The American Civil Liberties Union is backing former Intel employee Kourosh Hamidi who was ordered to stop criticising Intel in internal emails.
Published:
22 May 2000 y., Monday
In a case of email as free speech, the ACLU has filed an Amici Curiae (Friend of the Court) brief in an appeal pending in the lawsuit brought against by Intel.
Over a two-year period, Hamidi is reported to have sent six emails to other Intel employees criticising the company's employment policy and the hiring of staff from outside the US. Intel asked Hamidi to desist, but he refused.
Now no longer with the chip behemoth, Hamidi runs the FaceIntel website with the aim of highlighting what he considers to be inappropriate corporate behaviour. The ACLU says that Intel's subsequent legal actions were a heavy-handed attempt to silence a critic, not an effort to prevent overload to its email system. The California Court of Appeal is not expected to make a decision on the case until the end of the year.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
About 22,000 non-citizens have not yet exchanged their former USSR passports.
more »
A group of Russian and international environmental organizations have sent a letter to the World Bank’s president James Wolfensohn.
more »
Polish Education Minister Miroslaw Handke faces not only a bad grade but losing his job as well as opposition lawmakers push for his ouster over a math’s mistake.
more »
The euthanasia is widely discussed subject in Lithuania as all over the World, but people barely know how it is performed in the country where this kind of practice has been done for more than 25 years: the Netherlands.
more »
U.S. investigators say they have stronger evidence than ever that American soldiers missing in action - including spy pilots shot down during the Cold War - were held in the Soviet ''gulag archipelago'' of prison camps.
more »
More than 30,000 Poles, including President Alexander Kwasniewski and Prime Minister Jerzy Buzek, are to travel to Rome from July 6-8.
more »
Terrified villagers barricaded themselves in their homes as 200 Neo-Nazis chanted "Sieg Heil" and "Heil Hitler" at a weekend meeting in northern Poland which police did nothing to stop, a newspaper reported Monday.
more »
Nearly a fifth of Hungarian teenagers have been entrapped by the Internet, the Zeus Consulting and Publishing Company told MTI on Wednesday .
more »
Vilius Kavaliauskas,well-known Lithuanian political scientist, shares his view on interrelation of national minorities in Lithuania.
more »
The anti-Hungarian manifestations in Marosvasarhely (western Romania) after the second round of local elections are far from reflecting a tolerant European mentality.
more »