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Yahoo shells out $1.1 billion for Tumblr

Michael Liedtke
It's the company's biggest acquisition since it bought the online search engine Overture for $1.3 billion

Doug Henwood: Capitalism thrives on class exploitation

Bhaskar Sunkara
The publisher of "Left Business Observer" talks print media, left regroupment and electoral politics

Will you marry me — once you’re done peeing?

Tracy Clark-Flory
From popping the question while peeing to getting engaged for real estate, some proposals are charmingly unromantic

Pollution as ancient Chinese art

An Xiao
With the help of Photoshop, artist Yao Lu has made shanshui — traditional ink paintings — of China's landfills

New DSM, new debates over ADHD and autism

Natasha Lennard
The ever-controversial manual now is broadening the definition of ADHD, narrowing that of autism

Revenge, ego and the corruption of Wikipedia

Andrew Leonard
The unmasking of a writer who took extraordinary advantage of online anonymity to pursue old vendettas

Photographed secretly at home: Is it art?

Mary Elizabeth Williams
A gallery show features pictures of residents shot through their windows. The subjects are understandably annoyed

Is the IRS “scandal” all hype?

Brad Friedman
Inspector General report finds no evidence Tea Party groups were targeted for political reasons

Mormonism’s most dangerous morality lesson

Joanna Brooks
Elizabeth Smart's ordeal reminds us that church members' self-worth is perilously predicated on sexual purity

A Sports Illustrated model’s bizarre Farrah Abraham rant

Daniel D'Addario
Christine Teigen goes on Twitter jag shaming the "Teen Mom" starlet

Waiting for Terrence Malick

Michael Nordine
The celebrated director is notoriously private. Does it matter that we know so little about him?

Report: Nintendo to fix gay marriage “glitch” in game

Katie McDonough
Reports are circulating that Nintendo will remove a game feature allowing male characters to marry and raise kids

A crusading newspaper takes on the NYPD

Graham Kates
At question is whether cops should release granular crime data

We are all addicts now

Damian Thompson
Even cupcakes and iPhones control us -- social and technological advances stimulate desires and foster addiction

Has the Onion gotten too mean?

Daniel D'Addario
Ex-Onion writer: "I see a cultural cycle of this increasing savagery, and the boundaries are washing away."

Allie Brosh returns to Hyperbole and a Half with comic on depression

Prachi Gupta
After an 18-month hiatus, the cartoonist and blogger returns to share her struggle

Heritage Foundation’s “final straw”

Alex Seitz-Wald
Group's immigration study is "deeply flawed,” "not serious" and a "decline in quality." And that's the GOP talking

Our favorite bits of 1920s slang

Angela Tung
Phrases like French kiss, blind date, sexpert and backseat driver were all coined in the roaring twenties

Twitter’s latest unfunny trend: #killallmen

Mary Elizabeth Williams
A satire turns into a serious conversation -- but mostly it's an excuse for both sexes to be obnoxious

First Western painting of Native Americans discovered at the Vatican

Hrag Vartanian
It's a detail in the Borgia Apartment

Jennifer Rubin is right

Irin Carmon
About one thing! (Still wrong about everything else)

Why did Komen for the Cure give Nancy Brinker a 64 percent raise?

Mary Elizabeth Williams
Komen, already under fire for shrinking contributions for breast cancer research, paid its CEO $684,000 last year

Anonymous takes charge, the Web takes down governments

Nicco Mele
The Internet collective's approach to holding power accountable might suit this moment better than any military

How Facebook could blow it

Andrew Leonard
A pledge to give users the power to block the ads they hate is a promise the social network can't keep
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