- Friday to mark 14th annual SysAdmin Day
- Edit Wars Reveal The 10 Most Controversial Topics on Wikipedia
- Why You Should Think Twice Before Shaming Anyone on Social Media
- Instagram and self-esteem: Why the photo-sharing network is even more depressing than Facebook
- How War in Syria Turned These Ordinary Engineers Into Deadly Weapons Inventors
- Jury: Website defamed ex-cheerleader
- Whether High School or College, Students' Speech Rights Are Being Threatened Online
- Internet trolls: What to do about the scourge of the Web?
- Technologically illiterate MP who masterminded UK porn blocker gets hacked, threatens reporter for writing about it
- Chinese firm Huawei controls net filter praised by PM—Makes perfect sense.
- UK ISP on porn filters: if you want internet censorship 'move to North Korea'—And those who claim it would be limited to porn are ignorant.
- Internet porn 'opt in' is censorship, say Canadians
- Ireland: Rabbitte ignores calls for State role in blocking online porn
- After backlash Yahoo's Tumblr quietly restores adult, NSFW blogs
- Porn Films Don't Get Copyright Protection in Germany, Court Rules
- SF court orders Prenda to pay $22,531 in attorney’s fees
- EFF Calls For Court Sanctions For Copyright Troll's Public Humiliation Tactic
- 'Girls Gone Wild' founder Joe Francis desperate to block release of sex tape
- MIT Moves to Intervene in Release of Aaron Swartz's Secret Service File—"MIT claims it's afraid the release of Swartz's file will identify the names of MIT people who helped the Secret Service and federal prosecutors pursue felony charges against Swartz for his bulk downloading of academic articles from MIT's network in 2011. MIT argues that those people might face threats and harassment if their names become public. But it's worth noting that names of third parties are already redacted from documents produced under FOIA." Emphasis mine, and let me emphasize that MIT's actions here have been deplorable.
- Judge dismisses lawsuit over Instagram terms of service—"Lawsuit over controversial changes at the photo-sharing service gets tossed on procedural grounds."
- How Apple led an e-book price conspiracy—in the judge's words—Here's a CliffsNotes edition.
- Panasonic fined $56.5 million over conspiracy to fix prices of laptop battery packs and auto parts
- Local Newscast Uses DMCA to Erase Air Crash Reporting Blunder—Guess there was something wrong.
- Joel Spolsky: Victory Lap for Ask Patents—Got 15 minutes? Help stamp out patent trolls.
- EFF Joins Massive Coalition Calling For Patent Reform
- Canadian "patent troll" Wi-Lan loses East Texas trial
- The Web's longest nightmare ends: Eolas patents are dead on appeal
- Google Caught Red-Handed Ripping Off an Apple Patent Graphic
- Steve Jobs didn't build that—"Our patent law doesn't promote innovation, it stifles it by buying into the myth of the 'hero inventor.' Here's why." Salon
- For Whom the Bell Trolls: Life for a startup on the receiving end of a patent lawsuit—"You'll stay in business and license from us, or you'll go out of business."
- The Biggest Secret Trade Deal You've Never Heard Of, Explained—"The US is nearing the end of negotiations on a massive free trade deal called the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Here's what it's all about."
- "Fair Use Creep," and Other Copyright Bogeymen, Appear in Congress
- In another Aereo win, court refuses to rehear New York case
- Victory for Fair Use and Consumer Choice: Ninth Circuit Rejects Networks' Appeal in Fox v. Dish.
- Congresswoman Claims 'Fair Use' And 'Transparency' Are Just 'Buzz Terms'
- Apple gives up on failing App Store v. Appstore trademark lawsuit
- The Artist Behind the Technoviking Meme Got Sued, and Wants to Make a Film About It
- Google Refuses to Delete Pirate Websites from its Search Results
- Swedish Movie Subtitle Fansite Raided By Copyright Industry And Police—Fan-made subs.
- PRISM for Pirates: AT&T Invents The Ultimate Anti-Piracy System
- W3C rejects ad industry attempt to hijack do-not-track specs—It's DOA for now.
- Do Not Track opt-out icon coming to mobile browsers
- Do Not Track Advocate Mozilla Supports Some Tracking
- Google starts sending adverts as emails to Gmail users
- Twitter fakes real users' tweets to promote ad platform—Now that they've been caught with what's tantamount to identity theft, they're saying sorry.
- Feds tell Web firms to turn over user account passwords
- The 8-character password is no longer secure WSJ
- Facebook: Mark Zuckerberg's former speechwriter warns of password issues—"Katherine Losse claims social network's customer support could access any user's account with a master password."
- "NASDAQ is owned." Five men charged in largest financial hack ever—"Scheme created hundreds of millions of dollars in losses to world's biggest institutions."
- Apple Developer site hack: doubts cast on Turkish hacker's claims
- Justice Department fails in bid to delay landmark case on NSA collection
- Northern Idaho mom sues president over government surveillance program
- US tech firms losing business over PRISM: poll
- Pentagon to deploy huge blimps over Washington, DC for 360-degree surveillance
- Senate threatens to sanction countries that aid Snowden
- Outrage is not enough for US anti-surveillance campaign
- MaskMe helps you cover your tracks, avoid online annoyances—"In an era where big businesses and shadowy spy agencies are tracking your every movement online, can you really afford to share your true identity with strangers? A new service lets you blur your online identity by creating disposable email addresses, a secondary phone number, and virtual credit cards."