RawStory

Tech News

You probably have a very skewed view of this election -- here's why

If you’re liberal, you probably saw the news that Al Gore campaigned with Hillary Clinton in Florida last week, and they both spoke about links between climate change and hurricanes. (We covered their joint event here at Grist.) But if you’re conservative, you might not have seen that news at all.

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Clinton says the 'clean energy economy' will create millions of jobs -- can it?

Job growth is a prime topic in the U.S. presidential race, but Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have very different takes on the role clean energy could play in creating employment.

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Czech police and FBI arrest alleged Russian hacker for cyber attacks against United States

Czech police said Wednesday they staged a joint operation with the FBI to arrest a Russian citizen in Prague suspected of staging cyber attacks on the United States.

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Germany asked Tesla to not use 'Autopilot' in their advertising

German Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt has asked Tesla <TSLA.O> to stop advertising its electric vehicles as having an Autopilot function as this might suggest drivers' attention is not needed, his ministry said on Sunday.

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US bans Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphones from air travel

Samsung Galaxy Note 7 smartphone devices will be banned from aircraft in the United States starting on Saturday at noon EDT (1600 GMT) under an emergency order, regulators said on Friday after numerous reports of the devices catching fire.

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Dozens of US lawmakers request briefing on Yahoo email scanning

A bipartisan group of 48 lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives on Friday asked the Obama administration to brief Congress "as soon as possible" about a 2015 Yahoo program to scan all of its users' incoming email at the behest of the government.

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Samsung's woes highlight explosive limits of lithium batteries

Lithium-based batteries have been powering our portable devices for 25 years.

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Corporations are assembling far-reaching dossiers on you -- and the FCC needs to stop them

When Yahoo! confirmed that it had experienced a massive online attack from hackers who stole personal information from more than 500 million people — including names, emails and phone numbers — it revealed a disturbing truth about our digital media system. Deep into its core, the internet is being transformed into a powerful, Big-Data-driven commercial surveillance apparatus.

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'Don't feed the trolls' really is good advice – according to science

Almost half the population of the planet now has access to the internet, with about one in three of those people regularly active on social media.

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NSA contractor charged with stealing secret data -- but agency denies 'Snowden-type situation'

The FBI has arrested a National Security Agency contractor on charges of stealing highly classified information and is investigating possible links to a recent leak of secret hacking tools used to break into the computers of adversaries such as Russia and China, U.S. officials said on Wednesday.

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A would-be Snowden? NSA contractor charged with theft of classified government material

The U.S. Justice Department charged a Maryland man with theft of classified government material, according to a criminal complaint unsealed on Wednesday.

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Even with rising wages, robot revolution skips restaurants

Clamshell grills are making burger flipping obsolete at McDonald’s, Johnny Rockets and other burger chains. Digital kiosks, tabletop tablets and mobile phones are taking orders at eateries like Panera, Chili’s Grill & Bar and Domino’s. And at Silicon Valley start-up Zume, robots are being programmed to take over pizza assembly.

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'No doubt' Russia behind hacks of U.S. election system: senior Democrat

A senior Democratic lawmaker said Sunday he had "no doubt" that Russia was behind recent hacking attempts targeting state election systems, and urged the Obama administration to publicly blame Moscow for trying to undermine confidence in the Nov. 8 presidential contest.

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