- Fri Oct 29 2004 Oracle sex suit winner seeks $679,000, apology
Former IT sales account manager in England seeks compensation after winning her gender discrimination case.
Posted by Andy McCue
- Thu Jul 24 2008 EFF: Yahoo Music should compensate customers
Yahoo Music comes under criticism for deciding to stop supporting DRM keys. The Electronic Frontier Foundation says Yahoo should have learned from Microsoft's mistakes.
Posted by Greg Sandoval
- Mon Nov 6 2000 RIAA chief asks Napster to apologize to Metallica
If Napster really wants to bury the hatchet with the Recording Industry Association of America, it may have to eat crow and issue a personal apology.
Posted by Cecily Barnes
- Wed Feb 25 2009 Google Gmail outage compensation: $2.05 per user
Affected Google Apps Premier customers get 15 days of free service for the 2.5-hour outage, the equivalent of $2.05 per Gmail user.
Posted by Stephen Shankland
- Wed Nov 4 2009 T-Mobile says software error behind outage
In a statement on Wednesday, the cellular carrier says that a software problem generated "abnormal congestion" on its network.
Posted by Ina Fried
- Thu Dec 13 2007 What bad year? AMD's Hector Ruiz gets a raise
AMD has decided to give its CEO a raise despite a horrible year for the company plagued by product delays and poor execution.
Posted by Tom Krazit
- Thu Feb 24 2005 Microsoft says sorry for AntiSpyware error
A Dutch Web site has accepted an apology from Microsoft after it was blacklisted by the software giant's anti-spyware tool.
Posted by Ingrid Marson
- Tue Nov 6 2007 Alibaba IPO eclipsed by Yahoo's bad day at Congress
Yahoo chief celebrates 39th birthday apologizing to mother of jailed Chinese citizen. Oh, and Yahoo investment in Alibaba gains from IPO.
Posted by Elinor Mills
- Mon Jan 28 2002 Telstra employee skews cyberpoll
Caught in the act of rigging online user surveys last week, Australia's leading telephone company deliberates offering a formal apology, saying it can't control its employees' actions.
Posted by Rachel Lebihan
- Tue Jan 9 2001 Lengthy Egghead investigation costs banks millions
While the e-tailer spent weeks to conclude that hackers did not get to any credit card information, banks and credit unions paid millions of dollars to reissue cards and compensate employees for overtime.
Posted by Robert Lemos