Consumer technology doesn't always get better, faster and cheaper. Here are four bad moves that prove the future isn't always bright.Scientific American From ACM Opinion | October 3, 2011
If you're taking a break from work to read this article, I've got one question for you: Are you crazy? I know you think no one will notice, and I know that everyone...Slate From ACM Opinion | September 30, 2011
In the trenches of consumer technology, there’s plenty to complain about. Today's cell-phone contracts are exorbitant and illogical (why has the price of a text...Scientific American From ACM Opinion | September 28, 2011
Even if the Justice Dept. were to establish that Google is a monopoly, it would be hard for anyone to prove that the company's free services have injured consumers...GigaOM From ACM Opinion | September 28, 2011
There’s a bill sitting on the desk of California Governor Jerry Brown, which if signed would ban police from searching the mobile devices of people arrested for...Wired From ACM Opinion | September 26, 2011
The algorithm is the key to success. That's how Google replaced Yahoo as the Web's best search engine in 1998. Google became the font of the online world's information...CNET From ACM Opinion | September 23, 2011
Mark Zuckerberg wants you to share. He doesn't much care if you want to share. Sharing, in Zuckerberg's view, has morphed from an affirmative act—that video was...Slate From ACM Opinion | September 23, 2011
Vint Cerf, Google's chief internet evangelist, and the man who designed a key building block of the Internet, warned that Facebook's "closed" architecture meant...The Guardian From ACM Opinion | September 22, 2011
A proposal for a new cost-free open-access publication model for computer science papers.Dan S. Wallach From Communications of the ACM | October 1, 2011
There are two situations in software testing that scare testers: when they see "too many" defects and when they do not see "enough."Phillip G. Armour From Communications of the ACM | October 1, 2011
Examining the socio-technological issues involved in Denmark's decision to pursue the legalization of electronic elections.Carsten SchÜrmann From Communications of the ACM | October 1, 2011
The Internet causes connections to multiply and strengthen, creating a frenzy of positive feedback, which can drive people apart—not together.The Atlantic From ACM Opinion | September 21, 2011
Last week, Oracle quietly announced the addition of three new commercial extensions to MySQL Enterprise Edition, the proprietary flavor of the dual-licensed MySQL...IT World From ACM Opinion | September 20, 2011
As President Barack Obama and Congress roll up their collective sleeves in an effort to jump-start our nation's struggling economy and cut the burgeoning federal...Politico From ACM Opinion | September 19, 2011
Much has been said about how the newly passed patent reform legislation, the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, benefits large corporations. While that argument...CNET From ACM News | September 19, 2011
Reading my RSS and Twitter feeds Tuesday night, I turned to a tech writer friend and said, "the Wintel Era just ended, and half of these people are fighting over...Wired From ACM News | September 16, 2011
In November, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a case that could redefine the scope of privacy in an age of increasingly ubiquitous surveillance technologies...The New York Times From ACM Opinion | September 16, 2011
Max Levchin and Peter Thiel are not ones to mince words: "Innovation in this country is somewhere between dire straits and dead," Levchin said at TechCrunch’s...Forbes From ACM Opinion | September 15, 2011