Trisha Jandoc was an associate writer at CNET covering broadband and everything related to home internet. She graduated from St. John's University with a bachelor's degree in journalism and a focus on ...
Life online for women is toxic and filled with hate and sexism. Some activists say it’s time to reimagine how the whole thing works. It’s April 13, 2025. Like most 17-year-olds, Maisie grabs her phone ...
Three new books propose remedies that run the gamut from government regulation to user responsibility. From addictive algorithms to exploitative apps, data mining to misinformation, the internet today ...
Welcome to onionland. This is your guide to understanding the dark web: what's on the hidden Internet, how to access it, and how it works under the hood.
Last month, when Cloudflare’s systems went down for half a day, websites from Ikea to ChatGPT refused to open, showing HTTP errors on browsers.
Listen to more stories on the Noa app. This article was featured in the One Story to Read Today newsletter. Sign up for it here. “Was the internet really this bad?” I wondered to myself as I read the ...
The semantic web, Web 3.0, and Web3 are three guiding ideas shaping the future of the Internet. Here's how they come together, bonded by technologies like blockchain, generative AI, and HTMX. The ...
When major online services suddenly went dark earlier this week due to an outage at Cloudflare, it exposed how deeply ...
As we continue to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, there remains a feeling that the ground beneath us is not yet stable. Ongoing effects such as the inflation crisis and longstanding concerns such ...
Here is my confession: I’m traumatized by a David Letterman clip. It’s from November 1995, and Letterman’s guest is a young, bespectacled Bill Gates. The video starts with a question from the ...
Edina Harbinja is affiliated with Open Rights Group (member of the Advisory Council). Vasileios Karagiannopoulos does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or ...
The internet consists of tiny bits of code that move around the world, traveling along wires as thin as a strand of hair strung across the ocean floor. The data zips from New York to Sydney, from Hong ...