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by Sam Thielman in New York on (#JR0J)
Biderman to step down as CEO of infidelity website as third leak of emails is released and company pledges to restore service to membersThe chief executive of extramarital affairs website Ashley Madison has left the company after a third leak of emails and suggestions that he had affairs despite earlier denials.“Effective today, Noel Biderman, in mutual agreement with the company, is stepping down as Chief Executive Officer of Avid Life Media Inc (ALM) and is no longer with the company,†said an unattributed statement on the Ashley Madison website. “Until the appointment of a new CEO, the company will be led by the existing senior management team.â€
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Technology | The Guardian
Link | https://www.theguardian.com/us/technology |
Feed | http://www.theguardian.com/technology/rss |
Copyright | Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. 2025 |
Updated | 2025-06-27 03:16 |
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by Jessica Elgot on (#JQYK)
One in seven people worldwide used the social network on one day this week, says Mark Zuckerberg. Here is how it has changed our lives – for better or worseOn Monday, one in seven people on Earth used Facebook – 1 billion people, according to founder Mark Zuckerberg. In a decade, the social network has transformed people’s relationships, privacy, their businesses, the news media, helped topple regimes and even changed the meaning of everyday words.“A more open and connected world is a better world. It brings stronger relationships with those you love, a stronger economy with more opportunities, and a stronger society that reflects all of our values,†wrote Zuckerberg in the post announcing the numbers. Continue reading...
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by Jasper Jackson on (#JQSW)
Matt Brittin cites newspapers’ failure to grasp impact internet companies would have on business and says producers should take advantage of web’s growthGoogle’s European boss has warned that the TV industry risks repeating the mistakes of newspapers by trying to “protect the past from the futureâ€.Matt Brittin told the Guardian Edinburgh International Television Festival that the “Edinburgh bubble†and debates over the BBC reminded him of how newspapers failed to grasp how companies like Google would affect their businesses. A former Olympic rower, Brittin had first-hand experience of the internet’s impact on newspapers as an executive at Trinity Mirror before joining Google in 2007. Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#JQRP)
A selection of educationally-focused apps that shows there’s more to iOS and Android for children than gamesThe summer holidays are either over or nearly over depending where your child is in the world. Parents are breathing a sigh of relief at the prospect of making a cup of tea without being screamed at / bundled into / forced to referee an over-aggressive game of split-screen Minecraft.And their children? They’re back at school learning, then coming home every night eager to continue the education on whatever devices at hand. Or, alternatively, to continue eagerly smashing one another’s blocky windows. Continue reading...
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by Jasper Jackson on (#JQGE)
Paul Buccieri, president of US channel, says issue is bigger than ever, with increase in digital making problem more difficult to deal withPiracy is a bigger issue than ever for the TV industry, despite it being talked about less, according to one of the US’s top cable executives.Paul Buccieri, president of US channels A+E and History, told the Guardian Edinburgh International Television Festival that the industry needs to keep up its efforts to tackle people illegally watching content. Continue reading...
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#JQEQ)
It may not live up to financial analysts’ high expectations but sales are six times bigger than nearest competitor making it the best selling smartwatch in historyApple sold 3.6m Watches in the second quarter of this year, but compared to the 40m sales estimates, does that make the company’s first smartwatch a flop?
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by Guardian music on (#JQCK)
The electronic band are translating their striking live 3D and surround sound performances to Blu-Ray formatKraftwerk have confirmed details of a “3D album†– translating their current visual show into a release scheduled for autumn 2015.
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by Francesca Perry on (#JQAH)
What happens when our maps get gamified? A team at Ordnance Survey decided to find out – and created a Minecraft map of Great Britain
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by Samuel Gibbs on (#JQ71)
New iPhones are expected at Apple’s 9 September event, but as the competition improves and phones last longer the next upgrade has its work cut out for itApple is expected to launch a pair of new iPhones at its 9 September event in San Francisco, and along with it a renewed push for its Siri and HomeKit features.But if Apple intends its devices to become the central hubs of people’s connected homes, or even just to persuade customers to upgrade, what does the company need to get right with its iPhone 6s and 6s Plus? Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#JQ3R)
‘It turns out that nearly one in five photos or videos people post aren’t in the square format,’ admits Facebook subsidiary, with eye on video adsInstagram built its community of 300 million users around a simple rule: every photo or video that they shared using its app would be square. Now the Facebook subsidiary is ditching that policy.The app’s latest update introduces portrait and landscape options for both photos and videos, in a move that may be aimed at encouraging more brands to run video advertisements on Instagram. Continue reading...
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by Keith Stuart on (#JPTJ)
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Friday! Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#JNN1)
Social network hit 1bn user milestone on Monday, but Mark Zuckerberg maintains it is still ‘just the beginning of connecting the whole world’As the fictional Sean Parker might put it: ‘A million people logging in to Facebook on a single day isn’t cool. You know what’s cool? A billion people’.The non-fictional Mark Zuckerberg has announced a new milestone for the social network: one billion daily users. Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#JP77)
Twitter’s six-second looping videos app will now help users add music to their clips: but for artists this means promotion not paymentsVine has already been a launchpad to stardom for musicians like Shawn Mendes, whose six-second loops on Twitter’s video-sharing app propelled him to a major record deal, chart-topping sales and a tour with Taylor Swift.Where Mendes and fellow Viners Jack & Jack and Us the Duo have blazed a trail, other musicians are following. Now Vine is making music even more of a priority with new features within its app. Continue reading...
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by Reuters on (#JN99)
The company is widely expected to unveil the iPhone 6S and the iPhone 6 Plus S, and potentially a new version of its Apple TV set-top box and a new iPadApple Inc on Thursday invited journalists to a 9 September event, where it is expected to unveil new iPhones and potentially a new version of its Apple TV set-top box.The email invitation includes a colorful Apple logo with the sentence “Hey Siri, give us a hint,†referring to Apple’s popular digital voice assistant. Continue reading...
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by Juliette Garside on (#JN5M)
Legal action by European commission over shopping price comparison service ‘wrong as matter of fact, law and economics’, says GoogleGoogle has described the European commission’s antitrust case against its search engine business as “wrong as a matter of fact, law and economics†in a lengthy counter submitted to the regulator.The commission’s competition policy chief, Margrethe Vestager, launched a full-scale legal attack on Google in April, accusing the company of abusing its market dominance by systematically favouring its shopping price comparison service. Continue reading...
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by Helienne Lindvall on (#JMPP)
UK performing rights organisation says it has no choice but to sue music site for not paying songwriters royalties after ‘years of unsuccessful negotiations’
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by Ben Beaumont-Thomas on (#JMBR)
Digital composers of the 1990s pushed the console tech far beyond its natural limits to produce warped symphonies that are buried deep in the minds of millions. Now specialist labels are reissuing them on vinylIn an age when even the most obscure subculture is within easy reach, a passion for music can become tinged with one-upmanship. “Have you heard these Levantine recordings from 1906?†“S’OK. I’m more into this Tuareg reimagining of Purple Rain.â€The feverish cratedigging is compounded with the trend for luxurious vinyl releases, to the point where your mantelpiece can end up stuffed with cloth-bound 10-LP boxes of even the most marginal synth-botherer, and your kids are asking why you can’t afford their uni fees. Continue reading...
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by Stuart Dredge on (#JKKR)
Internet retailer will suck up the costs of in-app purchases on customers’ behalf, paying developers $0.002 per minute their apps are usedIn-app purchases may have become the dominant way for developers to make money from charging for their apps, but Amazon’s new app takes a sledgehammer to the model.Well, in a sense. Amazon Underground is an app for Android smartphones that offers a catalogue of apps and games with their in-app purchases all reduced to zero. Users can still “buy†virtual currency and items, but Amazon will pay for them – touting an “actually free†slogan. Continue reading...
by Jack Schofield on (#JKEN)
More than 75m PCs were upgraded to Windows 10 in the first month, and readers still have questions about installation disks, product keys, downgrading and more Continue reading...
by Keith Stuart on (#JK9B)
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Thursday. Still raining. Continue reading...
by Will Coldwell on (#JK16)
The trend for uploading holiday photos on social media has led one travel company to include a personal photographer to document your trip and deliver a daily supply of Instagram-friendly images for you to share onlineIt’s difficult not to feel insecure scrolling through the Instagram feed of El Camino Travel. Svelte, well-dressed travellers dance in front of brightly painted doorways on Latin American streets, plunge into crystal clear waters, and generally look like they’re having a better holiday than you ever will. They’re certainly having a more beautiful one.Still, it’s easier to look good when you’ve got a personal photographer in tow – and El Camino includes a professional snapper as part of the package on its small group tours in Colombia and Nicaragua. The photographer will deliver dozens of images to you each morning that “you can immediately share on social mediaâ€. Launched last year and with tours already sold out for 2015, it’s one of a growing number of travel companies capitalising on the desire among travellers to capture their trip in stunning photographs and, perhaps more significantly, share them online. Continue reading...
by Samuel Gibbs and agencies on (#JG8H)
Autonomous vehicles capable of driving using GPS waypoints or following human-driven vehicles will be part of roadworkers’ fleet
by Stuart Dredge on (#JG7G)
Despite 50m downloads of Angry Birds 2 game, 38% headcount reduction aims to help ‘leaner and more agile’ company recover from over-expansionAngry Birds creator Rovio Entertainment is preparing for another round of layoffs, announcing plans for up to 260 redundancies following the departure of 110 staff in late 2014.The new layoffs will be accompanied by a previously-announced focus on games, media and consumer products, which seemingly spells the end for the company’s efforts in the education sector. Continue reading...
by Stuart Dredge on (#JG5Y)
Online games sites breached UK advertising standards on social responsibility, as well as direct exhortation and parental authority, rules watchdog
by Stuart Dredge on (#JG0V)
Service aims to help Google-owned video streaming company compete for live gaming audience after it failed to buy market leader
by Ben Perkin on (#JFZ3)
From wall runs to underwater shoot-outs, developer Treyarch has sought to up-end the game’s multiplayer experience. Here’s what a pro player makes of the changesTreyarch, the LA-based studio behind the Call of Duty: Black Ops series, first revealed its plans for the third game in the series back in April. At the time, the setup looked like an intriguing extension of the tech-focused Advanced Warfare, with its exoskeletons, directed energy weapons and jet pack manoeuvres. However, Treyarch was promising an even more fluid experience, complete with wall running, underwater fights, and the ability to string together moves into Tony Hawk-like environmental combos.The studio also introduced the idea of Specialist classes, a selection of nine super-powered combat archetypes offering online players access to a range of devastating attacks as well as interesting defensive options. These effects can be earned during a match and then triggered at key moments – just like the eponymous mech suits in Titanfall. Continue reading...
by Keith Stuart on (#JFQB)
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Wednesday. Continue reading...
by Mahita Gajanan in New York on (#JDSZ)
Authorities in Gastonia, North Carolina, have been unable to determine source of photos that have gone viral: ‘We don’t know if someone is playing around’Images of a cloaked figure who reportedly dropped raw meat near an apartment complex in North Carolina last week went viral and frightened local residents enough that police looked into the matter.
by Alison Flood on (#JDM4)
Paula Hawkins’ bestseller leads a crop of psychological thrillers, in a top 20 dominated by womenDark psychological thrillers dominate the list of the year’s bestselling ebooks unveiled by Amazon, with MP Nadine Dorries making it into a line-up composed almost entirely of female writers.The British arm of the online retail giant said that Paula Hawkins’ hit novel The Girl on the Train, a thriller about marriage, murder and alcoholism, was its bestselling ebook of the year to date. Just two of Amazon.co.uk’s bestselling ebooks of 2015 so far are by male writers: Lee Child’s thriller Personal, in 10th place, and David Nicholls’ story of a crumbling marriage, Us, in 12th. Continue reading...
by Sam Thielman in New York on (#JD4H)
Venture capitalists and market analysts warn that Chinese ripple effect could force tech startup ‘unicorns’ to settle for buyouts instead of going publicSilicon Valley startups basking in billion-dollar valuations may face a long-overdue reckoning as a result of the global panic set off by roiling Chinese markets, investors and analysts have warned.
by Dugald Baird on (#JD1K)
Former Top Gear trio ‘won’t be getting mobbed’ in their home country after their move to ‘Amazon Past Their Prime’, claims journalist and ex-CNN presenter
by Shaun Walker in Moscow on (#JCVD)
Court ordered ban on page about charas, an Indian form of hashish, but some Russian users found entire site blocked due to secure https protocolRussian authorities briefly banned the entire Wikipedia site over a page relating to drug use which the site had refused to edit or delete.The ban was quickly lifted on Tuesday, before it had even gone into effect for most Russian internet users but not before the news had created a wave of panic in the country’s online community. There is increasing concern in Russia about a crackdown on internet freedom. Continue reading...
by Keith Stuart on (#JCKB)
The place to talk about games and other things things that matterIt’s Tuesday and it’s raining. Continue reading...
by Staff and agencies on (#JC40)
Plaintiff says Avid Life Media, owner of adultery website, could have taken ‘necessary and reasonable precautions’ to keep customers’ data safeRelated: Toronto police report two suicides associated with Ashley Madison hackThe infidelity website Ashley Madison and its parent company are being sued in US federal court by a man who claims that the companies caused him emotional damage by failing to adequately protect personal and financial information from theft. Continue reading...
by Halima Kazem in San Jose on (#JBNP)
If bill is signed by governor, it will be a trespass violation to fly unmanned aircraft or drones over private property below 350ft without consent of owner or tenantCalifornia lawmakers have sided with privacy advocates to pass a bill that bans drones from flying lower than 350ft (106m) over private property.If the bill is signed by Governor Jerry Brown it will create a no-fly zone and make it a trespass violation for someone to fly an unmanned aircraft or drone over private property below 350ft without the consent of the owner or tenant. Continue reading...
by Adam Alexander in Valletta on (#JA8K)
Joseph Cannataci describes British oversight as ‘a joke’ and says a Geneva convention for the internet is neededThe first UN privacy chief has said the world needs a Geneva convention style law for the internet to safeguard data and combat the threat of massive clandestine digital surveillance.Speaking to the Guardian weeks after his appointment as the UN special rapporteur on privacy, Joseph Cannataci described British surveillance oversight as being “a jokeâ€, and said the situation is worse than anything George Orwell could have foreseen. Continue reading...
by Guardian Staff on (#JAGA)
Toronto police say at least two suicides may be linked to the hacking of infidelity website Ashley Madison which exposed exposed tens of millions of people’s personal information. Bryce Evans, acting staff superintendent, says the reports are still unconfirmed but possibly associated with the leak. Evans also details threatening messages sent to the site’s administrators, including the message ‘Time’s Up’, as the information was released Continue reading...
by Guardian Staff on (#JAF1)
Tech companies valued at £1bn or more, once as rare as unicorns, are increasingly common – raising fears of another dotcom bubbleName: Unicorns.Age: About two. Continue reading...
by Josh Bornstein on (#JA3W)
Businesses have been shedding their identity as employers for at least 30 years, profiting from the work performed by ‘independent contractors’ without the cost, risk or aggravation of actually dealing with employeesWhining about cab drivers transcends national boundaries. From New York to Sydney, the complaints are indistinguishable. Sitting among 450 of the world’s leading labour law scholars at the University of Amsterdam in June, I met a young Belgian scholar who confided that he only used Uber because it provided a superior service. “I never use Belgian cab drivers,†he said. “They are fucking pigs.â€
by Samuel Gibbs on (#J9FV)
Chief executive of Swiss watchmaking group says its smartwatches will last nine months per battery and not collect user dataThe chief executive of watchmaking corporation Swatch has dismissed the Apple Watch as an “interesting toyâ€, as he set out the company’s smartwatch plans.
by Stuart Dredge on (#J99P)
Company blames bad iSight camera component but says that only ‘a small percentage’ of devices are affectedIf you’ve had a run of blurry photos taken with an iPhone 6 Plus smartphone, the problem may not be your photographic skills.Apple has launched a camera replacement programme for the device after a number of owners complained about the quality of photos taken using its iSight camera. Continue reading...
by Guardian Staff on (#J98J)
Group that archives deleted tweets from legislators has its access to social network shut offTwitter has shut off access to 31 accounts that chronicled and archived the deleted tweets of politicians, diplomats and embassies around the world.The move follows the social network’s earlier blocking of Politwoops US, which archived deleted tweets by American lawmakers. Continue reading...
by Keith Stuart on (#J94B)
The place to talk about games and other things that matterIt’s Monday. I’m actually on holiday in Devon, but I will keep Chatterbox going anyway because I am a wonderful person. Continue reading...
by Katharine Murphy and agencies on (#J90Y)
The communications minister maintains earlier figures were known to be unreliable as they were based on inadequate financial informationThe costs of building Australia’s largest infrastructure project, the national broadband network, could rise by as much as $15bn according to a new corporate plan released on Monday.The communications minister, Malcolm Turnbull, acknowledged the forecast costs associated with the project had risen as he released the new corporate plan of the NBN Co – the company overseeing the rollout. Continue reading...
by Patrick Harkin, Chris Dring, Matt Kamen on (#J8Y7)
A revamped classic fails to measure up while a box set brings 30 of Rare’s best titles together – and the latest in a long-running serial cannot fail to please
by Staff and agencies on (#J8H4)
Two men suspected of making social media threats stopped trying to enter competition in Boston, and guns and ammunition susequently foundBoston police have arrested two men heading to the Pokémon world championships after firearms and several hundred rounds of ammunition were allegedly found in their car.The men were originally suspected of making violent social media threats to people attending the gaming event in Boston. Security at the convention reported the threats on Thursday and the suspects were stopped as they were about to enter the gaming event hours later, Boston police said. Continue reading...
by John Naughton on (#J749)
Users complain about load times and third-party scripts, but if ad-blocking continues to rise, what happens to the web’s business model?As you’ve probably heard, the “infidelity†website Ashley Madison (motto: “Life is short. Have an affairâ€) has been hacked and the personal details of its 33 million users have been dumped on the internet, with predictable results. Reckoning that it’s the kind of story that is made for tabloid news outlets, I logged on to Mail Online, and sure enough, they did it proud.Mail Online is one of the world’s most popular news websites and it’s free: no paywall. But my browser has a plug-in program called Ghostery, which will scan any web page you visit and tell you how many “third-party trackers†it has found on it. These are small pieces of code that advertisers and ad-brokers place on pages or in cookies in order to monitor what you’re doing on the web and where you’ve been before hitting the current page. Continue reading...
by Martin Love on (#J6FV)
Driving this extraordinary stripped-back little sports model is like sitting on a rocket. And about as comfortable …Price £27,790
by Stuart Dredge on (#J620)
Last week’s revelations of the lengths Amazon goes to monitor staff come amid growing evidence that thousands of other companies are using technology to check on workersActivity-tracking devices made by companies like Fitbit, Jawbone and Misfit are increasingly popular gadget purchases, but they’re also making their way into the workplace: research firm Gartner estimates that 10,000 companies offered activity-trackers to staff in 2014. Their motivation is being questioned, however: will your boss have access to the data from these devices? (Imagine your annual review including criticism of your sofa-loafing nature at weekends). And will they share it with advertisers or insurance companies? Continue reading...
by Sam Thielman on (#J4RG)
A Microsoft product called Yammer was open to anyone who’d ever been a contractor or an employee at the Department of Veterans AffairsA chat network used by staff at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) was a major security risk and open to anyone who had ever been a contractor or an employee at the VA, an internal investigation found.According to the VA’s Office of the Inspector General the chat software, a Microsoft product called Yammer, “did not have an administrator or system set in place to ensure removal of former VA or contractor employeesâ€. Only an administrator could remove an employee from the system, so everyone who had ever logged maintained access to the service.