Explore Publications

Type a keyword in the search box below. To conduct a wider search, please pick from one (or more) of the drop down menus below. Articles will be listed from newest to oldest.
Published by CorpWatch Blog | By Pratap Chatterjee | Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Raytheon, a U.S. military manufacturer, is selling a new software surveillance package named "Riot" that claims to predict where individuals are expected to go next using technology that mines data from social networks like Facebook, Foursquare and Twitter.

Read More
Published by CorpWatch Blog | By Pratap Chatterjee | Thursday, February 7, 2013

All data on completed medical experiments are to be made available to the general public by GlaxoSmithKline, the biggest UK pharmaceutical company. The announcement is a major win for the AllTrials campaign mounted by healthcare activists as well as researchers that has gathered widespread support.

Read More
Published by CorpWatch Blog | By Pratap Chatterjee | Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The medieval alchemists claimed they could turn ordinary metals into gold. Analysts at Standard & Poors (S&P), Wall Street's top ratings agency, claimed that bad loans to poor people were wildly profitably. A U.S. government investigation alleges that S&P financial analysts are no different from the hucksters of yore.

Read More
Published by CorpWatch Blog | By Pratap Chatterjee | Monday, February 4, 2013

Executives from three major Spanish construction companies are in the limelight for allegedly contributing to a slush fund for the Partido Popular, the Spanish ruling party: Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas from Barcelona, Obrascón Huarte Lain and Sacyr Vallehermoso from Madrid. The scandal has rocked the conservative government of Mariano Rajoy.

Read More
Published by CorpWatch Blog | By Puck Lo | Thursday, January 31, 2013

A climate change activist locked himself to a projector screen at an oil and gas conference in Texas today interrupting a TransCanada executive who was making a presentation on a pipeline from Alberta to the U.S. Instead 300 astonished attendees heard an impassioned presentation about TransCanada's poor safety record.

Read More
Published by CorpWatch Blog | By Pratap Chatterjee | Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Nestlé, the world's largest food company, has been found guilty of spying on Swiss activists in 2003 with the help of Securitas, a private security company. Jean-Luc Genillard, president of the Lausanne civil court, told the two companies to pay $3,267.55 to each of nine victims.

Read More
* indicates required