- What was Alan Turing really like?
- Computer becomes first to pass Turing Test in artificial intelligence milestone, but academics warn of dangerous future
- No, A 'Supercomputer' Did NOT Pass The Turing Test For The First Time And Everyone Should Know Better
- With the Americas running out of IPv4, it's official: The Internet is full
- Dot Whine: France Angry Over .Vin Domain Names
- House committee approves permanent Internet tax moratorium
- The richest man in Vegas has declared war on internet gamblers—"Eighty-year-old billionaire casino owner Sheldon Adelson hates email, doesn't text, and wants to stop you from betting online."
- Uber isn't the problem; taxi regulations are
- Father of "net neutrality" runs for office, wants to block Comcast/TWC merger—"Tim Wu, running for Lt. Governor in New York, says 'cable prices are too high.'" Tim Wu is Tim woof, in more ways than one.
- Democrats unveil legislation forcing the FCC to ban Internet fast lanes—"Leahy and Matsui's proposed ban on fast lanes would apply only to the connections between consumers and their ISPs — the part of the Internet governed by the FCC's proposed net neutrality rules." The real issue is between ISPs and content providers, but this does trickle down to consumers. WaPo
- AT&T claims 'strong' net neutrality would actually ruin the Internet. That's a big leap.—It's bullshit, that's what it is. WaPo
- What Everyone Gets Wrong in the Debate Over Net Neutrality
- Many Verizon DSL and AT&T customers not getting speeds they pay for
- T-Mobile's CEO Went Off Last Night And Said AT&T And Verizon Are 'F------' That Are 'Raping You'
- Mobile crammers settle case, forfeit $10M in assets, including Bentley
- Intel forced to pay record $1.4 billion fine for unfair sales tactics
- Chinese site in signal-jammer sting could pay record $34.9M FCC fine—"CTS boldly—and falsely—claimed that some of its jammers were approved by the FCC...."
- Apple settles e-book price fixing class action suit, dodges possible $840M in claims
- One Bitcoin group now controls 51% of total mining power, threatening entire currency's safety
- Mt. Gox CEO Returns to Twitter, Infuriates Burned Investors
- US Marshal CCs, rather than BCCs, those interested in anonymous Bitcoin auction
- Supreme Court smashes "do it on a computer" patents in 9-0 opinion—"Court declines to stop software patents altogether."
- The Supreme Court doesn't understand software, and that's a problem
- Patent trolls take their toll—"Patent trolls are, in a sense, legal extortion. These entities, which do not produce a product or sell a service, are set up only to bring about patent infringement lawsuits in hopes of collecting a payday."
- The FBI Built the Most Comprehensive List of Twitter Slang We've Ever Seen
- CLAIM: Harvard Has 3.3 Million Facebook Fans And 'About Three Million Of These Are Fakes'
- This Is What Your Facebook Profile Really Says About You
- ABA: Lawyers can scour jurors' social media sites
- After Forty-Seven Years, Computerworld, Tech Publishing's Elder Statesman, is a Print Publication No More
- German publishers want an 11 percent cut of Google News
- Journamalism: Google Gesture-edition
- Wikipedia creates new rules, forcing editors to disclose if they're paid—"Change comes after a few high-profile instances of articles-for-hire."
- You Have No Idea What's Behind These Clickbait Headlines! So I'll Tell You!
- A New Weapon In Upworthy's Unlikely War On Clickbait
- The Way One Man Is Waging War On Clickbait Will Blow Your Mind
- The Onion: ClickHole—"Because all content deserves to go viral."