• Judge Reigns In Clinton Email Lawsuits to Avoid Duplicative Discovery
    U.S. District Court Judge Reggie Walton has put one of the lawsuits related to Hillary Clinton's private email server on hold. The judge rejected the Justice Department's push to resolve the lawsuit in the government's favor, as well as conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch's request for the State Department to turn over more information about the issue. "To avoid duplicative discovery and unnecessary expenditure of public funds, the Court will stay this case pending the completion of discovery in those other cases," Walton wrote in the order.
  • Trump Should Look to Sanders to Learn Email Marketing
    Bernie Sanders raised more than 110,000 individual donations through his email campaigns in the state of Washington, a record breaking number for presidential- primary season. Hillary Clinton raised 30,000 donations in the state. Meanwhile, Donald Trump has only raised 314.
  • Grand Jury Criticizes City of Berkeley's Email Management
    A grand jury has criticized how the city of Berkeley, CA uses email. The city automatically deletes emails after 90 days unless employees manually archive the files. The grand jury's report urged the city to retain all of its emails for at least two years to follow public records rules.
  • Microsoft Turns to Recent Supreme Court Decision to Support Its Fight Against U.S. Gov
    Microsoft is shining a light on a Supreme Court decision this week which upheld that U.S. laws do not apply overseas unless Congress has given explicit permission. The tech giant is using this precedent to support its ongoing fight with the U.S. government who is demanding that the company hand over private user emails stored on servers in Ireland. In this week's unrelated decision, the Supreme Court pointed out that without "clearly expressed congressional intent to the contrary, federal laws will be construed to have only domestic application."
  • Google Now Allows Mobile Users to Sign Into Gmail From Home Screen
    Google has released a new feature that allows Gmail users to login to their email accounts directly from their home screen. Users must set up this feature on a desktop or laptop in the Sign in and Security section of their account to set up their phone. Android phones must have an active screen lock mechanism, and iPhones need Touch ID for this feature to work.
  • Slipknot Drummer Says He Was Fired Via Email
    Heavy metal band Slipknot fired its drummer via email, according to the ex-member Joey Jordison. In an interview with Metal Hammer, Jordinson revealed the band's cold move and called them "cowardly" for failing to give him the axe in person.
  • Trump Sends First Campaign Email
    Despite the fact that Donald Trump has bragged about self-funding his campaign, the presumptive Republican presidential candidate sent out his first campaign email on Tuesday after news was revealed that he had significantly less money on hand than Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. "This is the first fundraising email I have ever sent on behalf of my campaign. That's right. The FIRST ONE," Trump wrote in the email.
  • Clinton's Former IT Aide to Testify
    The former IT professional that worked for Hillary Clinton while she was Secretary of State will give a deposition this week. Bryan Pagliano was originally scheduled to testify on June 6 but the deposition was delayed after his lawyers said that he planned to plead the Fifth in order to avoid answering questions. Pagliano is understood to have set up the controversial private email server for Hillary Clinton.
  • Ticketmaster Repays Customers $386M in Free Concert Tickets
    Ticketmaster is emailing customers letting them know that they have free tickets coming to them. The company is required to give out tickets to 50 million people that purchased tickets from the site between 1999 and 2013 as part of a $386 million class action lawsuit. The rebate comes after Ticketmaster was found guilty of charing "excessive" service fees.
  • Hilton Grand Apologizes Over Distasteful Email
    Hilton Grand Vacations Club has apologized for sending an inappropriate email. The email encouraged recipients to "take a bite out of Orlando" and was sent several hours after the missing toddler was retrieved from Disney's Seven Seas Lagoon. The company explained that the email was scheduled in advance of the news. Social media users criticized the company after the message went out.
« Previous EntriesNext Entries »