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Showing posts from July, 2018

Seattle judge blocks release of 3D Printed gun files

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If at first you don't succeed, .Net, .Net, .Net again. Microsoft released 30 new, separately identified .Net patches yesterday. Win 10 still broken.

Facebook Has Identified Ongoing Political Influence Campaign

Taxi strike targeting Uber brings chaos to Spanish cities

Don’t try to rejuvenate your vagina, FDA warns after scolding companies

Wikipedia picture of the day on August 1, 2018: Chapel at the...

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Michigan governor announces new high school curriculum focused on automotive cybersecurity

Ex-SolarCity employees: we were fired after reporting millions in fake sales

Amazon dark patterns

An Amazon staffer is posting YouTube videos of herself living in a warehouse parking lot after an accident at work.

Ex-SolarCity employees: we were fired after reporting millions in fake sales

Some Amazon Reviews Are Too Good To Be Believed. They're Paid For

Why New York Kicked the Country's Second-Biggest Cable Company Out of the State: 'New York State regulators say they are fed up by Charter Spectrum Cable's empty promises, poor service, and misleading claims.'

New video by The King of Random on YouTube

Why are Americans second-class citizens as compared to Europeans when it comes to digital privacy?

All-electric Porsche Taycan will boast 600 HP and 500 km (310 miles) of battery range - Porsche has also partnered with Daimler, VW, Ford and BMW on the Ionity Charging Network, which will see 350 kWh charge points installed every 100-150 km (62-93 Miles) along European roadways

Steve Jobs' former ad man says Tim Cook is getting 'vanilla' advice, and it's making Apple bland

Voting systems in Wisconsin, a key swing state, can be hacked, security experts warn

Uber’s self-driving trucks division is dead

Firefox is getting a new logo, and Mozilla wants to hear what users think

Logitech is acquiring Blue Microphones for $117 million in cash

T-Mobile signs $3.5 billion deal with Nokia for 5G technology

New York state commission moves to kick Spectrum out over consumer complaints

Fake news 'crowding out' real news

Wikipedia picture of the day on July 31, 2018: A Kamchatka Brown...

The $120-billion reason we can’t expect Facebook to police itself - Wall Street just showed us why it’s ridiculous to expect Facebook and Twitter to self-regulate.

What happens when you let computers optimize floorplans

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Comcast installed Wi-Fi gear without approval—and this city is not happy

Cord Cutting Accelerates Faster Than Expected, As Cable Still Refuses To Compete On Price

Comcast could lose as many as 430,000 video subscribers in 2018, analyst says

John Oliver Calls Facebook 'History's Most Profitable Data-Harvesting Machine'

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Accidents at Amazon: workers left to suffer after warehouse injuries - Guardian investigation reveals numerous cases of Amazon workers being treated in ways that leave them homeless, unable to work or bereft of income after workplace accidents

What We Have Now Is Not Advertising

America spends over $20bn per year on fossil fuel subsidies. Abolish them - While we need to leave fossil fuels in the ground, America is giving the fossil fuel industry billions to extract more

How to Make Sure You're Getting the Internet Speeds You're Paying For

TSA is tracking regular travelers like terrorists in secret surveillance program

A New Broadband Network Is Pitching Surveillance Enhancements to Cops Across the Country

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Sweden to reach its 2030 renewable energy target this year

‪Autodesk discontinues Mac support of ‬ ‪Alias and VRED due to Apple’s OpenGL deprecation in macOS Mojave

U.S. confirms it provides armed drones to Niger.

How Cloudflare Uses Lava Lamps to Guard Against Hackers

Here’s why Facebook suspended Alex Jones but not Infowars

Verizon’s new ‘Safe Wi-Fi’ is a VPN that blocks ad tracking for $3.99 a month

Big tech warns of 'Japan's millennium bug' ahead of Akihito's abdication | Technology

TSA is tracking regular travelers like terrorists in secret surveillance program, The teams document whether passengers fidget, use a computer, have a “jump” in their Adam’s apple or a “cold penetrating stare,” among other behaviors.