Tellingly, the fact that the scary sounding group doesn't exist didn't stop a right-wing site from pushing the tall tale; a tale that quickly ricocheted across the conservative media landscape and was touted as a deeply troubling development.
These three mobile apps work to bring the power of your social networks to the real world, helping you come face to face and get a chance to experience what you've been seeing on your screen all along.
Who's ready for more ads on Twitter? Today Twitter officially launched an "Ads API," which it says it's been testing with partners since January.
In the past five years, many institutions and hubs throughout Africa have been established to facilitate technological innovation and development, but many of these institutions and hubs should do more to increase the participation of women and girl techpreneurs.
I am going to show you how one GE exec (at GE HealthCare Hungary) figured out how to instill a sense of creative freedom among the employees that led to a real burst in innovation.
In social media, we see people -- entrepreneurs, activists, disruptive thinkers, politicians, educators, journalists -- with content that is informational, inspirational, even aspirational.
Want entertainment? Instead of reaching for your CDs or even your hard drive -- you rent the musical experience from the cloud from any number of providers: Spotify, Pandora and others with varying business models, but all you require for any of them is a credit card and password.
Israel, affectionately known as Silicon Wadi, has become the second most important technology center in the world.
Schools that implement a serious video strategy tend to see rewarding results, from improving learning to increasing access to and quality of knowledge in the classroom, on campus and beyond, as well as more engaged students and faculty.
Is a cat the best decision for a Monopoly game piece? And thinking more broadly about crowds and commerce, when does it make sense and when does it NOT make sense to cast a wide net for input into business decisions?
Go out and join the fight for privacy; God knows it's one that needs waging. I just don't think fantasizing about anonymity will do us much good.
CES made clear how much our whole notion of what a computer does is changing. Only a few short years ago, we used computers only at our desks. Now there are laptops, netbooks, the Mac Air, Ultrabooks and tablets of all sizes.
Kevin Smith, Jason Mewes, Lisa Kudrow and Burnie Burns sit down for a discussion about the future of web television and how technology is changing the entertainment and media industries.
I work with teachers who don't like to look stupid in front of their class. This makes sense in their subject area. But with technology, if they are avoiding looking stupid by because they don't know how to use it, chances are, they are looking pretty silly to their students already.
Clearly we are living in and through a lot of transitions in our rapidly changing world. Perhaps one of the biggest changes we face is how we learn daily what we need -- and want -- to know and learn about concerning what is going on in the world around us.
As news of major breaches roll in like waves on a storm-eroded beach, the likelihood increases that the next war we fight will be waged on computers aimed at crippling the systems that keep the wheels of government and daily life turning.
We have been conditioned to accept privacy abuses as the price of using the Internet. These abuses generally involve having our search engine send us "better" ads, which most of us believe cannot be too dangerous.
The idea of driverless cars may seem like a sci-fi fantasy now, but they are already being tested and driven. And they work, so it's already a matter of time before they begin appearing on our roads. But what about road rage?
Are computers becoming independent of the user? In other words, will the virtual machine at some point in time completely control the user or even exempt the user?