India's IT industry body, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom), is preparing a security audit of its 860 member companies to ensure that the flow of outsourcing work from the UK and US isn't halted by fears over privacy and data protection. The news follows an announcement that India's software industry is now the country's single biggest source of export revenue, accounting for revenues of nearly $13bn (£7bn). . . .. India's IT industry body, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom), is preparing a security audit of its 860 member companies to ensure that the flow of outsourcing work from the UK and US isn't halted by fears over privacy and data protection. The news follows an announcement that India's software industry is now the country's single biggest source of export revenue, accounting for revenues of nearly $13bn (£7bn). However, last week's move by Lloyds TSB's group union, LTU, to take legal action against the bank for breach of the Data Protection Act (DPA), is just one of a number of things sparking fears in India of a potential slowdown in outsourcing growth. For India to continue evolving as a global IT heavyweight, it has to ensure that it has an adequate legal framework for data security and privacy, says Nasscom. The link for this article located at vnunet.com is no longer available. . India's IT industry body, the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom), is . india's, industry, national, association, software, services, companies, (nasscom). . Anthony Pell
A jury on Tuesday acquitted a Russian software company of criminal copyright charges related to selling a program that can crack antipiracy protections on electronic books. The case against ElcomSoft is considered a crucial test of the criminal provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), a controversial law designed to extend copyright protections into the digital age.. . .. A jury on Tuesday acquitted a Russian software company of criminal copyright charges related to selling a program that can crack antipiracy protections on electronic books. The case against ElcomSoft is considered a crucial test of the criminal provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), a controversial law designed to extend copyright protections into the digital age. The company faced four charges related to directly designing and marketing software that could be used to crack eBook copyright protections, plus an additional charge related to conspiring to do so. The jury acquitted the company of all charges. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Russian technology company ElcomSoft cleared of copyright infringement allegations, raising questions about DMCA ramifications.. Digital Copyright, eBook Protection, Legal Proceedings, DMCA Case, Software Industry. . Anthony Pell
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.