Activists Fly Airship over the NSA's Data Center
In protest of the NSA's massive spying operations, three activist groups flew an airship over the agency's new data center.
Baseball Had Radio; In the U.S., Soccer Has Twitter
In the same way radio revolutionized baseball's fan base, Twitter is transforming how people consume soccer.
Google Unveils Android 'Smartwatch'
"It is finally possible" said Singleton, to make a powerful computer you can "wear on your body all the time."
Mayday PAC: The Super PAC Built to Destroy Super PACs
Harvard law professor Lawrence Lessig's political money machine looks to Silicon Valley to save American politics
Amazon's new smartphone engineered to sell products
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos debuted the company's new smartphone in Seattle.
Amazon Shows Off Its First Smartphone
The company's only hint about what the phone may feature was a children's book, mailed to attendees of today's event
Closure for a New York Bar Forever Tied to 9/11
After 9/11, a home from home for firefighters and bagpipers—now a beloved bar has served its last drink
Hackers Try to Extort Domino's Over Stolen Data
The hackers wrote they would publish the customers' information, including "favorite pizza topping" if they aren't paid
Thinking Through the Turing Test
A computer program tricked a third of people into thinking it was an English-challenged person, but that's not the same as thinking
Netflix Refuses to Back Down in Battle With Verizon
The Internet provider demanded that Netflix stop displaying a message about slow speeds, but Netflix has declined
The Fight to Find John Wilkes Booth's Diary in a Forgotten Subway Tunnel
Clues about a stunning twist in the plot to kill Abraham Lincoln may be hidden in a forgotten subway tunnel
How Much Did Snowden Take? Not Even the NSA Really Knows
More than a year after Snowden walked off with a massive trove of top secret documents, the U.S. intelligence community still doesn't know what he has
A Year After Snowden's Leaks, Journalism Adapts
Journalists are learning to work with security professionals, and to protect their sources at a very early stage
America's Invisible Trolley System
Light rail projects in the U.S. are being killed by greed, prejudice and a misguided obsession with cars
Apple's Show and Tell: Five Takeaways
Apple announces tweaks and updates, but no big bombshells
Video Spurs More Controversy at September 11 Memorial & Museum
Since its opening on March 24, the museum has struggled to find the proper language and tone to express the September 11 attacks
That'll Be 0.12 Bitcoins
Frustrated by credit card fees, merchants on Cleveland's Bitcoin Boulevard welcome the digital currency
Who Is—and Isn't—Fighting for Net Neutrality
Small tech companies join Google, Facebook and Netflix to oppose "new tolls" on the web, but where is Apple?
Watch a Live View of Earth From the International Space Station
NASA is now streaming live high-definition footage of the Blue Marble
What the Supreme Court Doesn't Know About Smartphones Could Put You in Jail
"What if the person had on his person a compact disk?" Justice Samuel Alito asked at one point
Mind the Gap: The World's 'Digital Divide' Is Not Closing Anytime Soon
Internet access is great for your economy if you have it, but much of the world is falling behind
Go East, Young Renters
The rapid and sometimes ruthless gentrification of San Francisco threatens to kill the neighborhoods that made it The City
NSA-Leaker Snowden Shares 'Truth-Telling' Award With Journalist Who Helped Him
The whistleblower racks up another award along with a woman too often overlooked in the reports based on his information
Turkey Attacks Twitter and the Robot Lobby
Protesters have already begun graffiting unblocked DNS addresses around the city
Edward Snowden Talks About Fighting for Your Right to Privacy at SXSW
"I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution," the former intelligence contractor turned leaker said
The War Brewing in the Streets of San Francisco
The displacement of longtime residents in the city is being drive by a small group of landowners and maybe a single company
For Syria, Surveillance Trumps Censorship
The Assad regime lets users access Facebook so it can snoop on private messages
NASA Finds Hundreds More Planets
Several fall in the distance from their stars that might support life
Nary a Drop to Drink
The chemical spill in West Virginia poisoned the water, and may have poisoned the state's trust in the industries that have sustained and plundered it