Is the number up for Amazon, Google and Starbucks on tax?
Why Friday could mark the end for multinationals using legal loopholes to make billions in the UK and then shift the profits out of the country to pay little or no tax.
Prime Minister David Cameron will tell internet giants including Google they have a “moral duty” to do more to tackle child abuse images found by using their websites.
Why Friday could mark the end for multinationals using legal loopholes to make billions in the UK and then shift the profits out of the country to pay little or no tax.
For some businesses it can be the difference between survival and annihilation. Geoff White looks at the best ways to get to the top of Google searches and at the “dark arts” being used for that purpose.
After revelations about the extent to which government agencies monitor our online data, the Data Baby and MWR InfoSecurity has a list of hints and tips to help keep your searching private.
After a meeting with Culture Secretary Maria Miller, technology companies agree to give the watchdog for child sex images online the power to seek out content, rather than just following up leads. But is it enough?
After the Prism spying scandal exposed the vulnerabilities of our online data, we sent the Channel 4 News Data Baby to an information security company to find out the extent of her online footprint.
David Cameron says he wants a deal on tax transparency at the G8 summit. But with London widely regarded as “the mother of all tax havens”, is he really serious?
Six years on from Israel’s imposed blockade of Gaza, Channel 4 News speaks to the tech entrepreneurs bypassing the blockade and developing software for the global online market.
Internet giant Google is criticised for “brazen” attempts to reduce its liabilities in the UK while HMRC and Britain’s accountancy firms are under fire for “helping clients avoid taxes”.
The US government does not have a “back door” into Google, the company’s chief legal officer told Channel 4 News. That would mean that some early reports of the spying are wrong. What do we know?
Exclusive: Google’s chief legal officer tells Channel 4 News his company has written to the US attorney general to be able to provide more detail about court orders requiring it to release user data.
You would expect the Prism spying software scanning the world’s email for terrorism to be cutting-edge, but experts say it is not much smarter than a search engine. But how does it work?
So the government is watching you. Or is it? And should you be worried?
Some of the world’s biggest internet firms – Google, Facebook and Skype – are under pressure to explain just how far they co-operated with intelligence agencies to access your personal information.
The prime minister demands Google do more to rid the internet of child pornography, warning that lives are being put at risk.