- The Evolution of the Web
- Watch: An Amazing Mechanical Computer From 1948
- Say Goodbye to the Tech Sounds You'll Never Hear Again
- Indian IT firm accused of discrimination against "stupid Americans"—"Infosys favored Asians in hiring, alleges suit seeking class action status."
- One Small Win Against Lodsys, One of Nathan Myhrvold's Patent Troll Shell Companies
- Federal judge: Bitcoin, "a currency," can be regulated under American law
- Man charged with trying to sell stolen car on Craigslist
- Mail from the (Velvet) Cybercrime Underground—"Earlier this month, the administrator of an exclusive cybercrime forum hatched and executed a plan to purchase heroin, have it mailed to my home, and then spoof a phone call from one of my neighbors alerting the local police."
- Facebook Brag Leads To Arrest In Dog Burning Case
- Alpha, officials file defamation lawsuit against anonymous online users
- Jurors jailed for contempt of court over internet use—'Two jurors have each been jailed for two months for contempt of court after one posted a comment on Facebook and the other researched a case online." Frightening to have idiots like these deciding cases.
- Man accused of skipping out on Reno bar tab in custody; pub condemned him in Facebook post
- Fired for a tweet?
- Hollywood Keeps Censoring Pirate Bay Documentary, Director Outraged
- The Hole in Our Collective Memory: How Copyright Made Mid-Century Books Vanish
- How We Can Balance Freedom Of Speech And The Rights Of College Athletes—"The root of the O’Bannon case isn’t that EA Sports uses avatars that represent real athletes, but that the NCAA and EA have conspired to fix the monetary value of athletes at zero by refusing to allow them any compensation for use of their names, images, or likenesses."
- Algorithms Are the New Content Creators, and That's Bad News for Humans—"The battle for fair use is unfair to anyone who plays by the old rules and tries to share with the artists because human creatives can't compete with the automated services that aren't sharing with the artists."
- Whining doesn't make you right
- Pirate Bay 'Founders' Speak Out on the Site's Past and Future
- Obama administration looks to make unauthorized streaming a felony
- 2,919 Movie Pirates Walk Free as BitTorrent Trolling Scheme Falls Apart
- Lady Gaga 'Applause' Leak Sparks Fan-Driven Anti-Piracy Campaign
- High 'Game of Thrones' piracy is 'better than an Emmy,' says Time Warner CEO
- CBS Blackout Triggers Surge in TV-Show Piracy
- Time Warner Cable, CBS trade barbs on day seven of blackout
- More Static: Time Warner Cable Denies Cramping CBS's Internet-Video Style
- The 'Australia tax' is real, geo-blocking to stop
- Parliamentary report urges Australians to bypass online geo-blocks that can double prices for IT products
- The 'Australia Tax' - how vendors are ripping us off
- How Microsoft Lost Its Way, as Understood Through The Wire
- Microsoft cuts Surface Pro price by $100 following Surface RT reductions
- Asus kills its line of Windows RT tablets
- Apple workers file lawsuit for lost wages due to bag searches—All those unpaid minutes add up and should be compensated accordingly.
- No bathroom breaks: iPhone factory in China accused of egregious labor violations
- Obama Administration Vetoes Apple Product Ban
- Apple iPhone patent violated by Samsung, US trade court rules—"ITC ruling comes as Apple asks court to force Samsung to stop using iPhone features in violation of its patents."
- Android vs. iPhone: Why Apple still has the edge over Google's operating system.
- The Newtonians: Worldwide Cult Ditches iPhone for Apple's Distant Past
- Rush Limbaugh: Apple is Republicans, Google is Democrats
- Angry Apple makes hollow threat to bar Kindle, other e-book apps—"'Apple is under no duty to allow other retailers to offer apps on the iPad,' company says in reply to DOJ's e-book price-fixing remedies."
- Publishers object to U.S. remedy in Apple e-book case
- Judge scolds Apple for lack of remorse in e-book antitrust case
- Confused photocopiers randomly rewriting scanned documents—"Scans can't be trusted as Xerox machines switch numbers around." Dyslexic scanners... huh.
- How do you stop HTTPS-defeating BREACH attacks? Let us count the ways
- Firefox 23 lands with a new logo and mixed content blocking
- JavaScript and Timing Attacks Used to Steal Browser Data
- xkcd: The Mother of All Suspicious Files
- Edward Snowden's father gets visa to visit son in Russia
- The NSA is turning the internet into a total surveillance system—"The NSA appears to believe this general monitoring of our electronic communications is justified because the entire process takes, in one official's words, 'a small number of seconds.' Translation: the NSA thinks it can intercept and then read Americans' emails so long as the intrusion is swift, efficient and silent."
- Cory Doctorow: privacy, oversharing and government surveillance—"Globally-renowned science fiction author, activist and journalist gives his views on privacy, oversharing and the troubling concern of government surveillance."
- DIY stalker boxes spy on Wi-Fi users cheaply and with maximum creep value—"CreepyDOL follows you around town, vacuums up wireless digital crumbs."
- N.J. Man In A Jam, After Illegal GPS Device Interferes With Newark Liberty Operations—"Gary Bojczak didn't want his boss tracking him; instead he got federal agents."