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PC Magazine July 11, 2007 Cyrus Farivar |
Closing the Loopholes on Data Theft Millions have had personal data, including credit card numbers, stolen this year. Congress is seeking to pass a stricter, nationwide law.  |
PC Magazine July 11, 2007 Dan Costa |
Six Tech-Savvy Things the Next President Should Promise Technologically savvy campaigns are one thing, but we also need candidates who themselves understand how this stuff works.  |
InternetNews July 10, 2007 Roy Mark |
Google Prepping National Wireless Broadband Entry? FCC chairman's proposed spectrum auction rules could pave the way for Google to challenge incumbent wireless carriers.  |
InternetNews July 9, 2007 Erin Joyce |
Webcasters Running Out of Time? The Washington saga over Internet radio royalty rates will reach a crescendo this week with the new fees set to take effect on Sunday. Webcasters say the hike in royalties will wreck the industry.  |
ifeminists July 8, 2007 Stephen Baskerville |
Welfare and the "Road to Serfdom" As conservatives congratulate themselves on ten years of welfare reform, they need to start looking at the larger picture and all that was left undone.  |
Home Theater July 6, 2007 |
Verizon Dodges FCC CableCARD Rules Starting on July 1, all non-broadcast television providers are required under federal law to support the CableCARD standard and storebought cable boxes - with very few exceptions. One of those exceptions is Verizon.  |
InternetNews July 5, 2007 Roy Mark |
Broadband Growth Slowing in U.S. Latest Pew report shows 47 percent of American consumers have a high-speed Internet connections.  |
Smithsonian July 2007 Marina Koestler |
Goodbye My Coney Island? A new development plan may alter the face of New York's famous amusement park.  |
ifeminists July 3, 2007 Fima Fimovitch |
Simple Math and Legal System Current child porn laws are very dangerous, and impact on everything. They represent a serious threat to the nation's economy.  |
InternetNews July 3, 2007 Stuart J. Johnston |
Massachusetts to OK Microsoft OpenXML Formats Massachusetts' Information Technology Division published its proposal mandating the use of open formats for all public documents, and included Microsoft's Office Open XML on the list as well as the OpenDocument Format.  |
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