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News Feeds |
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BBC News - Technology
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The latest stories from the Technology section of the
BBC News web site.
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Facebook data hoarder speaks out
Security researcher Ron Bowes tells BBC News why he collected and published the personal details of 100m Facebook users.
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Google cleared of wi-fi snooping
No "significant" personal data was grabbed by Google when it snooped on wi-fi networks, says the UK data protection office.
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Amazon offers new look UK Kindle
Online retailer Amazon launches its popular Kindle e-reader into the UK market for the first time, with a new look and more books.
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Nintendo game copiers 'illegal'
A High Court has ruled that devices that allow gamers to play pirated video games on the Nintendo DS console are illegal in the UK.
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Legal action on 'zombie cookies'
Lawsuit filed in San Francisco district court after firms resurrected deleted browser cookies.
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State of global internet revealed
Asian countries top the charts when it comes to internet speeds, according to a global survey by network giant Akamai.
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Green light for mobile auctions
The government has finally set a date for the auction of airwaves crucial to next-generation mobile services.
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Botnet hacker caught in Slovenia
One of the hackers behind a computer virus that infected nearly 13m computers has been tracked down by international authorities.
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Long wait for StarCraft II ends
The long awaited real-time-strategy game StarCraft II has gone on sale, 12 years after the popular first edition was released.
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Call for clarity in broadband ads
The majority of people using broadband are not getting the speed they are paying for, research by the regulator Ofcom suggests.
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Facebook makes move into search
Facebook has made its first steps into the search market with the launch a servcie that allows users to quiz the site's 500m members.
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Britain's oldest Tweeter dies at the age of 104
104-year-old Ivy Bean, who is said to be the oldest user of social media site Twitter, has passed away in her sleep.
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Online etiquette
Nothing said online is really private, says Bill Thompson
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Step away from the iPod
Banning technology from classrooms is unlikely to solve any problems, thinks Bill Thompson.
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Building the Networked World
Open software, fast broadband and a narrower digital divide. Europe lays out its digital agenda.
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