August 30, 2008 / Tim Conneally
The newest Wi-Fi protocol, 802.11r, which has become the de facto "Wireless VoIP standard", is now a published standard of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) standards board.
August 29, 2008 / Tim Conneally
Deceased television network The WB has been resurrected, at least on line, emerging from beta as an ad-supported streaming TV show repository.
August 29, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
One day after Microsoft released the second public beta for Internet Explorer 8, readers have contacted CNET News with warnings about its installation and sites and services that are incompatible. While such behavior is expected of beta software, some problems appear to exist within Microsoft services themselves.
August 27, 2008 / Elinor Mills
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have released an extension for Firefox 3 that can protect wireless network users from so-called "man-in-the-middle" attacks.
August 27, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
The guys who created
Lonelygirl15--the scripted Web series that fooled many viewers into thinking it was the real video diary of a cute 16-year-old girl--are back with a new project.
August 27, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
The concept of privatizing the browsing experience has been the impetus for an entire segment of the anti-malware industry. Now, Microsoft has confirmed it will be claiming that segment for itself in the next version of Internet Explorer.
August 26, 2008 / Steven Musil
Google expects to graduate a feature from its labs to its main search page in the next week to help users execute faster and more specific searches. The feature, called Google Suggest, automatically recommends options for the rest of your search term as you type based on the most popular searches.
August 26, 2008 / Ed Oswald
The Finnish phone maker is expected Tuesday to take the lid off the two newest additions to its N-Series line of smart phones.
August 26, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
As CNET News first reported last week, Internet Explorer 8 will include a way to surf somewhat anonymously, allowing the user to suspend browsing history, cookies, and other identifying information. Mozilla had considered such a feature for its Firefox 3 release, but dropped it for technical reasons. Apple Safari also includes a similar feature.
August 25, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
Google's calculator has some trouble handling math with some large numbers, an issue that's not unheard of in computing circles but that might not sit well at a supremely nerdy company that's named after a humongous number.
August 25, 2008 / Jacqueline Emigh
Small regional ISP Frontier Communications has now joined Time Warner Cable in floating the idea of instituting monthly user caps even for subscribers who don't use much bandwidth, anyway.
August 25, 2008 / Steven Musil
Google's Street View service apparently thinks your "no trespassing" and "private road" signs are just for decoration.
August 24, 2008 / Jacqueline Emigh
In separate reports issued this week, one prominent analyst firm proclaimed the impending death of CDMA cellular technology, while another touted its resurgence. So which is it?
August 23, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
Firefox 3.1 will run many Web-based applications such as Gmail faster through incorporation of a feature called
TraceMonkey that dramatically speeds up programs written in JavaScript, Mozilla said Friday.
August 23, 2008 / Charles Cooper
Despite the early kinks attending MobileMe, what's not to like about the concept? I'll include Live Mesh in the category, though Microsoft still remains in beta with the product.
August 23, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
An apparent case of DNS poisoning in the caches of a major China-based ISP is causing extra concern today, in light of security engineer Dan Kaminsky's recent warnings about just how serious a cache poisoning exploit could become.
August 23, 2008 / Elinor Mills
A security researcher has been in discussions with Google on an exploit he plans to release that would allow a hacker to easily intercept someone's communications with supposedly secure Web sites over an unsecured Wi-Fi network, but other sites, like Facebook, Yahoo Mail, and Hotmail, remain vulnerable.
August 23, 2008 / Tim Conneally
Verizon and Google may be close to establishing a revenue sharing mobile search deal, according to a report which have yet to be confirmed though have certainly not yet been denied.
August 22, 2008 / Elinor Mills
A Brazilian man has been charged in connection with operating a botnet composed of more than 100,000 computers infected with malicious software allegedly designed to send spam, the U.S. Department of Justice said on Thursday.
August 21, 2008 / Greg Sandoval
Victor Rook, an indy filmmaker who was once wrongly accused by Viacom of copyright violations, is happy a judge has reminded media companies to think twice before calling someone a pirate.
August 20, 2008 / Ed Oswald
Bloggers have uncovered paperwork for two possible applications from Microsoft having to do with keeping the details of a user's browsing session private.
August 20, 2008 / Tim Conneally
To remain competitive as user activity levels off, eBay has announced that Buy it Now sales will incur a reduced flat fee for an extended listing period.
August 20, 2008 / Elinor Mills
A security researcher has unearthed evidence via Google and its Chinese counterpart that supports claims that several Chinese gymnasts are younger than they should be for competing.
August 19, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
For the most part, the only person you can socialize with on a handheld GPS navigator is the chick who tells you to turn left after 100 yards.
August 18, 2008 / Ina Fried
Microsoft's Live Mesh hasn't officially expanded to include Macs just yet, but the software maker has said that folks in more countries can now take part without having to wait for an invitation.
August 18, 2008 / Stephanie Condon
Google on Monday announced the launch of
FreetheAirWaves.com, a site promoting the unlicensed use of "white space" spectrum.
August 18, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
It's the ultimate summer Friday news story: CNN Webcasting a press conference hosted by the men who claim they nabbed a dead body of the legendary creature known as Bigfoot.
August 16, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
Two trends continue, as evidenced by this month's comScore Top 50 report, released this afternoon: One, Google's going nowhere but up. Two, it can still go up when overall Internet use in the US is actually going down.
August 16, 2008 / Stephanie Condon
With its tagline, "upload. share. archive.", it may have been inevitable that the magazine-sharing Web site Mygazines.com would face allegations of copyright infringement.
August 15, 2008 / Ina Fried
Microsoft is launching its Windows 7
blog, but it still doesn't have much to say.
August 15, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
In a move which could end up meaning either everything or nothing, the developers of a "lifestreaming" application have agreed to be acquired by a company whose track record with acquisitions hasn't always been pretty.
August 14, 2008 / Charles Cooper
Fire Eagle, Yahoo's new geolocation service, is fresh out of the company's Brickhouse development team, and third parties are lining up to cut deals.
August 14, 2008 / Stephanie Condon
It's a fundamental rule of journalism: let the facts speak for themselves.
August 13, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
You can now filter the items in your Facebook News Feed depending on what you're hoping to check out, thanks to a cool new drop-down menu. Previously, you could sort the list by a few Facebook mainstays: status updates, photo-related updates, and "posted items."
August 13, 2008 / Robert Vamosi
Initial information suggests that Internet attacks on Georgian Web sites over the last two weeks are the work of kids, according to one researcher, while another says the intensity of these attacks is short-lived when compared with attacks in Estonia last year.
August 12, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
Some don't like it when others clean out their houses while they're gone on vacation, and a few might hate it when someone else cleans
up. Facebook is now cleaner, brighter, and whiter, and tens of thousands are unhappy.
August 12, 2008 / Ed Oswald
Responses to a congressional inquiry into targeted online advertising indicate that some companies were indeed tracking their users without first asking their consent.
August 11, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
Facebook security chief Max Kelly has assured users in a blog post that the social network is "fighting the good fight" when it comes to several malware attacks recently discovered on the site.
August 11, 2008 / Caroline McCarthy
So you liked that blog post you just read--why don't you toss the writer a buck or two?
August 10, 2008 / Steven Musil
Updated at 11:43 a.m. PDT to report that the site is operational again.
August 10, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
The response from representatives of social networks impacted this week by the discovery of a type of worm that targets them specifically, appears to have come straight out of
West Side Story. They're playing it cool, boys, real cool.
August 10, 2008 / Ed Oswald
Last week, Congress sent letters to Internet platform providers expressing concern over targeted advertising. Now those letters have resulted in action from at least one company, which will now enable users to opt-out.
August 8, 2008 / Tom Espiner
Mozilla has launched a prototype messaging Firefox extension that it says could eventually enable users to keep track of all of their electronic communications, including email, RSS, social networks and web discussions.
August 8, 2008 / Scott M. Fulton, III
When a company's lab typically comes forth with an idea for the general public, it already has a proposition in mind for why that idea is necessarily good. This morning, one of Mozilla Labs' latest ideas actually leaves that question open.
August 8, 2008 / Ernesto
Configuring your BitTorrent client is essential if you want to enjoy optimal download speeds. In our quest to help users get the most out of BitTorrent, we asked one of the uTorrent developers how we can speed up our downloads.
August 7, 2008 / Karen Friar
Developers working on the next version of Firefox aim to release a beta to the public in August.
August 7, 2008 / Natasha Lomas
Free Wi-Fi is now available at St Pancras International for the 45 million commuters who annually pass through the station.
August 5, 2008 / Matthew Broersma
Spammers have added Google Sites to the arsenal of online tools used to get around junk-email filters, according to a study published on Tuesday by messaging security firm MessageLabs.
August 5, 2008 / Elinor Mills
Twitter's time has finally come.
August 5, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
Google's DoubleClick technology now can be used to deliver video advertising shown with Microsoft's Silverlight technology, and it will be used for that purpose with the Olympics video that NBC Universal plans to show online using a player based on Silverlight 2.
August 5, 2008 / APP
Close-up photos of Australian homes, businesses and famous landmarks in cities, towns and remote areas are now available on Google Maps Australia, absolutely free.
August 5, 2008 / Jacqui Cheng
The case against a mother who posed as a teenage boy to harass another teen online, in the process driving her to suicide, has taken another turn, as rights groups are opposing the government's criminal charges against the mother. The Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Center for Democracy and Technology, along with Public Citizen and a group of 14 law professors, have filed an amicus brief in the case, arguing that violating MySpace's Terms of Service agreement shouldn't be considered criminal offense under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. The groups believe that if the mother, Lori Drew, is prosecuted using CFAA charges, the case could have significant ramifications for the free speech rights of US citizens using the Internet.
August 5, 2008 / Nate Anderson
One side effect of the FCC's recent move against Comcast's P2P "delaying" technology has been to make discussions about the dark art of network management even more pressing (and they were pretty pressing before). If Comcast can't use TCP reset packets to limit the number of BitTorrent connections a client can spawn, what legitimate techniques can ISPs use to deal with congestion ? Google's Vint Cerf, one of the grandfathers of the Internet, today weighed in with his answer: transmission rate caps.
August 4, 2008 / Elinor Mills
A new worm is spreading via Facebook and MySpace, turning victims' computers into zombies on a botnet, Kaspersky Lab said on Friday.
August 4, 2008 / Tom Espiner
Apple's Domain Name System patch for Mac OS X systems is not completely effective, according to security experts.
August 4, 2008 / Ernesto
The deals between ISPs and anti-piracy organizations are a worrying trend. In just a few months entertainment industry representatives managed to convince ISPs and governments that they should have the right to accuse and warn Internet subscribers, without solid proof. The question that remains unanswered is whether these warnings will have any effect.
August 3, 2008 / Desiree Everts
Olympic officials on Saturday said there was "no deal" with the Chinese government to restrict Internet access for foreign journalists covering the Beijing Games.
August 3, 2008 / Stephen Shankland
Google's Street View service didn't invade a Pittsburgh couple's privacy, the search giant said in a response to the couple's April lawsuit over the matter.
August 3, 2008 / Ernesto
The Pirate Bay has rolled out a new feature which allows users to add tags to the torrents they upload. The tags will make it easier to structure and discover new content, and it gives users the opportunity to form tag based groups.
August 2, 2008 / Nick Heath
Google's Street View mapping system has been given the all clear by the UK's privacy watchdog.
August 1, 2008 / Tim Conneally
In mid-2005, Google began experimenting with venture capital investments in startup companies. Now, over three years later, the Wall Street Journal reports the search company has plans to start an arm dedicated only to this kind of investment.