A school district in Anaheim, California is the latest to distribute GPS devices to habitually truant students. But what role does a private company in Texas have in monitoring the students?
DVD? So five years ago. Download? Whatever, Grandpa. Two big Hollywood hits are now available to watch through apps on an iPad or iPhone. Better get used to it.
Apple is requiring a 30 percent cut of any purchases made within applications on the iPhone or iPad. It's a change that's already leading to charges of anti-trust violations and threats of lawsuits. What will this mean to you?
The Senate Judiciary Committee holds hearings today on how best to combat online piracy. We talk to the chairman of that committee, Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) about the aggressive approach he would like to see.
As protests begin to mount around the Middle East, some governments are facing a choice of whether to block some websites or allow more freedom. But even an Internet that appears free and open may be watched very closely.
The governing body that controls web domain names is preparing for what it calls a land rush. Soon, you might be seeing not just .com and .net but .eco, .flowers, .god, .gay, and dot just about anything else you can think of.
Several multinational oil companies have been hacked in recent months, using methods that are actually very simple. What does that say about corporate computer security?
If I met you online and then met you in real life, would you be the same person? A psychiatrist and author says your "e-personality" could be a troublemaker.
There's a tiny little charge on your phone bill that provides funding for phones in rural areas. Essentially, your phone bill is helping people who have a harder time getting phone service. FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski wants that money to go for broadband instead of phones.