- The Overly-Attached Girlfriend Explains What It's Like Being A Wildly Popular Internet Meme
- You didn't make the Harlem Shake go viral—corporations did
- Memes: Has The Time Come To Monetize Them—Here's a snapshot of what's been trending over the past few years.
- 7 Memes That Went Viral Before The Internet Existed
- The man who created internet memes — before the internet
- How the Banner Ad Was Born
- The Dangers of Trusting Wikipedia With Your Life
- Police Search For Mugger For 3 Weeks, Internet Finds Him In An Hour
- You can now tell Google what to do with your account in the afterlife—"Google's Inactive Account Manager lets users set up plans for 'inactivity' periods."
- Frequent texters tend to be shallow, research suggests—"Those who text 100+ times a day more interested in wealth and image, psychologists say."
- How the internet is making us poor
- Shodan: The scariest search engine on the Internet—"When people don't see stuff on Google, they think no one can find it. That's not true."
- Just Because It's On The Internet Doesn’t Make It True
- The Internet map—"is a bi-dimensional presentation of links between websites on the Internet."
- Cracked.com: If Famous Websites Were People
- White House knocks amended CISPA bill for not addressing civil liberties concerns
- CISPA's Sponsor Can't Even Keep His Story Straight About NSA Having Access To Your Data
- Privacy protections booted from CISPA data-sharing bill—"Committee overwhelmingly votes down privacy amendments that would have curbed National Security Agency's access to private sector data."
- CISPA 2013: Google, Apple Top Massive List Of Supporters Favoring The Controversial Cybersecurity Bill
- What is CISPA, and what does it mean for you? FAQ
- IRS claims it can read your e-mail without a warrant—"The ACLU has obtained internal IRS documents that say Americans enjoy 'generally no privacy' in their e-mail messages, Facebook chats, and other electronic communications."
- NSA data center front and center in debate over liberty, security and privacy
- Delete This When You're Done: Snapchat and the Power of Deletion—"Snapchat highlights the power of deletion in resisting the gentle totalitarianism of endless sharing."
- Google chief urges action to regulate mini-drones—"How would you feel if your neighbour went over and bought a commercial observation drone that they can launch from their backyard. It just flies over your house all day. How would you feel about it?"
- Facebook and State Attorneys General Team Up to Educate Teens and Parents about Privacy
- The Empire acquires the rebel alliance: Mendeley users revolt against Elsevier takeover—"Mendeley, an open collaboration platform for scientiffic research, has promised that it won't become less open after being acquired by journal publisher Elsevier, but some prominent users aren't waiting around."
- Opinion: Antitrust complaint against Android is an attack on open source
- Napster.fm Is An Open Source Social Music Player That Can Be Hosted By Anyone In Case Of Shutdown
- CFAA: Internet Activists Win First-Round Victory In Fight Over Anti-Hacking Law
- Open access gains momentum in Washington—"White House takes action to increase access to the results of federally funded scientific research."
- Australia To Propose Copyright Reform That Includes Fair Use
- The Copyright Monopoly Was Always Intended To Prevent Freedom Of Expression—"When Queen Mary I created the copyright monopoly on May 4, 1557, it was a purebred censorship mechanism: in exchange for a lucrative monopoly on printing, the London Company of Stationers agreed to let anything printed first pass by the royal censors."
- Blast from the Past: Stevie Wonder lobbies UN over audiobooks for the visually impaired
- Time Warner Cable: You Don't Really Need Google Fiber
- Don't let Verizon, AT&T run roughshod over smaller carriers, DOJ warns—"Spectrum auctions should boost competition, antitrust officials tell FCC."
- Cable Companies Can Now Force You to Rent Set-Top Boxes. Here Are Your Alternatives.
- Time Warner Cable (TWC) charges customer a wireless services fee for his own home—Customer rep claims that the "wireless signals are sent from the modem to the router, which then sends out WiFi signals at your home."
- Wouldn't It Be Smarter For ISPs And Cable Companies To Take Good Care Of Their Customers In The First Place?
- Stuffed Giraffe Shows What Customer Service Is All About
- Boy Reunited With Long Lost Toy Thanks to eBay
- BMW makes 4-year old's dream come true by designing a 19-engined race car
- RadioShack's epic PR win
- Why Amazon Is One Of The Most Successful Companies In The World