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Former fictional radio host Kelsey Grammer has begun using Twitter, and is supposedly hell-bent on correcting the grammar of wayward Twitter users. (article)
I have a totally unscientific theory that as time goes on the odds increase of any (yes, any) given person communicating with me entirely through emoji. (article)
Last week, Facebook announced it had conducted an experiment on some of its users without their knowledge or permission. (article)
Last month, documents surfaced that showed a company called the Internet Research Agency was paying people in Russia to go to an office and post pro-Kremlin comments all day. Alex tal... (article)
The clip above is just a little follow-up to Chris Neary's story last week about how public radio and "NPR" are two very different things. Oregon Public Broadcasting Morning Edition H... (episode)
Playing video games online, you're likely to run into cheaters. Aimbot, wallhacks, NoClip, they can render a server unplayable. However, they're little more than a pain in the ass, an... (article)
France's parliament passed a law this week that's been nicknamed "The Anti-Amazon Law." (article)
How the suppression of a free press in Egypt is reversing the course of the Arab Spring, challenging the conventional wisdom on student debt, a defense of True Crime, and more. (episode)
<p>Mosi Secret is the new "sin and vice" reporter at The New York Times. He explains how his new beat came to be, and the challenges of reporting stories about people on the fringe.</p>
To help sway public opinion, a company called the Internet Research Agency pays people in Russia to go to an office and post pro-Kremlin comments all day. (article)
For years the BSA, a group that represents the intellectual property interests of a number of software companies around the world, has been encouraging people to report their employer... (article)