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by Alan Travis Home affairs editor on (#A9CJ)
Exclusive: UK privacy campaigners say international treaty could provide legal alternative to government’s ‘snooper’s charter’ proposals Continue reading...
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| Link | http://feeds.theguardian.com/ |
| Feed | http://feeds.theguardian.com/theguardian/technology/rss |
| Updated | 2026-07-02 19:45 |
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by Hannah Jane Parkinson on (#A933)
Artificial intelligence technology Im2Calories aims to identify pictures of food posted to Instagram, and tell users the calorie count of their meals Continue reading...
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by Alex Hern on (#A8WV)
New malware ‘Tox’ lets would-be hackers create their own ransomware at will
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by Associated Press in Washington on (#A8VE)
The planes, which are equipped with video and cellphone technology at times, are being managed behind fake companies to mask government involvement Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#A8S5)
Workers treated at the scene in North Carolina by paramedics before being taken to hospital after exposure to noxious fumes
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by Hannah Jane Parkinson on (#A8S7)
Former Olympian and reality TV star, previously known as Bruce Jenner, takes just four hours to reach one million followers, becoming the fastest everFormer Olympic decathlon gold-medallist Caitlyn Jenner, previously known as Bruce Jenner, has smashed another world record by becoming the fastest person on Twitter to reach one million followers.Jenner took just four hours (and three minutes) to reach the milestone, usurping US president Barack Obama who broke the record just two weeks ago with his new @POTUS Twitter handle.pic.twitter.com/X7FvYrEH2DI'm so happy after such a long struggle to be living my true self. Welcome to the world Caitlyn. Can't wait for you to get to know her/me. Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#A8M5)
‘One of the hardest things to do is scaling openness, whether you run an internet platform or whether you run a country,’ claims Robert Kyncl• Interview part one: mobile, virtual reality and musicWith more than one billion monthly viewers, YouTube is the biggest online video service – but in 2015, there are plenty of companies hoping to take a bite out of it.Videos uploaded directly to Facebook are currently being watched more than 3bn times a day; startup Vessel is offering big YouTube stars more money if they give it three-day exclusivity on new videos; and Snapchat and Spotify have both expanded into video.Related: Snapchat adds entertainment and news with DiscoverRelated: Vessel founder: ‘Companies realise it’s a chance to redefine the next generation of TV’Related: PewDiePie, Zoella and who else? What the UK watched on YouTube in 2014Related: YouTube and Google win lawsuit in free speech battle over anti-Muslim film Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#A8M7)
Head of content and business operations, Robert Kyncl, also sees potential in virtual reality and subscriptions
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#A8M9)
Fredrik Neij served two-thirds of 10-month prison sentence for copyright infringement but remains defiant over government actionPirate Bay co-founder Fredrik Neij has been released from prison, marking an end to the incarnation of the notorious pirate site’s crew.
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by Alex Hern on (#A8J7)
Video-streaming service’s original series may be trailed before other Netflix shows if tests prove popularNetflix is testing pre-roll trailers before its original shows, according to reports from users.However, the company is keen to emphasise that the trailers, which promote other Netflix original shows, are “not adverts in the traditional senseâ€, according to a statement given to the Verge. The company also reaffirmed its promise to users that third-party adverts will never be shown on the site. Continue reading...
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by Martin Love on (#A8H3)
A big Porsche with decent fuel economy? That sounds as crazy as a pub that doesn’t serve booze… Continue reading...
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by Guardian Staff on (#A8FR)
Featuring customisable worlds and an array of models and mini-figs, Lego’s entry into creative gaming aims to corner market in constructive digital play
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by Guardian music on (#A89K)
Ahead of the launch of Apple’s streaming service, a string of artists have been affiliated with the venture Continue reading...
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by Associated Press on (#A7XD)
In the US in 2014 just 2% of Google’s workers were black people and 3% were Hispanic, and only 18% of technology jobs are held by womenGoogle is largely failing to diversify its workforce beyond white and Asian men even though it hired women to fill one in every five of its openings for computer programmers and other high-paying technology jobs last year.The imbalanced picture emerged in a demographic breakdown that Google released on Monday. The report underscored the challenges that Google and most other major technology companies face as they try to add more women, black people and Hispanics to their payrolls after many years of primarily relying on the technical skills of white and Asian men. Continue reading...
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by Associated Press in Washington on (#A6GS)
The supreme court ruled in favor of Anthony Elonis, who wrote about smothering his ex-wife, but did not set a new standard of proof for lower courts Continue reading...
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by Alex Hern on (#A6CN)
Users of the social network can now opt to encrypt email notifications such as password resets and other confidential informationFacebook is offering users the ability to encrypt password reset emails for the first time, using the popular PGP email encryption standard.Users who want to take advantage of the new security standards can tell Facebook their public key, and the site will then ensure that any sensitive emails that it sends out, such as password resets or other notifications, will be encrypted. The company will also cryptographically sign messages it sends, which allows users to verify that the sender genuinely is Facebook. Continue reading...
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by Rachel Obordo on (#A625)
Have you chucked something in the bin only to realise later that it was a mistake? We’d like to hear from you
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#A61E)
Google’s advanced research arm shows off new projects at I/O developer conference in San Francisco Continue reading...
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by Alex Hern on (#A5XH)
Blockchain has issued an update for the Android version of its bitcoin wallet after discovering a critical failure which breaks the cryptocurrency’s securityBitcoin wallet application Blockchain has rushed to release an update after a critical bug left multiple users unaware that they were sharing a bitcoin wallet, leaving their cryptocurrency completely unsecured.The bug affected users running Blockchain’s app on Android version 4.1 or older, the company says, and it “resulted in one specific address being generated multiple times, leading to a loss of funds for a handful of users.â€I’m just sitting here like â€¼ï¸ at the foolish audacity of acquiring remotely generated entropy for your Bitcoin app over plaintextWallet relied on http://t.co/tbMRgU4EP2, which wasn't random? Just another day in the Bitcoin clown show. https://t.co/3QkFk04qVE Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#A5SW)
MixRadio, Google Photos, Make My Day, Capitals, Geometry Wars 3, Til Morning’s Light, Inbox by Gmail and more Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#A5QS)
Google Photos, MixRadio, Periscope, Inbox by Gmail, Skiing Yeti Mountain, Biz Builder Delux, Lara Croft: Relic Run and more Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#A5QV)
Final version of Windows will be released this summer as a free upgrade for users of Windows 7 or later
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by Keith Stuart on (#A5GG)
The place to talk about games and other things that matter Continue reading...
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by Stuart Richardson on (#A5EC)
(PS4, Xbox One, PC, Bandai Namco, cert: 18, out now) Continue reading...
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by Will Coldwell on (#A5EA)
It’s like the dating app, but for work. But is swiping really the best way to find employment – or dogs, or houses? Continue reading...
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by Rory Summerley on (#A5E9)
(Wii U, Nintendo, cert: 7, out now) Continue reading...
by Patrick Harkin on (#A5EE)
(Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo, cert: E, out now) Continue reading...
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by Associated Press in New York on (#A4SM)
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by Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff on (#A4NQ)
EA Games’ Fifa 16 is to include women for the first time – and it’s not the only recent boost for female football fans Continue reading...
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by Reuters on (#A4C6)
Mystery woman dropped off computer – built by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak in 1976 – after cleaning out garage, Silicon Valley recycling firm saysA $100,000 check is waiting for a mystery woman who donated a rare Apple 1 computer to a Silicon Valley recycling firm.CleanBayArea in Milpitas, California, said on its website that a woman in her 60s dropped off some electronic goods in April, when she was cleaning out the garage after her husband died. Continue reading...
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by Sam Thielman on (#A428)
Because the streaming software is an open-source community project run by a dedicated global collective, free all-the-movies-ever sites will keep popping up Continue reading...
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by Nicky Woolf on (#A3ZX)
Dread Pirate Roberts may have been sentenced to life, but experts and customers say the tide has turned and internet markets for illicit products are here to stay Continue reading...
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by Saeed Kamali Dehghan on (#A3P0)
In Iran, Twitter, YouTube and Facebook are among many sites blocked by the authorities, spurring a generation of young entrepreneurs to invent their own versions. Now, with the prospect of sanctions easing and the world lining up to invest in the tech sector, is all that about to change? Continue reading...
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by Jamie Doward on (#A39Q)
The man behind the dark web’s most notorious black market, is facing a lifetime in jail Continue reading...
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by Amanda Holpuch in New York on (#A2BZ)
Drag queens, transgender people and others part of #MyNameIs coalition will demand removal of fake name reporting option and clearer appeals processDrag queens plan to lead a demonstration outside Facebook’s Silicon Valley headquarters on Monday in response to the company’s “real name†policy.Facebook has repeatedly stated its opposition to anonymous users and has suspended accounts when people do not use their officially recognised names. The policy has incited drag queens, transgender people, Native Americans, domestic violence survivors and others who do not use the names on their birth certificates to come together against the policy as part of the #MyNameIs coalition. Continue reading...
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by Zoe Williams on (#A1ZK)
‘In town, it darts and scuttles like a tiny, exotic insect’ Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#A1PH)
An estimated 36m smartwatches are predicted to be sold by the end of 2015, as more consumers allow smart techonology to grace their wrists
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by Sam Thielman in New York on (#A1CC)
Thirty-one-year-old behind illegal online drug emporium handed five sentences – including two for life – to be served concurrently with no chance of paroleRoss Ulbricht, the man behind illegal online drug emporium Silk Road, was sentenced to life in prison on Friday by Judge Katherine Forrest of Manhattan’s US district court for the southern district of New York.
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by Alan Yuhas in New York on (#A10T)
Fight for the Future provides code to block access from congressional IP addresses amid debate to re-authorize Patriot Act or pass USA Freedom Act Continue reading...
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by Alex Hern on (#A0VR)
Inventor of world wide web also advised developing world to ‘just say no’ to Facebook’s Internet.org schemeTim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the world wide web, has urged Britons to fight the government’s plans to extend the country’s surveillance powers, and act as a worldwide leader for promoting good governance on the web.
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by Robin McKie Science Editor on (#A0SE)
On a spring Sunday in May 250 years ago, the Scottish engineer had a stroke of mechanical inspiration – and changed the world Continue reading...
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by Mary Hamilton on (#A0QX)
EA Sports has spent development time making its Fifa games more inclusive and representational – predictably, there has been an online backlash
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by Anna Dolgov for The Moscow Times, part of the New on (#A0G4)
Lyudmila Savchuk says lawsuit will shed light on secretive practice of paying people to post political comments online. The Moscow Times reports Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#A0E6)
The inventive London-based studio is planning more games and music-industry moves, as well as investment in startups, in a drive to never be second-guessedIn January, creative studio ustwo made a splash by releasing sales figures for its Monument Valley mobile game.The game and its Forgotten Shores expansion had cost $1.4m to make, but more than 2.4m sales generated revenue of nearly $5.9m, while the game scooped sackfuls of awards.Related: The best apps of 2014 for Android, iPhone and iPadRelated: Dice gambles on shaking up gig tickets: 'We're getting rid of the friction' Continue reading...
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by Nicky Woolf on (#A0DZ)
Convicted Silk Road operator asks judge for leniency as prosecutors demand lengthy sentence to set example for would-be deep web entrepreneurs Continue reading...
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by Nick Gillett on (#A0AC)
PS3/4, Xbox One/360; Activision; £19.99 Continue reading...
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by Keith Stuart on (#A0AE)
Soon-to-be-released Hatred has already garnered column inches and been banned from streaming service Twitch. Not bad for a schlock-horror clicheYou have to hand it to Polish studio, Destructive Creations – it set out to build a narrative of controversy and rebellion from the start, and it succeeded. In October 2014, the team released a ludicrous trailer for its isometric third-person shooter, Hatred. A gravel-voiced killer is pictured gathering an arsenal of weapons with which to embark on a murder spree, his motive a hate-filled contempt for society. “This is the time of vengeance and no life is worth saving,†he intones with an aggrandised misanthropy that doesn’t just sidle up to self-parody, but vaults the fence and charges in all guns blazing. And then we see in-game footage, and it’s basically Postal, a 1997 PC game in which the player controls an anonymous character on, yes, a psychopathic murder spree. That’s it. That’s what Hatred offers.From there, the studio garnered a series of PR coups. Game sites rushed to reflect on the “controversy†of the trailer’s content; then the title was briefly removed from Steam Greenlight, essentially the peer review section of the world’s dominant PC games retail platform. Accusations of corporate censorship abounded, and later, Gabe Newell, chief executive of Steam developer Valve, publicly reinstated the title and apologised for its removal.These days, when a lot of games are heading to be polite, colorful, politically correct and trying to be some kind of higher art, rather than just an entertainment – we wanted to create something against trends. Something different, something that could give the player a pure, gaming pleasure. Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#A06F)
Unfixed iOS bug allows booby-trapped messages to break Snapchat text chat and can be sent via Twitter direct messages or mentionsApple’s text messaging bug that can crash iPhones with simple text also affects Twitter and permanently breaks Snapchat text chat.
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by Mark Sweney on (#A027)
Dennis Publishing strikes deal with Mojang, creator of building game, with first print run set for 45,000 copiesThe UK is to get its first magazine dedicated to the hugely popular building-block game Minecraft.Dennis Publishing is to launch a monthly magazine called Minecraft World after striking a deal with Mojang, the creator of Minecraft which was acquired by Microsoft in a $2.5bn deal last year. Continue reading...
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by Keith Stuart on (#9ZYF)
The place to talk about games and other things that matterHey, it’s Friday! Continue reading...
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