in his administration who are corrupt, dealing in drugs or close to the Taliban... http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/06/27/wafg27.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/06/27/ixnews.html
full News |
Editor - 23:55:00 06-26-06 |
Mo. Elks Club building collapses with people inside |
A three-story Elks Club building partially collapsed as its members gathered for a dinner, injuring several people and trapping some inside.Local business owner Barry Glasscock said dozens of people were on the second floor of the building in this west-central Missouri town when the third floor collapsed. At least one person had not been accounted for, he said, but that could not immediately be confirmed.Witnesses said rescuers had made contact by cellphone with at least eight of nine people who were trapped, WDAF-TV reported.Club members had gathered for dinner and were preparing to initiate new members at a meeting that was to start at 8 p.m. when the collapse occurred around 7:30 p.m.Glasscock said hundreds of people gathered on the square immediately after the collapse.... http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2006-06-27-building-collapse_x.htm?csp=34
full News |
Editor - 23:07:00 06-26-06 |
National-security letter to library group dropped |
The FBI has abandoned its effort to use a "national-security letter" -- a broad and secret demand for communications and financial information -- to obtain user records from a group of Connecticut libraries. The bureau's New Haven field office wrote to the libraries' attorneys at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), saying it "will not seek to enforce the national security letter delivered to your client, Library Connection, Inc., by FBI personnel on or about July 12, 2005." The libraries challenged the constitutionality of the letter in U.S. District Court in Connecticut, saying the letter and the secrecy imposed on its recipients violated the First and Fourth amendments. "We pursued this matter because librarians should protect the privacy of our patrons," George Christian, executive director of Library Connection, said yesterday. "Everyone has the responsibility to make sure the government plays by the rules." ... http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20060626-110156-3734r.htm
full News |
Editor - 23:01:00 06-26-06 |
Bombings and kidnappings beseige Iraq after Maliki peace plan |
At least 57 people were killed in attacks and 10 students were kidnapped from their hostel in Baghdad, one day after the prime minister unveiled a peace plan aimed at easing the violence. Moscow meanwhile confirmed the killing of four of its Baghdad embassy employees following an Internet statement by their kidnappers, an Al-Qaeda-led insurgent grouping, that they had been executed.Sectarian violence reared its head again in Iraq when at least 25 people were killed and scores wounded in two separate bombings targeting the country's majority Shiite community.The first attack happened near Baquba in the village of Khairnabat, northeast of Baghdad, when a booby-trapped motorbike exploded in a marketplace killing at least 18 and wounding 20, a defense ministry source said.... http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060626/wl_afp/iraq
full News |
Editor - 22:53:00 06-26-06 |
|
post The Good, The Bad and The Ugly |
|