The old political punchline about moving to Canada if an election goes the wrong way is more than a joke to some — and a lot harder to pull off than most people suspect.
Depending on where you live, and what kind of company you work for, your boss can tell you who they want you to vote for. And they can fire you if you don't.
We can support candidates with a text, participate in polls, even register to vote online, but we still can't vote that way — which might be good news.
A Maine state senate candidate gets attacked for her online gaming activities, and a startup that wants to help you sell your used MP3s goes to court against a big entertainment company.
Most people watching the first big presidential debate will do so on television, but for a fast-increasing number, it's far from the only primary source.
Social movements come and go — will Occupy Wall Street be one that lasts? Or has it already dissipated? Also, listen to letters that Occupiers wrote to financial institutions.
Mitt Romney is scheduled to accept the GOP nomination tonight. We travel to Florida's I-4 corridor to take the pulse of voters living in "The Real Economy."