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13 votes
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A tiny screw shows why iPhones won’t be ‘assembled in USA’
15 votes -
Google asks Supreme Court to overrule disastrous ruling on API copyrights
16 votes -
Fake news is more likely to be shared by older people — but we don't know why
19 votes -
Stop trusting viral videos
16 votes -
State official went roaming around Vermont to test cell coverage claims
4 votes -
These are all the federal HTTPS websites that’ll expire soon because of the US government shutdown
8 votes -
Slack is banning users who have visited US-sanctioned countries (including Iran and Cuba) while using its app
20 votes -
The FBI has seized the domains of fifteen DDoS-for-hire services, and filed criminal charges against three people associated with them
10 votes -
German cybersecurity chief: Anyone have any evidence of Huawei naughtiness? We won't be having a word with local firms until then
11 votes -
Apple computers used to be built in the US. It was a mess.
11 votes -
How does the USA have jurisdiction over Huawei's alleged sales to Iran?
It took a while for this to sink in, since the arrest of Huawei's Chief Financial Controller a few days ago, but... How does the USA have jurisdiction over Huawei's alleged sales to Iran? Huawei...
It took a while for this to sink in, since the arrest of Huawei's Chief Financial Controller a few days ago, but...
How does the USA have jurisdiction over Huawei's alleged sales to Iran?
Huawei is a Chinese company, not an American company. Sure, the USA has imposed sanctions on trading with Iran - but surely those sanctions would apply only to American companies. How does the U.S. government have jurisdiction over what a Chinese company does?
11 votes -
We finally talked to an actual Waymo passenger—here’s what he told us
11 votes -
Instacart and Amazon-owned Whole Foods are parting ways
6 votes -
After audit, no Chinese surveillance implants in Supermicro boards found
10 votes -
Looking to cancel Amazon Prime for ethical reasons (and quality decline) - what are my alternatives for online shopping?
For the past few years, I've grown more and more uneasy with Amazon's business practices. I think it's time to move on. Not to mention the declining quality in products since international...
For the past few years, I've grown more and more uneasy with Amazon's business practices. I think it's time to move on. Not to mention the declining quality in products since international shippers were added (as discussed in the podcast Reply All).
I'm addicted to the convenience of 2 day shipping, even though we use Amazon less and less, I like knowing I have that option.
I've been considering a Costco membership instead - how does their online shopping and shipping times/prices compare?
I've also considered using Jet more but I don't know much about their ethics, does anyone?
Open to other alternatives and discussion about business ethics here.
33 votes -
Google CEO Sundar Pichai testifies before the House Judiciary Committee on Data Collection
15 votes -
Project Code Rush - The beginnings of Netscape/Mozilla
19 votes -
Canada arrests Huawei CFO. She faces US extradition for allegedly violating Iran sanctions
14 votes -
Marriott admits hackers stole data on 500 million guests; passports and credit card info included
21 votes -
Sheryl Sandberg asked Facebook staff to research George Soros
12 votes -
How I changed the law with a GitHub pull request
20 votes -
Natalie Wynn: The stylish socialist who is trying to save YouTube from alt-right domination
32 votes -
The Snowden Legacy, part one: What’s changed, really?
11 votes -
Robot-soldiers, stealth jets and drone armies: the future of war
8 votes -
Delay, deny and deflect: How Facebook’s leaders fought through crisis
16 votes -
Facebook reportedly discredited critics by linking them to George Soros
19 votes -
Amazon selects New York City and Northern Virginia for new HQ2 locations
20 votes -
Jeff Bezos is wrong, tech workers are not bullies
9 votes -
Homeland Security fell for YouTube videos about ‘Antifa Civil War’
9 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission Republican claims municipal broadband is threat to First Amendment
12 votes -
Pentagon working on tech to identify protestors with bad/non-existent opsec
19 votes -
Gab's demise is just the beginning of a horrific new era of far-right extremism
12 votes -
Facebook's "paid for by" disclosure for political ads is easily manipulated and rarely verified
12 votes -
Walmart-owned Sam’s Club is opening a cashier-less store in Texas
15 votes -
Cellphone unlocking, jailbreaking and repairing now legal in US
43 votes -
Wisconsin’s $4.1 billion Foxconn factory boondoggle
12 votes -
Why the NSA called me after midnight and requested my source code
38 votes -
China suggests Trump 'can use Huawei' after iPhone tapping report
9 votes -
I bought used voting machines on eBay for $100 apiece. What I found was alarming.
26 votes -
It started as an online gaming prank. Then it turned deadly - the story of the "swatting" that killed Andrew Finch
18 votes -
Antiwar movement spreads among tech workers
10 votes -
Apple CEO Tim Cook is calling for Bloomberg to retract its Chinese spy chip story
13 votes -
Foreign disinformation is killing Americans
9 votes -
Facebook to ban misinformation on voting in upcoming U.S. elections
10 votes -
Pinboard on Twitter: Palmer Luckey has made the maximum legal donation this year to Steve King, the nation's most openly white supremacist congressman.
@pinboard: Palmer Luckey has made the maximum legal donation this year to Steve King, the nation's most openly white supremacist congressman.
25 votes -
Thirty-five US states tell the Federal Communications Commission to get off its ass and do something about spoofed robocalls
6 votes -
DOJ demands Facebook information from 'anti-administration activists'
17 votes -
Weak default passwords for internet-connected devices banned in California from 2020
19 votes -
The Army may have found its next rifle in a Colorado garage
18 votes