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5 votes
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OneWeb set to launch first satellites in quest to provide global internet coverage from space
10 votes -
Microsoft’s HoloLens 2: A $3,500 mixed reality headset for the factory, not the living room
12 votes -
The trauma floor - The secret lives of Facebook moderators in America
17 votes -
Emoji are showing up in court cases exponentially, and courts aren’t prepared
24 votes -
Niantic is tweaking Pokémon Go to settle a US lawsuit with angry homeowners
12 votes -
Where will the materials for our clean energy future come from?
7 votes -
The Verge is sending out copyright strikes to people who criticized their PC build
For those of you not in the loop, the Verge created a PC build guide back in September, and it was...bad, to put it lightly. They took down the original video after a storm of criticism, but this...
For those of you not in the loop, the Verge created a PC build guide back in September, and it was...bad, to put it lightly. They took down the original video after a storm of criticism, but this guy reuploaded it, if you want to see it.
Kyle (aka Bitwit) created a response video to it, which got copyright striked (which is more severe than a claim and has to be done by a human, unlike content ID claims), in addition to ReviewTechUSA. Ironically, the Verge published an article about abuse of the copyright system just 3 days ago (2 days when the videos were taken down yesterday).
The Verge should have taken more responsibility to begin with, now that the dust have settled they seem bent on reminding everyone how bad their video was.
Edit: Bauke pointed out Kyle's video is back up! This is not because the Verge retracted their claim, but because YouTube actually had a human review it and determine it was fair use (which usually isn't the case from what I've heard).
41 votes -
Swiss e-voting trial offers $150,000 in bug bounties to hackers
11 votes -
Why Amazon buying Eero feels so disappointing
10 votes -
‘Fauxtography’ is now a fact of life
9 votes -
Why CAPTCHAs have gotten so difficult
22 votes -
Automated background checks are deciding who's fit for a home
10 votes -
No, Elon, the Navigate on Autopilot feature is not ‘full self-driving’
11 votes -
Machinima, one of YouTube’s biggest and oldest channels, goes dark
12 votes -
Apple launches $129 battery cases for iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR
8 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garage—a system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
Prime and punishment: Dirty dealing in the $175 billion Amazon Marketplace
10 votes -
Tumblr will ban all adult content on December 17th
68 votes -
Time is different now
12 votes -
"The Wandering Earth" could be China’s breakout sci-fi blockbuster film
12 votes -
Walmart-owned Sam’s Club is opening a cashier-less store in Texas
15 votes -
Alienation is the most powerful online brand
10 votes -
The PlayStation 4 fails at handling text strings; can be bricked by receiving messages.
19 votes -
One Night, Hot Springs uses social anxiety to explain what it’s like to be transgender in Japan.
10 votes -
Microsoft now faces a big Windows 10 quality test after botched update
27 votes -
Telltale Games has laid off approximately 90% of their employees, leaving a staff of about twenty-five people
32 votes -
Times Newer Roman is a sneaky font designed to make your essays look longer
11 votes -
Netflix planning live-action Avatar: The Last Airbender with original creators
20 votes -
Tomorrow, the EU will vote on the future of the internet (again)
10 votes -
How Tor.com went from website to publisher of sci-fi’s most innovative stories
17 votes -
Nintendo shuts down the tool behind your favorite Pokémon fan games
15 votes -
How baseball’s tech team built the future of television
6 votes -
Nvidia announces RTX 2000 GPU series with ‘six times more performance’ and ray-tracing
30 votes -
Magic Leap One Creator Edition preview: A flawed glimpse of mixed reality's amazing potential
4 votes -
Scientists put a nuclear waste container through a demanding trip to see if the fuel would break
7 votes -
YouTube deletes Alex Jones' channel for violating its community guidelines
46 votes -
Microsoft will keep classic Skype alive ‘for some time’ after user backlash
7 votes -
Tesla whistleblower countersues over Elon Musk’s ‘defamatory’ statements
5 votes -
Netflix has renewed Altered Carbon for a second season
39 votes -
Virgin Galactic’s spaceplane flew higher than ever before in its third powered flight
3 votes -
Bad romance - To cash in on Kindle Unlimited, a cabal of authors gamed Amazon's algorithm
10 votes -
Steam has updated its built in chat feature
4 votes -
Leaked videos appear to depict Apple’s internal iPhone and Mac repair processes
10 votes -
Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Twitter partner for ambitious new data project
7 votes -
The GameCube controller’s A button subtly taught us how to play
21 votes -
The Twitch streamers who spend years broadcasting to no one
26 votes -
The next generation of VR headsets will connect over a single USB-C cable
9 votes -
How a group of romance writers cashed in on Amazon's Kindle Unlimited
3 votes -
George Hotz is on a hacker crusade against the "scam" of self-driving cars
6 votes