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- Microsoft says it snooped on Hotmail to track leak | AP News
John Frank, deputy general counsel for Microsoft, which owns Hotmail, said in a statement Thursday that the software company “took extraordinary actions in this case ”
- Microsoft says it snooped on Hotmail to track leak - Sent-trib
According to an FBI complaint alleging theft of trade secrets, Microsoft found Kibkalo in September 2012 after examining the Hotmail account of the blogger with whom Kibkalo allegedly shared proprietary Microsoft code The complaint filed Monday in federal court in Seattle did not identify the blogger "After confirmation that the data was
- Microsoft Searched Hotmail Messages To Track Leak
John Frank, deputy general counsel for Microsoft, wrote in a blog post Thursday that the software company "took extraordinary actions in this case, based on the specific circumstances"
- Microsoft says it snooped on blogger’s Hotmail account to trace leak
John Frank, deputy general counsel for Microsoft, which owns Hotmail, said in a statement Thursday that the software company “took extraordinary actions in this case ”
- Microsoft says it snooped on bloggers Hotmail account to trace leak . . .
John Frank, deputy general counsel for Microsoft, which owns Hotmail, said in a statement Thursday that the software company "took extraordinary actions in this case "
- Microsoft Admits Searching Bloggers Hotmail, Chats For Information
Microsoft admits in federal court documents that it forced its way into a blogger's Hotmail account while investigating a leak of sensitive software, But says its decision was justified and it has the right to take "extraordinary actions" based on extraordinary circumstances
- Microsoft snooped on Hotmail to track leak - The Hans India
Microsoft, which has skewered rival Google for going through customer emails to deliver ads, has acknowledged it had searched emails in a blogger's Hotmail account to track down who was
- Microsoft admits snooping on Hotmail user’s accounts
After slamming Google for sifting through users' emails to deliver targeted advertisements, Microsoft is now fielding a privacy scandal of its own, admitting it snooped through a blogger's
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