software
The Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) is perceived as such a threat to liberty that one or its leading proponents has withdrawn support.
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It's true, apparently, that criminals - especially arsonists - often return to the scene of their crime, as do IED bomb makers in the Middle East.
China's ordering bars, cafes and other places offering free Wifi access to monitor their customers' online activities, according to state media.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) is now rolling out new software nationwide that gives far less revealing body scanner images.
IBM researchers have for the first time found a way of enabling phase-change memory to store data for longer, opening the way for low-cost, faster and more reliable memory applications.
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has caved in to public outcry about its intrusive body scanners, and developed new software that affords paseengers a little more privacy.
The world's greatest user of pirated software, China, has announced it is to crack down on piracy by ensuring that all government offices are using legitimate software.
It seems that no one is immune to patent law. And as a recent intellectual property (IP) suit alleges, the CIA’s unmanned drones that operate all over the world could very well be acting in violation of US legislation.
A ruling by a federal appeals court could mean a ban on sales of second-hand software - and even of second-hand books and music.
Google says the massive furore over Wifi snooping by Street View cars was all the fault of one software engineer.
Four out of five children can't tell when an adult is posing as a child online, according to software developers working to track pedophiles online.
Apparently speed does matter. And that is why Mozilla's next-gen Firefox browser will be taking on Google's blazingly fast Chrome with a "super-duper" JägerMonkey JavaScript engine.
The first generation of iPad apps has some pretty serious usability problems, according to a report from the Norman Nielsen Group.
No, Apple's nascent Gianduia platform will not kill Flash for the masses. That is what HTML5 is for - at least according to Steve Jobs.
Google has updated its sophisticated text translation software for Android-based smartphones.



















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