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added: Sun, 11th September 2005 | 370 views | 0x in favourites
feed url: http://wired.com/news/feeds/rss2/0,2610,4,00.xml
Wired News, a pioneer in online journalism, has been at the forefront of daily technology news coverage since its launch in 1996. The site\'s mission is to provide an original, lively and timely chronicle of how technology affects our lives, for better or worse.
President Bush signs legislation Monday creating a copyright czar, a cabinet-level position on par with the U.S. drug czar. Here's your chance to nominate who you think should assume the newly created post.
No outsider spends more time tracking the labyrinthine ways of the National Security Agency than James Bamford. But despite three books on the U.S. government's super-secret, signals-intelligence service, even he gets lost in the maze.
Until Monday, the U.K.-based spam fighters at Spamhaus had an extensive profile of "Master Splynter," the assumed identity of the FBI agent who took over the cybercrime trading post DarkMarket. Was it all part of a cunning plan to establish a back story for a crime lord who never existed?
Legislation dreamed up by MySpace and authored by John McCain requires registered sex offenders to report their e-mail addresses to a national database available to social networking sites. Pedophiles are quaking in their boots.
Repeatedly stung by copyright law, the McCain campaign petitions YouTube to revamp its DMCA take-down policy, urging the site to consider fair-use rights before removing McCain campaign videos.
Last fall, Danger Room's Sharon Weinberger agreed to be a guinea pig in a demonstration of the Pentagon's controversial "pain ray." She was told the weapon was safe. But newly-obtained information shows that the pain ray's operators were dangerously undertrained -- exposing test subjects "to unconscionable risks."
A report out Monday says Google is profiting by generating ad revenue from so-called typo-squatting websites. Such websites usually have one letter different from the URL of the original, trademarked site.
President Bush signs legislation Monday creating a cabinet-level copyright czar on par with the U.S. drug czar.
For two years a site that provided one-stop shopping for credit card swindlers, hackers and identity thieves around the world was run by an FBI agent in Pittsburgh, FBI documents reveal. Let the arrests begin.
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