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California AG: HP 'lost its way'
On Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2006, California Attorney General Bill Lockyer filed criminal charges against former HP Chairman Patricia Dunn and four others. The charges say Dunn knew illegal techniques were used to track private phone records. Here, Lockyer addresses the complaint in Sacramento, Calif.
Former HP Chairman Patricia Dunn says she didn't know what pretexting was until last summer.
Congresswoman asks about 'sleaze factor'
During a congressional hearing into Hewlett-Packard's leak investigation, former chairman Patricia Dunn was questioned by Rep. Jan Schakowsky. Dunn said most corporations have security departments that do "detective-type work."
HP says sorry, but does it matter?
In the aftermath of new disclosures and increased pressure from California's attorney general, can Hewlett-Packard's embattled Chairwoman Patricia Dunn hang onto her job?
At the congressional hearing on HP's leak investigation, Rep. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) asks former Chairman Patricia Dunn about phony e-mails. HP's investigators were trying to get the reporter to divulge her HP source by attaching an e-mail tracer to her computer.
Five face criminal charges in HP scandal
On Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2006, the California Attorney General filed criminal charges against former HP Chairwoman Patricia Dunn and four others. This follows an investigation of HP's use of "pretexting" to obtain personal phone records of reporters, company directors and two HP employees. Here, Lockyer announces the charges in Sacramento, Calif. Video provided by KPIX-TV.
Hewlett-Packard CEO Mark Hurd announced the resignation of Patricia Dunn as chairman in his first public appearance since the controversy over the company's use of pretexting erupted more than two weeks ago. But as he offered an apology, Hurd also raised new questions about HP's investigation into boardroom leaks. Join this week's edition of the CNET News.com Reporters' Roundtable with Charlie Cooper, Jim Kerstetter and Ina Fried.
HP's former chairman testifies
In her testimony before a congressional subcommittee, Patricia Dunn clearly regretted the spying she unleashed on journalists, HP directors and employees. Earlier this month, she resigned her board position.
A digital whiteboard to make presentations roar
Reporting from Demo '06 in Phoenix, CNET's Rafe Needleman chats with Polyvision CEO Michael Dunn, who shares his vision of the whiteboards and meetings of the future.
Mozilla's CEO discusses Firefox's next challenge
Will it be harder to lure another 20 percent of browser users to Firefox or to keep enthusiasts from defecting to Chrome? CEO John Lilly speaks out.
