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4 insane ways Google has been invading our privacy

Steven Rosenfeld
It's even worse than you thought...

Richard Sherman shuts down Twitter troll with one simple response

Prachi Gupta
Someone hurled insults at the NFL player, but he responded with a smile

4 ways Google is destroying privacy and collecting your data

Steven Rosenfeld
Google Street View wasn't only taking photographs, and your Android phone can do a lot more than make calls

Facebook’s fatal weakness: Why the social network is losing to Amazon, Apple & Google

Andrew Leonard
Ten years in, Facebook has its eye on world domination, but one tricky hurdle stands in the way: People hate it

How breaking news is breaking us: The rush to report Philip Seymour Hoffman’s death

Stacia L. Brown
News of a celebrity's death can now spread across Twitter before the family's informed. That doesn't mean it should

30 amazing Beatles covers you need to hear

Noah Berlatsky
When you want exciting reinterpretations of the Fab Four's hits, here's your playlist

What makes Rupert Murdoch tick? The science behind media greed

Gautam Shroff
Murdoch's paper hacked phones. But why? How the lust for advertising pay-dirt drives media companies to madness

The end of “revenge porn”: Legal challenges mean consequences for creeps

Mary Elizabeth Williams
Another state moves to make Hunter Moore's favorite entertainment illegal

Aaron Swartz: The painful saga of a rebel genius

Andrew O'Hehir
A new documentary asks whether the legendary coder-turned-activist was the target of political persecution

Play Angry Birds, give data to the NSA

Natasha Lennard
Documents provided by Snowden show how spy agencies use commercial data from "leaky" apps

Paul Ryan is wrong: Wealthiest Americans are not “makers,” they’re mercenary takers

Paul Buchheit
Richest Americans are takers: Only place money is trickling from these job-creating "makers" is in their pockets

Champagne for shams: The insane opulence of tech bubbles

Eric Bovim
At the height of the dot-com boom, lavish parties were in greater supply than killer ideas. Is history repeating?

What reviewers said about the first Mac when it debuted 30 years ago

Joseph Stromberg
They nitpicked the hardware, but critics appreciated the features that would redefine personal computing

“I feel like I was set up to fail”: Inside a for-profit college nightmare

Adam Rust
Some schools feast on federal aid and don't care if the student can repay it. Here's one woman's tragic story

America’s top computer scientists rebuke mass surveillance

Kelsey D. Atherton
Open letter defends personal privacy, says mass data collection invites many types of abuse.

4 nations under scrutiny in Human Rights Watch’s annual report

Sarah Wolfe
Yes, the US is one of them

Big Brother on your iPad: The video game that’s taking on the surveillance state

Steve Haske
"République's" creator hopes the game makes people think about the ways their privacy's being invaded every day

Experts: Healthcare.gov still dangerously easy to hack

Tim Sampson
One such vulnerability exposes users' personal information, including full names and email addresses

Google just moved into your house

Andrew Leonard
The search giant buys Nest, a startup that makes "smart" thermostats and smoke alarms. So why are people nervous?

Obama weighs NSA reform, but our surveillance state is going nowhere

Natasha Lennard
Reading too much into the anticipated reform misses the extent of the surveillance state and war on whistle-blowers

The silver lining of NSA surveillance

Andrew Leonard
The dangers of trusting Facebook and Google to protect our privacy could not have been made any clearer

How college pricing is just like holiday retail sales

Marian Wang
Both offer "carefully engineered illusions" of affordability

Facebook is reading your private messages, new lawsuit alleges

Tim Sampson
"Contrary to its representations, 'private' Facebook messages are systematically intercepted by the company"

One code to rule them all: How big data could help the 1 percent and hurt the little guy

Andrew Leonard
Computer algorithms could run business, law enforcement and more. But what happens when they get it wrong?
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