free speech
3 ResultsSponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
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Download a Free Trial of Diskeeper 2011 EnterpriseServer
Discover the only solution specifically designed for your largest servers, the ones that must be kept online with volumes up to 20TB and millions of fragments. Achieve peak performance 24-7 with...
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Facebook Finally Removes Its Pro-Rape Pages
It took Change.org two months, 186K signatures and a furious Twitter campaign to get pro-rape pages removed from Facebook.
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Another reason for ACTA caution: U.S. rightsholders as government pawns
ACTA negotiations are coming to a close, but even without it, nothing prevents repressive governments from seizing dissident computers on the pretext of infringement on U.S. copyrights. Do we...
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Freedom of expression online: How far should it go?
Freedom of speech and expression in 'real life' if you will is tricky enough as it is, but online there is a severe lack of regulation and moderation at the best of times. How far should it go?
Additional Results
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Free Wi-Fi could boost Ultrabooks in business laptop market
Intel could one-up Apple in the business laptop market thanks to free Wi-Fi on Ultrabooks and tablets.
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Google's search engine results are free speech and I don't care
Think the United States government has a chance in hell of beating Google's legal team? Think again.
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The curse of free cloud services: a cautionary tale
Cloud services have their failings, and I'm not talking about the usual crashes and cyberattacks. No, sometimes the service just goes away.
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Intel pledges conflict-free microprocessor by end of 2013
The company hopes to do away with conflict-tainted tantalum by the end of 2012, with validation for gold, tin and tungsten targeted for late next year.
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Malware charges users for free Android apps on Google Play
Android users are being tricked into paying for free apps. The malware is a new variant of the Android.Opfake family that pushes fake versions of popular Android apps to unsuspecting consumers.
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Trade war: Chinese solar exporters to rebut U.S. tariffs
Chinese solar panels makers are forging alliance to rebuttal the newly imposed punitive tariffs on exports to the US, as the Commerce Department set a new rate of over 30% on May 17.
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TeenTech Weekly: Zuckerberg's student mocking, privacy policies, free Xboxes
The weekly roundup of Generation Y and student resources you may have missed.
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Microsoft eyes students, offers free Xbox with purchase of Windows PC
Microsoft's is once again offering students a free Xbox with the purchase of a qualifying Windows PC.
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On eve of Facebook IPO, Sunlight exposes $3 billion tax break
Facebook's IPO lets it use a tax loophole to get up to $3 billion in tax breaks; no need to pay taxes for the forseeable future.
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Intuit rides taxes, SMB to solid Q3
Intuit's tax business could have been better, but the company's SMB business is healthy and QuickBooks Online is going global.
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Good news for SAP HANA developers: free is a four letter word
SAP has made its HANA developer license free to all comers. This is important at multiple levels, not least because it opens the door to extreme applications.
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Google Chrome 19 is out
Google Chrome version 19.0.1084.46 is out, fixing 20 security vulnerabilities in the company's browser: eight high-severity flaws, seven medium-severity flaws, and five low-severity flaws.
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Why Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin is a schmuck
In order to avoid paying taxes on his multi-billion dollar IPO windfall, Eduardo Saverin, co-founder of Facebook, is renouncing his United States citizenship.
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SAP Sapphire kicks off with Lance Armstrong, motivational speeches
SAP's Sapphire Now kicks off in Orlando with motivational speeches and Lance Armstrong. Can its tech "supermen" lead businesses into the future?
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Adobe about-face: Photoshop, Illustrator patches will be free
Adobe has changed course and will now backport the fixes to existing software versions.
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Richard M. Stallman, free software leader falls ill at conference
Richard M. Stallman, creator of the concept of the free software and president and founder of the Free Software Foundation fell sick at a technology conference in Spain.
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Queen's speech unveils UK's 'Patriot Act' Web monitoring plan
The Queen has officially lifted the lid on plans for the British government to monitor all U.K. Web, email and phone traffic.
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