Showing results for: user (page 105)
The delicate art of the corporate apology ad
Daniel D'Addario
Lately, brands are making like Paula Deen and publicly apologizing for their missteps. But they walk a fine line
Bank of America Twitter bot trolls Occupiers
Gaby Dunn
An automated Help account responds to criticism of the bank's foreclosure policies in the most grating way possible
Sheldon Adelson finds a new nemesis: Online poker
Alex Seitz-Wald
The casino mogul says his new fight against Internet gambling is a moral one, but others see "naked self-interest"
City living breeds creative genius
Randy Rieland
New research suggests that productivity and innovation in urban areas grow at roughly the same rate as population
AdBlock Plus lets some advertisers pay to play
Andrew Leonard
The hugely popular browser extension charges a fee from big advertisers such as Google to let some ads go through
Waze could spark Israeli Internet growth
Associated Press
The company's billion-dollar sale has caught the attention of web innovators across the world
Hackers sabotage Jay-Z’s android app
Fidel Martinez
The mogul-rapper can now add at least one more to his list of 99 problems
What comes after Bitcoin?
Kyle Chayka
The digital currency may have been the first to go mainstream, but it certainly won't be the last
Mitch McConnell is “hip” now!
Alex Seitz-Wald
A wacky Web video is just part of the minority leader's new effort to win the Internet and prove he's "with it"
Female astronauts wear bras, says an astronaut
Katie McDonough
Yet another question about the known universe has been answered!
Report: Computer user believed to be Adam Lanza discovered
Alex Halperin
He had a "fetish" for a certain type of bullet and obsessively corrected Wikipedia articles about killers
Please stop the bogus tech nostalgia eulogies
Andrew Leonard
Here's what all the silly weeping over Google Reader and AltaVista really means: We miss being young and in love
Why is Twitter so awful on Sundays?
Daniel D'Addario
Tweets about Sunday TV have taken on their own form of humor -- fun if you're watching, obnoxious if you're not
App of the Week: Duck Duck Go
Andrew Leonard
The privacy-friendly search engine comes to iOS -- and brings some reading material along with it
“God is a delusion”: I was a Pentecostal preacher — until I lost my faith
Jerry DeWitt, Ethan Brown
I was a Pentecostal preacher for decades. When I lost faith, I thought I'd lose everything -- but atheism saved me
Snowden screen name said leakers “should be shot”
Alex Halperin
His amnesty application to Ecuador may also take months
Is this the end of hockey fights?
Eli Epstein
The NHL may tighten restrictions on in-game fisticuffs, but it'll face stern resistance from violence-loving fans
Home on the range — in New York City
Daniel Krieger
Even in America’s least gun-friendly city, a small but steadfast group insists on staying locked and loaded
James Gandolfini and the rush to the first tweet
Daniel D'Addario
Why we're all afraid of remaining silent on the subject of a tragic celebrity death -- and why we should take a day
Facebook security chief joined NSA in 2010
Natasha Lennard
Max Kelly's career exemplifies the tangled cyberpower nexus upholding our surveillance state
Paula Deen’s racism goes viral with #PaulasBestDishes
Prachi Gupta
Perhaps the celebrity chef, who reportedly uses the N-word liberally, would like to chill some "Lynchin' Lemonade"
Popularity boost for search engines outside NSA dragnets
Natasha Lennard
DuckDuckGo, among others, is benefiting from never tracking user data in the first place
Google to the NSA: Don’t be evil
Andrew Leonard
Citing the First Amendment, the search giant files a court challenge to the government's surveillance gag orders
Now the dead can send Facebook messages too
Marc Ellison
A new app lets users record video messages that are released to friends and family postmortem
Page: 105