The Backlash Against .Sucks Has Begun
• http://motherboard.vice.comThe organization that administers the internet's domains is having second thoughts about allowing companies to secure one of its newest and most controversial addresses, .sucks.
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The organization that administers the internet's domains is having second thoughts about allowing companies to secure one of its newest and most controversial addresses, .sucks.
YouTube's paid subscription offering takes shape -- and it's almost here
Like a walk through a fascinating internet graveyard, a list of domains deleted by the US government over the last ten years has been obtained via Freedom of Information Act request.
Monday night, in a dangerous, dizzying maneuver, a team of six Greenpeace activists boarded a Shell oil rig bound for the Arctic. The impressive feat was recorded in a gut-churning video that makes clear the stakes of grappling onto a 100-foot fr
The Russian government wants every tech company to store all personal data about Russian users inside the country, a measure that critics say is just about giving Vladimir Putin's government a better chance to censor and monitor the internet.
ISTANBUL -- Google was spared on Tuesday from a recent wave of Internet bans in Turkey after it reportedly complied with a court order to remove links to images of Mehmet Selim Kiraz, a prosecutor who died after leftist militants took him hostage at
Google's business only works when people are online. It doesn't care how you get there.
IN order to maintain national security, the NSA has set up a surveillance room specifically for watching hardcore pornography.
I have been following MaidSafe since before I learned about Bitcoin and I learned about Bitcoin back when I could still mine full blocks with my own CPUs.
With more than 2,000 channels to choose from, Roku's little streaming puck has never been short on content.
Silk Road Strikes Comedic Gold
The Internet's largest ad network won't support sites that show what happened at Abu Ghraib--but company reps say they're only enforcing the rules.
As you may have heard, yesterday the FBI "uncovered" yet another of its own terrorist plots, the latest in a very long line of "terrorist plots" the FBI has "uncovered" -- in which the details always show that it was an undercover FBI
The age of the Internet of Things, where everything from fridges to wind turbines are connected to the Internet, is coming. These smart devices can be controlled remotely, optimizing efficiency and power production--but they can also be hacked.
A ROADMAP OF THE INTERNET'S DARKEST ALLEYS
A ROADMAP OF THE INTERNET'S DARKEST ALLEYS
For many, Tor is synonymous with its hidden services, the encrypted and anonymous .onion websites that make up the darknet.
In a LONG-OVERDUE UNIVERSAL INBOX move , you can use the Gmail app for Android as a single hub for nearly all your webmail accounts.
Internet Explorer, which not long ago totally dominated the browser market, has been eclipsed in recent years by Google Chrome, according to stats compiled by Dadaviz.
Back in those early days MaidSafe was not creating a crypto-currency and instead focusing mostly on distributed storage. Much has changed since then and there are many great things that MaidSafe is doing. Today I would like to offer my opinions on th
The nonprofit WiderNet Project turns to Indiegogo with its eGranary Pocket Library that helps connect people living outside of the Internet's reach.
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Three U.S. Federal Trade Commission members said on Wednesday they regretted the inadvertent release of part of an agency report about its probe of Google Inc as the company continues to face antitrust scrutiny from European authorities.
Rep. Louie Gohmert lashes out oveCongressional Republicans are united in their anger over new net neutrality regulations--but no one could match the fury displayed by Rep. Louie Gohmert on Wednesday.r net neutrality regulations.
?On March 10, Wikipedia took a stand for its users, in particular its anonymous volunteers, and sued the NSA, accusing it of mass surveillance.
Google may have gotten a pass in the US a few years ago from the Federal Trade Commission, which decided not to sue the search giant for alleged anticompetitive practices, but the company may not be so lucky in Europe.
The first legal shots have been fired in the battle over Internet regulation.
Google has backed off its original "open" stance on Android. And it's all because apps are replacing the web on mobile devices. Google got mobile carriers on board by promising them that the project would remain open.
The broadcast data startup, Outernet, has installed CubeSat facility in Kenya to transmit free internet to any Wi-Fi enabled device.
Cuba is using the internet to experiment with toning down its political censorship in a sign that a glimmer of glasnost has arrived on the Communist-run Caribbean island.