Official says agency perused private email accounts of workers while investigating leaks of confidential information The U.S Food and Drug Administration FDA today said it monitored the private email accounts of nine agency whistle-blowers starting in 2010 to determine whether any of them leaked confidential information to the public.Six of the whistle-blowers late last month filed a lawsuit alleging that the FDA violated their privacy and constitutional rights by secretly monitoring and collecting information from private email conversations. The FDA had not denied monitoring the email. The six complainants are scientists and doctors who have publicly disclosed what they call serious irregularities in the FDA device evaluation process. T <a href=https://www.polenes.ca>polene</a> he monitoring in question occurred when the employees used personal Gmail and Yahoo email accounts on work computers. The employees claim that information found during the email monitoring has been used against them.The lawsuit has prompted U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa R-CA , chairman of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, to send a letter to FDA Commissioner Mar <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley cup</a> garet Hamburg seeking details on the agencyrsquo email surveillance activities. Erica Jef <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.es>stanley cup</a> ferson, team leader for the FDArsquo Medical Products and Tobacco group, said Friday that the targeted email surveillance of the nine individuals started in April 2010, more than a year after the whistle-blowers started complaining to Congress about the FDArsquo device clearan Qykq CTIA: Search startups vie for position in mobile market
Nokia Corp. plans to fold all its mobile phone development efforts into a single new business unit, reflecting the growing importance to its business of multimedia and Internet-enabled devices.The new Device unit, as it will be called, will produce all of Nokiarsquo mobile devices, including more traditional mobile phones, as well as Internet-enabled devices like the N series. The products were previously produced by three separate divisions, for mobile phones, multimedia and enterprise solutions.As part of the <a href=https://www.polenefr.fr>polene bag</a> reorganization Nokia will also create two other new divisions, called Software Services, and Markets, to replace its existing structure. The divisions will all be launched on Jan. 1, 2008, the company announced Wednesday. When we int <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.pl>stanley kubek</a> roduced the current structure in early 2004, the market was still very voice centric at the time, said Nokia spokeswoman Arja Suominen. The other areas were small but have grown much since then. So it makes sense to bring all these together in one unit.Nokia said the changes will help to make its product development and manufacturing operations more effective and reduce the time it takes to bring new products to market.This isnrsquo;t a cost-cutting exercise, Suomin <a href=https://www.stanley-canada.ca>stanley ca</a> en said. We seek greater efficiency. The move comes as Nokia faces new low-cost challengers from Asia, as well as markets with high levels of phone penetration in developed countries.The current enterprise soluti